One atom of Na and one of Cl
540 g NaCl is equal to 0,54 kg.
I suppose that this situation is not possible.
You could titrate equal volumes of 1M solution of NaOH and 1M solution of HCl to obtain 1M solution of NaCl.
No, NaCl H2O is not a chemical equation. An equation must have an equal sign. And even if you put an equal sign into those terms, it is not true that NaCl = H2O, so that would be a false equation, not a complete and balanced equation. You are not even close to having that.
I'm going to assume that you mean 23.34g of NaCl. 1 mole NaCl = 58.442g NaCl (the atomic weight of Na and Cl in grams) 23.34g NaCl x (1mol NaCl/58.442g NaCl) = 0.3994mol NaCl
540 g NaCl is equal to 0,54 kg.
- 0,9 g/L NaCl equal to 0,154 moles - but because NaCl is dissociated in two ions in water the relation is 1 mol NaCl equal 2 osmol/L - and so 0,9 % NaCl equal 308 milliosmole/L
5 % NaCl is equal to 5 g NaCl in 100 g of a material.
KNaCl2
1000 mg. NaCl is the chemical formula for salt. NaCl stands for sodium Chloride and as stated above is salt; so 1000 mg of NaCl is equal to 1000 mg of salt unless you are talking about rock salt then the consistency is closer to 97% 1000mg = 0.0352739 ounce
I suppose that this situation is not possible.
Both are equal compound. Table salt contains naCl.
5 grams of NaCl, or table salt, is equal to 5,000 milligrams. to convert grams to milligrams you simply multiply by 1,000.
The solution of NaCl with the concentration 0,9 % is considered normal saline; the osmotic pressure is equal to the pressure in the cells.
To find the grams in 6.20 moles of NaCl, you need to multiply the number of moles by the molar mass of NaCl. The molar mass of NaCl is 58.44 g/mol. Therefore, 6.20 moles of NaCl is equal to 362.49 grams.
13(g) / 58.5(g/mol) = 0.22 mol NaCl
To determine the number of moles in 240 grams of NaCl, divide the given mass by the molar mass of NaCl. The molar mass of NaCl is approximately 58.44 g/mol. So, 240 grams of NaCl is equivalent to 240/58.44 = 4.11 moles.