This is a very diluted solution (about 0.1%), hardly tastable.
When you add a teaspoon of honey to water with vapor pressure, it will reduce the vapor pressure. The sugar in the honey leads to the pressure going down.
To purify one gallon of water, you can add 8 drops (1/8 teaspoon) of unscented, plain household bleach that contains 5.25-6% sodium hypochlorite. Mix it well and let it sit for 30 minutes before using the water. Make sure to follow the proper guidelines for purifying water with bleach to ensure it's safe to drink.
If the solution is 67% sugar by weight, then take the weight of one gallon of water and multiply by 67%:One gallon of water weighs 8.34 lbs0.67 * 8.34 = 5.59 lbs.
Salt added to water form a solution, an electrolyte.
About 80ml of water must be added to 40ml of a 25 percent by weight solution to make a 2 percent by weight solution.
If you put a teaspoon of lemon juice into a gallon of water, that would be an example of a diluted solution. Another word for dilute would be to make weaker.
2 teaspoons of household bleach and 1 gallon of water
For a gallon of water, you can add 1 teaspoon of baking soda for general cleaning purposes or up to 1 tablespoon for a stronger solution. Be sure to dissolve the baking soda thoroughly before using the solution.
To sanitize water, add 1/8 teaspoon (or 8 drops) of bleach per gallon of water.
There is 1 gallon of 10% solution...There is 0% saline in water...The equation is (0.1)(1) + 0x = 0.02 (x+1)...Answer is: 4 gallons. Hope I helped!!:)
not very good.
75/4= 18.75
2 gallons.
0.25 gallons of water (or 1 quart)
Approx 1.86 gallons.
200 ml of solution is 40.5768271 teaspoons. Ignoring the volume of the 8gm of medication, each teaspoon would have 8gm/40.5768271 = 0.197156864gm = 197.156864 milligrams of medication. Note that we ignore the volume of the medication because (i) we don't know the exact volume of the medication, and (ii) we don't know to what extent it changes the overall volume of the solution when added to it (a cup of water with a teaspoon of sugar added to it, for instance, has the same volume (although more weight) as the the water before the sugar was added - the molecules of sugar slip into the empty spaces between the water molecules).
1 gallon = 16 cups 1 cup =0.23 gallon