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This is (mass of solute) divided by (mass of total solution) expressed as a percentage. The solute is what you are dissolving into the solution. Example: you have 90 grams of water, and you add 10 grams of salt (sodium chloride). The water is the solvent, sodium chloride is the solute, and the solution is salt water. 90 grams + 10 grams = 100 grams (mass of total solution). (10 grams) / (100 grams) = 0.1 --> 10% mass mass percent concentration.
The answer will depend on the temperature and pressure. At the pressure of 1 atmosphere (760 millimetres of mercury), 100 ml of pure water will have a mass of 99.9840 grams at 0 deg C, 99.9972 grams at 4 deg C (its greatest mass), 99.8203 grams at 20 deg C ("room" temperature), 95.84 grams at 100 deg C.
The density is (the mass, in grams)/100 grams per cm3 .
200 grams/1,000 mL x 100= 20%
100 grams isn't really heavy, in fact many chocolate bars weigh in at 100 grams. So anything that has a greater mass than a chocolate bar should also have a mass greater than 100 grams So, a can of soda, a large sandwich, a book.
100 ml of water is 100 grams
The answer depends on the temperature, but at room temperature (20 deg C), 100 ml of water would have a mass of 99.82 grams.
If you have pure water, standard temperature, and standard pressure,then 100 milliliters of water has 100 grams of mass.(Note: 'milliliters', not 'millimeters'.)
5 grams of salt in 75 grams of water = 5 grams of salt in 80 grams of the solution.So the mass concentration = 5/80 = 100*5/80% = 6.25%5 grams of salt in 75 grams of water = 5 grams of salt in 80 grams of the solution.So the mass concentration = 5/80 = 100*5/80% = 6.25%5 grams of salt in 75 grams of water = 5 grams of salt in 80 grams of the solution.So the mass concentration = 5/80 = 100*5/80% = 6.25%5 grams of salt in 75 grams of water = 5 grams of salt in 80 grams of the solution.So the mass concentration = 5/80 = 100*5/80% = 6.25%
Pure water, standard temperature and pressure, etc. Mass of 100 ml of water = 100 grams
This is (mass of solute) divided by (mass of total solution) expressed as a percentage. The solute is what you are dissolving into the solution. Example: you have 90 grams of water, and you add 10 grams of salt (sodium chloride). The water is the solvent, sodium chloride is the solute, and the solution is salt water. 90 grams + 10 grams = 100 grams (mass of total solution). (10 grams) / (100 grams) = 0.1 --> 10% mass mass percent concentration.
If all the water boils off, the mass of the steam will be 100 grams. Matter cannot be created or destroyed.
4.2 grams NaNO3/60 grams water * 100 = 7% by mass -------------------
6.25 gal 1 gallon = 16 cups 1 cup = 0.06 Gallon
The mass of 100 ml of standard water under standard conditions is 100 grams, regardless of what it's in. We have no way of knowing the mass of the empty beaker.
2,000 grams
it weighs the same. you specified that they both weigh 100 grams.ADDITION: Assuming 100 grams refers to mass, the uncooked chicken weighs .987 newtons.Cooked chicken will have a mass less than 100 grams. One reason is evaporation. A majority of the meats composition is made of water molecules. The evaporation of water will reduce the total mass of the chicken.