20%
Table salt added to water contains equal amounts of sodium and chlorine.
If the salt solution contains chloride ion (eg. from table salt, NaCl) then silver chloride will precipitate. Both sodium and nitrate ions stay unchanged in solution. Ag+aq + Cl-aq --> AgCls
Fist, pH is not a property of any given substance, but depends on both the strength of an acid or base and how much of it is in a solution. However, since tables salt has no acid-base properties, so any solution of it will have a pH of 7.
Table salt is NaCl while water is H2O. Also water is liquid while salt is solid..... if that isn't obvious
Water and salt (NaCl). An electrolyte is anything that contains ionic bonds, so there are many different options. Normal table salt (NaCl) is a good example. You can also use CaCl2 or a bazillion different compounds. To make it a "solution" just add water.
20%
1 ml is roughly equal to 1 gram.There fore 50ml water = 50 gm water. Then The amount of salt =10 gram. (10/50)*100 =20%
Table salt added to water contains equal amounts of sodium and chlorine.
The answer will depend on what information the table contains!The answer will depend on what information the table contains!The answer will depend on what information the table contains!The answer will depend on what information the table contains!
which group in the periodic table contains the most metals penis
The table salt solution is neutral.
Table vinegar contains 4 to 8 % acetic acid by volume. So between 92 and 96 % is water.
If the salt solution contains chloride ion (eg. from table salt, NaCl) then silver chloride will precipitate. Both sodium and nitrate ions stay unchanged in solution. Ag+aq + Cl-aq --> AgCls
Fist, pH is not a property of any given substance, but depends on both the strength of an acid or base and how much of it is in a solution. However, since tables salt has no acid-base properties, so any solution of it will have a pH of 7.
3,033g + 1,967g = 5. (100/5) x 1,967 = 19,34%
Table salt is NaCl while water is H2O. Also water is liquid while salt is solid..... if that isn't obvious
Table salt is a compound.