Chemistry, asked by aiotto826, 1 month ago

7 gram of sugar is added into water to make solution having total mass 150 gram calculate mass per cent of sugar solution​

Answers

Answered by AaravChhabra3008
0

A solution's percent concentration by mass,  

% w/w

, basically tells you what mass of solute you get per  

100 g

of solution.

In your case, sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. A solution is formed when you dissolve a solute in a solvent.

Here's how to solve this problem without using the formula for percent concentration by mass, which is given to you as

% w/w

=

mass of solute

mass of solution

×

100

You know that your target sugar solution must be  

7% w/w

. This means that every  

100 g

of this solution must contain  

7 g

of sugar.

This ratio between sugar and water is the same regardless of the mass of solution. In your case, you want the solution to have a mass of  

235 g

. Since it must contain  

7 g

of sugar for every  

100 g

of solution, you can say that

235

g solution

= 7% w/w

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7 g sugar

100

g solution

=

16.45 g sugar

You should round this off to one sig fig, since that's how many sig figs you have for the percent by mass, but I'll leave it rounded to two sig figs, just for good measure

m

sugar

=

16 g

This is what the formula for percent concentration by mass actually means. If you start with

% w/w

=

m

solute

m

solution

×

100

you can rearrange to solve for  

m

solute

, which is the mass of sugar

% w/w

m

solution

=

m

solute

100

m

solute

=

% w/w

m

solution

100

Now plug in your values to get

m

solute

=

7

235 g

100

=

16 g

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