Chemistry, asked by yasleen9898, 12 hours ago

The quantity of solute in grams present in 100 g of solvent

Answers

Answered by clementcherian
0

Answer:

Explanation:

, which is the grams of solute per 100 g of solution. Sometimes you may want to make up a particular mass of solution of a given percent by mass and need to calculate what mass of the solvent to use. For example, you need to make 3000 g of a 5% solution of sodium chloride.

Answered by rahul123437
0

The quantity of solute in grams present in 100 g of solvent will be     9.09 %

Explanation:

Mass of solute =10g

Mass of solution =Mass of solute+Mass of solvent

  =10 g+100 g

Mass % =Mass of solute×100/ Mass of solution

Mass % =​10×100/110 =9.09 %

  • The concentration of a solution is the mass of the solute in grams, which is present in 100 g of solvent where ​the concentration of the solution is expressed per 100 g of solution.
  • The concentration of a substance is the amount of solute which is present in a given quantity of solution. Concentrations of the solution are usually expressed in terms of molarity, defined as the number of moles of solute in 1 L of solution.
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