According to the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 58th Edition, 35.7 grams of sodium chloride (NaCl) can be dissolved in 100.0 grams of pure water at 0 degrees centigrade (page B-159). At 199 degrees centigrade the amount able to be dissolved increases to 39.12 grams of NaCl.
NaCl, or sodium chloride, famously known as salt dissolves in water depending on its temperature. In 0 degrees celsius 13 grams of salt dissolves in 100 ml of water while in 100 degrees celsius 247 grams of salt dissolves in 100 ml of water.
At 20°C (room temp.) 35.9g NaCl (salt) will dissolve in 100g of H2O (water).
35.9 grams at room temperature
It's 1/10 of a liter.
14.625
It depends on the final solution Volume you want to prepare. For 100ml of a 6M NaCL solution, you add 35.1g of NaCl to water until you reach 100ml. Dissolve and autoclave for 15 mins.
8g
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of NaCl. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel. NaCl=58.5 grams20.0 grams NaCl / (58.5 grams) =.342 moles NaCl
Cf. Related questions on NaCl
The answer is 0,065 g.
14.625
It depends on the final solution Volume you want to prepare. For 100ml of a 6M NaCL solution, you add 35.1g of NaCl to water until you reach 100ml. Dissolve and autoclave for 15 mins.
It depends how strong a solution you want to make. The molecular mass of NaCl is 58.44, so for a 1 molar solution you would dissolve 58.44 grams in water and make the volume up to 1 litre. For a 0.1 mol solution you'd take 5.844g to a litre, and a 2 mol solution you'd take 116.88g to a litre of water.
You need 841,536 g NaCl.
400
20
20
96.75 grams of NaCl
The answer is 8 g NaCl.
260
Substances that dissolve in water are polar molecules, like water. Also, many ionic compounds can also dissolve in water as well, such as common table salt, NaCl.