I would place the watch glass on a balance, and then zero out the balance with the watch glass placed in the tray. After the balance is balanced with the watch glass, I would move the weights to represent an added five grams. I would then slowly add calcium chloride to the watch glass until the balance rebalances or zeroes out.
You can measure 5 grams of salt using a kitchen scale. Place a container on the scale, tare it to zero, then gradually add salt until the scale shows 5 grams. Alternatively, use a measuring spoon to measure out the appropriate volume (approximately 1 teaspoon) of salt, since 5 grams of salt is roughly equivalent to that amount.
18 grams of salt in 90 grams of water is more concentrated than 5 grams of salt in 10 grams of water since the first mixture has a higher ratio of salt to water.
The resulting mass of the mixture is 35 grams (5 grams of salt + 30 grams of water).
A solution containing 5 g sodium chloride in 10 g water doesn't exist.
The more concentrated solution is the one containing 18 grams of salt and 90 grams of water. This is because the concentration of the solute (salt) is higher in this solution compared to the solution containing 5 grams of salt and 10 grams of water.
A teaspoon of pink salt typically weighs about 5-6 grams. However, this can vary slightly depending on the fluffiness or density of the particular salt.
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%
The weight of salt can vary depending on the type, but on average, about 5 milliliters of table salt weighs roughly 6 grams.
5 grams of salt is approximately 1 teaspoon.
5 grams of sea-salt.
5 grams of table salt is 5 grams of NaCl. NaCl has a molar mass of 58.443 grams/mol, so 5 grams would be .0855 mol NaCl. In one mole of NaCl there is one mole of Na, so there would be .0855 mol Na, or 5.235 * 1022 atoms Na.
Approximately 5 grams of salt in a teaspoon.
18 grams of salt in 90 grams of water is more concentrated than 5 grams of salt in 10 grams of water since the first mixture has a higher ratio of salt to water.
About 5 grams
A mass balance.
The resulting mass of the mixture is 35 grams (5 grams of salt + 30 grams of water).
This cannot be sensibly answered. Milliliters (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, grams is a measure of weight or mass.
5 grams of salt fills only 0.16 tablespoon ... 1/2 teaspoon of fine salt is roughly 5 grams