Guest dadobi Posted August 28, 2004 Posted August 28, 2004 It has been a couple years since I have had drug calculations - would someone please remind me of the steps I need to answer the following questions A 7% glucose solution is made up of what % glucose and what % water?? A 20% NaCl solution is made up of what % NaCl and what % water?? thanks so much in advance
Skye Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 For solutions it's a weight-for-weight percentage. You would normally see this written as '7% w/w' on the bottle, for the glucose solution. This solution will then contain 7% glucose, and 93% water, by weight. But it won't equal the same percentages in volume, or in moles.
pulkit Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 Solutions are not always w/w, they can be v/v as well (Eg. Ethanol solutions are always v/v) when the solute is a liquid, also there are w/v solutions. 7% glucose and 20% NaCl are most probably w/v solutions. w/v is one of the most popular ways to keep track of concentration, its also called strength of a solution.
Primarygun Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 dadobi, if it's volume, solute/solution Be careful, the solution=solvent + solute This all my little knowledge, don't scold me if I am wrong:P
Skye Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 pulkit, I assume it's w/w for solutions unless it says otherwise, this is the most common I've seen. Ethanol I've seen usually w/w, i.e. most of the ethanol around the lab used for cleaning and that will be 95% w/w. But it may just be my crazy part of the world, and it wouldn't surprise me if the glucose and NaCl were w/v.
pulkit Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 weight/volume has an unit so it can't be in % True. I must acept that I am wrong.
sfpublic Posted December 1, 2005 Posted December 1, 2005 Hello, I am a tiny bit confused about this w/w term. Could you please clarify it with a few examples so that I can understand it? thank you
RyanJ Posted December 4, 2005 Posted December 4, 2005 Hello' date=' I am a tiny bit confused about this w/w term. Could you please clarify it with a few examples so that I can understand it? thank you[/quote'] Ok... let see if I can explain it (I am now known for my explaining abilities ) Ok, in the examples remember they must all add up too 100% so... Lets go through an examaple: Question: A solution is composed of 33.3% Nitric Acid, 21.6% Hydrochloric Acid and the rest is water. Calculate the percentage of water in the solution. Answer: Now, here is a rule, all percentages in this case must MUST add up too 100% so... [math]33.3 + 21.6 + x = 100[/math] [math]54.9 + x = 100[/math] [math]x = (100 - 54.9)[/math] [math]x = 45.1[/math] So the percentage of water is 45.1% Your examples will work the same way just remember, they just all add up to 100% Here is another incase you need a bit ore practice. Question: A composition of an alloy requires between 0.95% too 2.1% Carbon and the rest pure Iron. Calculate the percentage of Iron needed if the Carbon content is considered too be 1.3%. Answer: Now, here is a rule, all percentages in this case must MUST add up too 100% so... [math]1.3 + x = 100[/math] [math]x = (100 - 1.3)[/math] [math]x = 98.7[/math] So you need 98.7% Iron assuming that the Carbon content is 1.3% Good luck! Cheers, Ryan Jones
sfpublic Posted January 1, 2006 Posted January 1, 2006 Thank you for your clear answer to the w/w question. I had forgotten that I posted it until 10 mins ago. It was one of those I-can-wait questions. Anyway, thanks andy
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now