so 50 = 53.57 mg carbonate needed per liter
this is the carbonate ion, CO
32-, not sodium carbonate, Na
2CO
3.
in order to find the mass of sodium carbonate needed, u must make use of the molar ratio,
which is that Na
2CO
3 = CO
32-, in terms of moles.
Could you please explain the calculate to moles I don't know what that means?
1 mole of substance is roughly speaking, the relative atomic mass (A
r) of an element in grams. u can look it up in any periodic table like on
this site for instance, just look for atomic weight of '...'
then there is the following formula:
n = m/M
where
n = number of moles
m = mass of substance
M = molar mass of substance (the sum of all the A
r of the elements included)
so from here, you convert the mass of carbonate needed into moles, and multiply the same amount of moles by the molar mass of sodium carbonate. this will give u the mass of sodium carbonate per liter.
I saw two different forms of sodium carbonate for sale, Sodium Carbonate Monhydrate and Sodium Carbonate Anhydrous.
the first is Na
2CO
3.H
2O, while the latter is just plain Na
2CO
3.
since the latter offers a higher concentration of sodium carbonate per gram, i would suggest it.