Calculating Glucose Concentration of Solution

  • Thread starter Thread starter MichaelXY
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Percent
AI Thread Summary
A 5% glucose solution in a 10 mL volume contains 0.5 grams of glucose, calculated using the weight/volume percentage formula. The discussion clarifies that the concentration is expressed as mass of solute per 100 mL of solution, leading to the conclusion that 0.5 grams of glucose is present in the 10 mL solution. The calculation involves understanding molarity and the relationship between grams and moles, but the key takeaway is the correct interpretation of percent concentration. The participants confirm the accuracy of the calculations and the method used. Understanding these principles is essential for future applications in laboratory settings.
MichaelXY
Messages
93
Reaction score
0
[SOLVED] Percent of solution

Homework Statement



Let's say we have 5% glucose of a 10 mL solution. So that would imply that .5 mL of the solution is glucose, but that does not really tell me how much glucose. Is it assumed that the glucose is 1 molar?

I ask because in one of my bio labs we did a lab where we were given exactly as stated above. Knowing the exact amount of glucose was not needed for the lab, however, I would like to understand this for future use.

Thanks for any input.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Yeah, the post above mine tells you exactly what you need to do.
 
Okay, let's see if I got this right. Since the solute is H2O, I assume 1 molar H2O.
Since 1 mole H2O = 18 grams/mole and I use the molarity formula to get grams.
10mL of H20 or .01L x 1 molar = .01 grams of H20.
ergo .01g H2O x 5% = 5 x 10^-4 gram glucose, or .0005 gram.
Is that correct?

Thanks in advance
 
yes now if only someone would help me for christ's sake...
 
I wish I could, but as you can see, I am not that good at chem. Thanks for the assist :)
 
You probably need to use units of percent weight/volume of solution. The glucose solution is not sensibly prepared as volume of glucose solid per volume of solution.
 
So by that you mean, Mass of solute/100 mL solution? So I think that would equate to .5 gram C6H12O6 @ 10mL Does that sound correct?
 
MichaelXY said:
So by that you mean, Mass of solute/100 mL solution? So I think that would equate to .5 gram C6H12O6 @ 10mL Does that sound correct?

That would give you 5 percent weight per volume.
 
Back
Top