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saltkoncentration

Saltkoncentration refers to the amount of dissolved salts in a solvent, most commonly water. It is defined by the concentration of charged ions—such as Na+, K+, Ca2+, Cl−, and SO4^2−—present in the solution. For practical purposes, saltkoncentration can be expressed with several units: molarity (moles of salt per liter of solution), molality (moles per kilogram of solvent), mass percentage (grams of salt per 100 g of solution), or parts per thousand (per mille, ‰). In marine and environmental contexts, salinity is often reported in practical salinity units (PSU), which approximate the dissolved salt content of seawater.

Typical reference values include physiological saline at about 0.9% w/v NaCl, used to balance body fluids, and

Measurement methods include conductivity to estimate ionic strength, refractometry in some settings, ion chromatography for individual

Applications span biology, medicine, food science, water treatment, and desalination. Maintaining appropriate saltkoncentration is essential for

seawater
at
roughly
3.5%
w/w
total
dissolved
salts
(about
35
g
of
salt
per
kilogram
of
seawater).
Since
salt
in
solution
consists
of
multiple
ions,
the
overall
concentration
can
be
expressed
as
osmolarity
or
osmolarity,
taking
into
account
the
van’t
Hoff
factor
(for
NaCl,
i
≈
2).
This
determines
osmotic
pressure
and
influences
freezing
point
and
boiling
point.
ions,
and
gravimetric
or
titrimetric
techniques
for
total
dissolved
solids.
cell
function,
flavor
and
texture
in
foods,
and
the
efficiency
of
desalination
and
purification
processes.