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  1. How to calculate molarity (article) | Khan Academy

    As long as you can dissolve a solute into a solvent, you can express it using molarity. Dissolving solid sodium chloride, salt, into water let's you use molarity.

  2. Molarity (video) | Stoichiometry | Khan Academy

    The most common way to express solution concentration is molarity (M), which is defined as the amount of solute in moles divided by the volume of solution in liters: M = moles of solute/liters of solution.

  3. Molarity (video) | Khan Academy

    The most common way to express solution concentration is molarity (M), which is defined as the amount of solute in moles divided by the volume of solution in liters: M = moles of solute/liters of solution.

  4. Molarity calculations (practice) | Khan Academy

    Course: KA Chemistry Class 11 > Unit 1 Lesson 9: Reactions in solutions Molarity Strength & molarity Molarity vs. molality Molarity calculations Worked example: Concentration terms Mole fraction & its …

  5. Molaridad (artículo) | Mezclas y soluciones | Khan Academy

    Este artículo fue adaptado de los siguientes artículos: “ Molarity ” (Molaridad) de Boundless Chemistry (Química sin fronteras), CC BY-SA 4.0 .

  6. Concentration molaire ou molarité (leçon) | Khan Academy

    Sources et références Molarity CC BY-SA 4.0 Molarity CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 US CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 Atmosphère terrestre

  7. Molarity vs. molality (video) | Khan Academy

    Learn how molarity and molality differ! The molality of a solution is equal to the moles of solute divided by the mass of solvent in kilograms, while the molarity of a solution is equal to the moles of solute …

  8. 摩尔 浓度 (文章) | 混合物和溶液 | 可汗学院

    来源和参考文献 Molarity CC BY-SA 4.0 Molarity CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 US CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 Atmosphere of Earth

  9. Molarity (apply) (practice) | Khan Academy

    Apply your understanding of molarity in this set of free, standards-aligned practice questions.

  10. Molarity, molality, osmolarity, osmolality, and tonicity - what's the ...

    So, the first one is molarity, and we know that means moles in one liter of solution. Keeping the numerator the same, but tweaking the denominator you get molality with an L.