As a food chemist for a major potato chip company, you are responsible for determining the salt content of new potato chips products for the packaging label. The potato chips are seasoned with table salt, NaCl. You weight out a handful of the chips, boil them in water to extract the salt, and then filter the boiled chips to remove the soggy chip pieces. You then analyze the chip filtrate for Cl- concentration using the Mohr method.
First you prepare a solution of silver nitrate, AgNO3, and titrate it against .500 g of KCl using the Mohr method. You find that it takes 62.2 mL of AgNO3 to reach the eqiuvalence point of the reaction.
You then use the same silver nitrate solution to analyze the chip filtrate in a Mohr reaction, finding that the solution yields a rusty brown precipitate when 46.1 mL of titrant is added.
Q: If the same sample of chips used to make the filtrate weighed 94.0g, how much NaCl is present in one serving (145g) of chips?