Thank you for watching! Do you have any questions about ppm and ppb calculations? Share them below. Also, don't forget to mention other pharmaceutical calculations topics you like video tutorials made on in the comments.
omggggggggggggggggggggggggg literally LITERALLY I"VE BEEN SUFFERING FOR 9 HOURS !! 9 HOURS IN A ROWW TO JUST understand this part and u just cleared all my confusion in 5 minutes and a half
The sulfates are obtained from dissolved salts (e.g. MgSO4) which implies that you have a solid solute dissolved in the solvent which is water. Hence the grams and not mL. In this example, the numeric value for the ppb will be the same if you used mL instead. However, the units would be wrong and could affect downstream calculations. Hope this helps. Thanks for the question and for watching.
Thank you Januja for watching and for the comment. The definition of ppm implies parts per million. We use 1 million ml as the denominator when the preparation is composed of a solute in a liquid solvent. Hope this helps.
Thank you for watching! Do you have any questions about ppm and ppb calculations? Share them below. Also, don't forget to mention other pharmaceutical calculations topics you like video tutorials made on in the comments.
What's the intro song ?
omggggggggggggggggggggggggg literally LITERALLY I"VE BEEN SUFFERING FOR 9 HOURS !! 9 HOURS IN A ROWW TO JUST understand this part and u just cleared all my confusion in 5 minutes and a half
Glad you found the video helpful. Thank you for watching and for the comment.
you are amazing ! incredible one of best teacher in solving pharmaceutical calculations for naplex, pebc, kaps and MOH. cheer boss 🙂
Thank you, Shahid Ali for watching and for the kind words.
This was the best ppm pub tutorial yet! tysm!!!
Thank you iheartlisa for watching and for the kind comment.
Thank you for the easy straight-forward explanation.
You are welcome Poloko. Glad the video was helpful. Thank you for watching and for the comment.
Just wow...just wow...just wow... amazing 🤩 thank you sir
Proud of you Dr Danquah
👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you for the comment.
Thanks bro, your videos are very clear and to the point
Glad you found the videos helpful Sam. Thank you for watching and for the comment.
Thanks 😊 the video helped👏
Glad you found the video helpful Fortune. Thank you for watching and for the comment.
Thanks.. this was a confusing topic for me but you cleared it up for me.
Glad it helped. Thanks for watching and for the comment.
Kishan Patel I
Thank you the Video helped a lot.
You're welcome! Glad the video helped. Thank you Tumiso for watching and for the comment.
You're a boss for this! it really helped thanks
Glad it helped! Thank you Uncle Talent for watching and for the comment.
Thank you very much I benefited through you
Glad the video helped. Thank you Salsabil for watching and for the comment.
Hey great video, you helped me a lot! But i have one question 7:38 why did you write the 1.4 ppm as 1.4 gramm? Shouldn't it be the same unit?
Thank you so much for making this video.
You are welcome. Thanks for watching and for the comment.
Sir Molecular weight of NAF is 41.99
How to calculate ppm , when 125mM NAF is dissolved in 3ml broth ?
You are king
Thank you for your kind words Mohammed and for supporting the channel.
Thank you!
You're welcome! Glad the video helped. Thank you for watching and for the comment.
So helpful
Thank you
Thank you for watching and for your comment. Are there any other topics you will like to see covered?
Sir How to convert 125 mM to ppm in 3 ml broth ?
Thank you Januja for watching and for the comment. The molecular weight is needed in order to answer the question . Please provide it.
@@PharmaceuticalCalculationsEasy sir Molecular weight of NAF is 41.9
Sir, How to convert 125 m M NAF in 3ml broth to ppm ?
In example 6, how do you know that the 10^-7 parts of sulfates is in grams not mL. Would it makes a difference?
The sulfates are obtained from dissolved salts (e.g. MgSO4) which implies that you have a solid solute dissolved in the solvent which is water. Hence the grams and not mL. In this example, the numeric value for the ppb will be the same if you used mL instead. However, the units would be wrong and could affect downstream calculations. Hope this helps. Thanks for the question and for watching.
Please sir solve it...
NaCl 1.25 g/L. Ppm =?
Thank you Nusrat for watching and for the question. Here is the solution to your question (bit.ly/gperLtoppm).
Why we take 1 million ml ?
Thank you Januja for watching and for the comment. The definition of ppm implies parts per million. We use 1 million ml as the denominator when the preparation is composed of a solute in a liquid solvent. Hope this helps.