Question #f9956

1 Answer
Sep 15, 2017

Here's how you can do that.

Explanation:

A solution's concentration in parts per million, or ppm, tells you the number of grams of solute you get for every

10^6 = 1,000,000

grams of solution.

Similarly, a solution's concentration in parts per billion, or ppb, tells you the number of grams of solute present for every

10^9 = 1,000,000,000

grams of solution.

In your case, a solution that has a concentration of "500 ppm" will contain "500 g" of solute for every 10^6 "g" of solution. By comparison, a solution that has a concentration of "500 ppb" will contain "500 g" of solute for every 10^9 "g" of solution.

So in order to convert the "500-ppm" solution to "500 ppb", you need to increase its volume by a factor of

"DF" = (10^9 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))))/(10^6color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g")))) = color(blue)(1000) -> the dilution factor

So, for example, if you start with "100 g" of this "500-ppm" solution, you need to add enough water to get the mass of the solution to

color(blue)(1000) * "100 g" = 10^5color(white)(.)"g"

So, to sum this up, you can convert a "500-ppm" solution to "500-ppb" by diluting your sample to a total mass that is color(blue)(1000) times higher than the mass of the initial sample.