There are approximately 393.92 grams of citric acid powder in a cup. Calculations are as follows:
236.588236 cm3 / 1 US cup
X
1.665 grams of citric acid / 1 cm3 of citric acid
=
393.9194129 grams of citric acid / 1 US cup
Conversion from US cups to cubic centimeters obtained from Google calculator http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=1+cup+to+cubic+centimeters
As many cups as there are in one pound of water
Approx. 400 g for anhydrous citric acid and a 250 mL cup.
The mass is approx. 14 ounces.
Some cheeses have citric acid added to them to improve the melting qualities of the cheese. Quick Mozzarella is a classic example of this. Many Processed cheeses have citric acid in them to give a smooth melting cheese.
The acidity of Sprite is about 2.88 pH. That means that like many other carbonated beverages, it is considered fairly acidic.
Monohydrate citric acid has a single (=mono) molecule of water (=hydrate) attached to each molecule of citric acid, whereas anhydrous citric acid has been dried so has no water at all (no water = anhydrous).
Citric acid is the stronger acid of the two because the molecule has three acid groups as opposed to malic acid which has only two. Citric acid will therefore dissociate more easily. From personal experience, malic acid is the more strongly flavoured though!
There are 6 carbon atoms, 8 hydrogen atoms and 7 oxygen atoms in C6H8O7 (2-hydroxypropane-1,2,3-tricarboxylic acid, citric acid).
4.9
Add 192,12 g citric acid in 1 L water.
Citric acid can be used for many things... actually Vitamin C contains citric acid...
1 teaspoon of citric acid is 5gm. So 100gm is 20 teaspoons.
The formula of citric acid is C5H4O5, its gram molecular mass is 192.14, and the gram atomic mass of oxygen is 15.9994. Therefore, the fraction by mass of oxygen in citric acid is 5(15.9994)/192.14 or 0.4162 and the mass of oxygen in 20.2 units of citric acid is 0.4162(20.2) or 8.41 of the same units, to the justified number of significant digits.
Not copious amounts of it. Citric acid is found in many fruits, so it your horse likes oranges, its eatng citric acid.
Citric acid can not harm you. It ca not harm you because you eat it in many grapefruits
Citric acid is a food additive and has many uses, commonly in soft drinks. ORANGES AND LEMONS ARE NATURAL SUBSTANCES CONTAINING CITRIC ACID
Soy milk contains many thing but citric acid is not one of them.
CITRIC
Yes, as is ascorbic acid (vitamin C) and many other things.
Yes, In fact, Kool-Aid mix packets are mostly citric acid. Citric acid is responsible for the sourness in many drinks including Kool-Aid.