Answer :

A chemical species' concentration in a solution, specifically the amount of a solute per unit volume of solution, is measured by its molar concentration.

What is meant  by molarity?

A chemical species' concentration in a solution, specifically the amount of a solute per unit volume of solution, is measured by its molar concentration. The number of moles per litre, denoted by the unit symbol mol/L or mol/dm3 in SI units, is the most often used unit denoting molarity in chemistry.

The amount of a substance in a specific volume of solution is known as its molarity (M). The number of moles of a solute per litre of a solution is known as molarity. The molar concentration of a solution is another name for molarity. The amount of solute in moles per litre of solution is known as molarity (). The quantity of moles of solute per kilograms of solvent is known as molality (). The quantity of equivalents per litre of solution is referred to as normality ().

with units of [tex]$\mathrm{mol} \cdot \mathrm{L}^{-1}$[/tex]..

For  molarity  we take the quotient moles of solute/ volume of solution

And so.... [tex]$\frac{\frac{3.46 \cdot g}{58.44 \cdot \mathrm{g} \cdot \mathrm{mol}^{-1}}}{50.0 \cdot m L \times 10^{-3} \cdot L \cdot m L^{-1}}= \cdot \mathrm{mol} \cdot L^{-1} \ldots$[/tex]

To learn more about molarity refer to:

https://brainly.com/question/17138838

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