So as far as sodium chloride is concerned, lets go back to the formula NaCl. The atomic mass number of sodium is 23. Because there�s only one sodium atom in the formula NaCl, the atomic mass number remains 23 (ie 23 multiplied by 1). The atomic mass of chlorine is 35.5 and again there�s only one chlorine atom, so the figure remains at 35.5. If we add, the 35.5 and the 23, this will give us the total atomic mass of the compound, sodium chloride, which is 58.5.
The percentage of sodium in sodium chloride is now easy to calculate. We need only to divide the atomic mass of sodium, ie 23, by the total atomic mass of the compound ie 58.5. Multiplied by 100 to give a percentage, the figure is 39.3%. You can calculate the chlorine in the same way or substract one from the other, when we can then see that every 100 grams of sodium chloride contains 39.3 grams of sodium and 60.7 grams of chlorine.
So what does this mean in practice? It shows that whatever sodium figure a food manufacturer or retailer declares on an ingredients label, this figure is only 39.3% of the salt figure. Let�s call the 39.3% figure, 40% for ease of calculation.. This means that all declared sodium figures should be multiplied by 2.5 (40 x 2.5 = 100)to give us a the true percentage of salt in a product. For example, if a product states it contains 2% sodium, it actually contains 5% salt.