i have always been told 20 drops per ml is rule of thumb, i am a certified pharmacy technician, and that is what we go by when dispensing medication
It, of course, depends on factors like type of solution, temperature, viscosity, etc. (All of which are, yes, taught to all students in pharmaceutical classes) The typical "rule of thumb" is 20 drops/ ml for low viscosity liquids, such as water.
This is in no way scientific but I just got about 80 out of my 5ml eye drops.
5 drops is 0.25mL or 1/4mL
30mL equals 600 drops.
300 drops per 15mL
5mL is 100 drops.
300
4 times 25ml = 100ml 1.5ltr = 15 times 100ml Answer: 15 times 4 = 60
15 minutes
15 meters=15,000 millimeters
Answer: 180 inches is equivalent to 15 32 feet
15 millimeters = 1.5 centimeters
No, most of them are 15 ml.
There is around 15 to 20 drops in one ML. The liquid viscosity will change this answer. You may consider that there is 80 to 100 drops in a 5ml bottle.
15 tbsp EQUAL HOW MANY DROPS?
Yes they can, but a period of at least 15 minutes between the drops is advisable
15 gtts (drops) = 1ml 1.5ml --> 15 gtts + (15/2=7.5) = 22.5 drops
In college chem when titrating we were told to take 10 drops per mL, thus there would be 10,000 drops per liter. Other texts cite 10, 15, 20, even up to 60 drops per milliliter when dealing with intravenous drip calculations in medicine - so, depending on what source you use, that could mean up to sixty thousand drops in that bottle.
15
0.75mL is 15 drops.
120 drops. 20 drops / mL.
15 drop per ml or 15 ggt according to National Healthcaregiver Association
60ml x 15 drops/ml = 900 total drops 900 total drops divided by 60 minutes (1 hour) = 15 drops per minute
A shot is 50ml and a bottle is typically 750ml, so about 15.