Only if you have pure water in mind: 1 liter of pure water weigh 1000 grams or 1 kilogram. 1 mililiter of pure water weigh 1 gram. To calculate the weight of other materials you need the specific weight (density) of the material. Measure the amount of your subject matter (volume in liters). Then weigh it (weight in kilograms). Then divide the weight by the amount.
You cannot. The milligram is a unit of weight and the litre a unit of volume. In the case of water only a litre happens to weigh a kilogram and therefore a milligram of water is 0.1 % of a kilogram and 0.1 % of a litre.
Divide by 10. The math behind that is to first multiply by the liters to milliliters conversion factor (1 L = 1000 mL), and cancel out the liters unit: gram x 1 L = gram
L 1000 mL 1000 mL Then multiply by the correct factor to get the volume you want in the denominator (1/10, or divide by 10), because: 1000 mL = 100 mL
10 So gram / 10 = gram
1000 mL 100 mL
Use the Ideal gas Law, which is Pv=nRT.
p=pressure(in atm)
v=volume(in liters)
n=moles(per gram)
R=constant(0.0821 [(Liters x atm)/(K x mol)]
t=temperature(in kelvin)
find the values of each and solve for "v"
You cannot. Weight percent is a weight-to-weight measure. With some simple assumptions it is a mass-to-mass measure. Grams per litre is a mass-to-volume measure. To convert form one to the other it would be necessary to know the density of the second substance - the "solvent".
Grams is a measure of mass, while litres is a measure of volume, so to convert it you would need some sort of density value.
Multiply by 1000.
A liter is 1000 times bigger than a milliliter.
You divide the mass, in grams, by the volume, in litres!
divide g/l value by 10.
Easy. Multiply grams per milliliter by 1,000 to get grams per liter.So, 1.56 x 1,000 = 1,560 grams per liter.
divide by the molecular mass, (units of gram per mol)
note: 1 miligrame=0.001gram 1dl(deciliter) = 0.1 liter to convert multiply 1000/10
You need to know the volume of liquid that contains the solid to answer this question. If you have one liter of a solution that contains 0.1 grams per milliliter, you can find the number of grams in the container through this calculation: 1 liter X 1000 ml/liter X 0.1 grams/ml = 100 grams of solid in the one liter of solution (the units for liters cancel out)
2.5g/100ml = moles/1L First convert the ml into L. 2.5g/.100L = moles/1L Cross multiply. 25 moles/ 1L
Multiply grams per liter by 0.001 to get grams per milliliter.
Easy. Multiply grams per milliliter by 1,000 to get grams per liter.So, 1.56 x 1,000 = 1,560 grams per liter.
1 milligram per litre is 0.001 grams per litre. 1 gram per litre is 1000 milligrams per litre.
divide by the molecular mass, (units of gram per mol)
The question is meaningless. No such thing as a cubic gram.
note: 1 miligrame=0.001gram 1dl(deciliter) = 0.1 liter to convert multiply 1000/10
Plug your numbers into this formula: mg per liter x 0.003785 = grams per US gallon210 mg per L x 0.003785 = about 0.794936 grams per US gallon.
The numbers are equivalent. For example, 5 grams per 100 grams = 5%.
(Micrograms per litre)/(gram molecular weight of solute) = (micromoles per litre).
You need to know the volume of liquid that contains the solid to answer this question. If you have one liter of a solution that contains 0.1 grams per milliliter, you can find the number of grams in the container through this calculation: 1 liter X 1000 ml/liter X 0.1 grams/ml = 100 grams of solid in the one liter of solution (the units for liters cancel out)
129 (grams per liter) = 129,000,000 micrograms per liter.
Use this: mpg x 235.2 = liters per 100 km