In SI units, the prefix nano- indicates 10 E(-9) and milli indicated 10 E(-3). This means that given 1 millimole, there are 10 E6 nanomoles and given 1 nanomole, there are 10 E(-6) millimoles.
You haven't specified the compound. However, I can talk you through it. You have to divide by 1000, then divide by molecular mass.
multiply by 1.5
In order to convert a microliter per liter to a mililiter per liter, just divide by 1,000.
A mililiter is a thousand part of a liter.
5300 X 1000 = 5300000 ml1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
liter
1000 milliliter=1 liter divide the value in milliliter by 1000 to convert it to liters. 37/1000=0.037 liters
1000
A mililiter is 1/1000 as large as a liter, so the liter is 1,000 times larger than the milliliter. Your answer is, "Yes".
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters
0.24
1 liter = 1000 mililiters 1 mililiter = 0.001 liter
Yes. 1 milliliter contains 1,000 microliters.
That is 4,100 ml.