The preferred piece of laboratory glassware to heat 5ml of a liquid is a small round bottom flask. These are also known as boiling flasks.
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identify the glassware use for direct heating of 5.0ml liquid
petri dish
50cc = 50ml
Not much! 0.75 ml 750 mm3
You will need to expand on your questions 50g of what - lead, oil, mercury, water???? You divide the mass by the density (in common units) to get the volume then convert to the required units. i.e. for cold water density = 1000 kg/m^3 50g = 0.05kg 1m^3 = 1000 Litres = 1000000 ml. so 0.05 / 1000 * 1000000 = 0.05 * 1000 = 50ml. or another way to remember this is 1 litre of water = 1kg therefore 0.05kg water = 0.05Litres
Depending on how accurate you want to be you can use a variety of methods. Common methods include the following (with increasing level of accuracy) 1) graduated cylinder 2) volumetric pipette. 3) Calibrated micro-pipette (may require more than one transfer)
ice is a solid so u can't say ml, u may say grams, but anw, hypothetically speaking, it is still 50ml.
You would use a graduated cylinder to measure out 50 cubic centimeters of a liquid. Graduated cylinders are precise glassware that allows for accurate volume measurements. They often have markings every 1 milliliter, making them suitable for measuring specific volumes like 50 cubic centimeters.
That is 50ml.
A graduated cylinder would be a suitable glassware to measure exactly 65ml of a liquid.
The liquid's density is 0.8 g/mL
That's easy. 50ml in ml is 50ml.
1 ml is equivalent to 1 cc (cubic centimeter). Therefore, 50 ml is equal to 50 cc.
50mL is 5cL (0.1 centiliters per milliliter).
Density = Mass/Volume = 150g/50mL = 3 grams per millilitre.
Oil
100*12ml/50ml = 24%
50mL = 1.6907 fluid oz
definitely a 50ml measure