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.
A 50ml fixed volume pipette. Graduated pipettes are less accurate, multiple pipettes are bad for accuracy, and most other glassware is bad for accuracy. Also look for the highest class pipette available
That is 50ml.
To measure a volume of liquid, laboratory instruments known as glassware are used. The commonly used glassware are burettes, pipettes, volumetric flasks and graduated cylinders.
The liquid's density is 0.8 g/mL
That's easy. 50ml in ml is 50ml.
50ml = 50cc
50mL is 5cL (0.1 centiliters per milliliter).
Oil
100*12ml/50ml = 24%
Density = Mass/Volume = 150g/50mL = 3 grams per millilitre.
50mL = 1.6907 fluid oz
definitely a 50ml measure