0.5 L = 500 mL
Remember
1000 mL = 1 L (Litre)
300 mL is 0.3 L
It depends on what you want your end units to be. If you're just looking for g/mL, then 43.5 g/50 mL = .87 g/mL or for g/L, 43.5g/.05 L = 870 g/L
To find the number of moles, first calculate the number of moles of HCl in the 50 mL solution by multiplying the volume (in liters) by the molarity. Volume in liters = 50 mL / 1000 mL/L = 0.05 L Moles = 0.05 L * 6.0 mol/L = 0.3 moles of HCl.
160 ML is technically 160,000,000 litres. However 160mL is 0.160 litres; this is probably the one you want if you are reading this out of a cookbook or something of the sort.
First, calculate the number of moles of NaOH: Moles = Molarity x Volume (L) Convert mL to L: 450 mL = 0.45 L Moles = 0.25 N x 0.45 L = 0.1125 moles of NaOH.
7,500 ml = l
1000 mL = 1 L(0.0698 L)(1000 mL / L) = 69.8 L
300 mL is 0.3 L
there are 1,000 ml's in a l making 3 l's 3,000 ml's and 1,000 l's 1,000,000,000 ml's
There are 2.8 L in 2800 mL.
0.5 L = 500 mLTo convert from L to mL, multiply by 1000.
1 L = 1,000 ml 2 L = 2,000 ml 3 L = 3,000 ml . . . 58 L = 58,000 ml 58.6 L = 58,600 mL
1000 mL = 1 L 750 mL = 0.75 L
3.048 L = 3048 mL To convert from L to mL, multiply by 1000.
1 mL = 0.001 L.
8.36 L = 8360 ml
100 mL = 0.1 L