There are many different types of sugar, but I will presume you mean glucose, C6H12O6. Glucose has a molecular mass of 180 g/mol.
12 g . 1 mol . 6.02 x 1023 molecules = 4.01 x 1022 molecules of glucose.
180g 1 mol
This was a question in a AS Physics text book. The answer is 1x10^15m (1 times 10 to the power of 15 meters)
EDIT:
The volume of a grain of sugar is not one quadrillion meters as suggested above.
It is more closely approximated as 1.6x10^-11 m^3
(16 cubic picometers)
It all depends on the size of the grain of sugar. Since the grain of sugar is three dimensional, one has to take this into account. This is more an engineering question, but I had time to check out some figures through the Engineeringtoolbox website. A micron is one millionth of a meter. There are 54400 microns in an inch. A guestament would be between 40 and 4000 micron. Check out engineertoolbox for more scientific assistance.
A micron is a measure of length, whereas a grain is a measure of weight.
Your question is like asking " how many inches is a pound of potatoes "
There is no logical answer to this.
a single grain of sugar contains about 1 800 000 000 000 000 000 sugar particles hope dis helps
the mass of granulated is hard to find you will have to find the base first
It can vary greatly from few hundred to few thousand
40 000 000 molecules
about 50 sugar grams.
50000000
275
10 Microns.
109 microns 1.000.000.000 microns
One piece of sugar is a grain, which is also the same for salt. E.g., a grain of sugar or a grain of salt.
I assume you mean, how many microns in 0.0015mm. Well there are 1000 microns in a millimetre. In order to convert mm to microns, you have to multiply by 1000. 0.0015mmx1000 is 1.5 microns.
914400 microns
1mm is 1000 microns
1000 microns
0 grams
There are 1000 microns in a mm. There are 5000 microns in 5 mm
ahh really depends. you have to count the brown sugar grain by grain. normally when im doing this i listen to the song "brown sugar" by the rolling stones.
2 microns