That is approximately 50 ml
You need 1,5 g sugar for 50 mL water.
saturated
For a concentration of 0,6 g sugar/1000ml: 15 ml for 150 mL.
The solubility of sucrose is 2 000 g/L at 25 oC. For a teaspoon of 5 mL and and a sugar density of 1,5 g/cm3 the teaspoon contain 7,5 g sugar.
Approx. 50 g.
mL is a measure of volumeg is a measure of massYou need to know the density of the substance you are asking about if you want to convert between volume and mass:Volume (mL) = mass (g) / density (g/mL)(To make a guess you might assume the density of Gr.Yog. to be 1.0 g/ml:then the answer is 50 mL)
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
This is not a valid conversion; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass while milliliters (mL or ml) measure volume.
Millilitres and micrograms are not directly comparable as the first is a unit of volume and the other is a unit of mass. For water, 1 ml = 1 g. 1 mg = 0.001 g so 50 mg = 0.05 g. Therefore, 50 mg = 0.05 ml.
That is approximately 105 ml
That is approximately 1/5 cup
When sugar and water are mixed, the sugar dissolves in the water, therefore water is the solvent and sugar is the solute.