Want this question answered?
Slightly dirty water should not affect the setting time of powdered dehydrated gypsum, but would affect the quality.
There are several types of plaster...so it all depends on the type of plaster you use. Lime plaster...may work...dry plaster is what they use for walls and stuff...maybe if the temp is very low it may work but I think plaster is flammable to an extent
By definition, it weighs 50 grams. A litre of water weighs a kilogram.
Also 10 grams.
~58 If iridium has a density of 22.42 g/cm3, 1300 grams of iridium would displace 1300/22.42 grams of water (as water has a density of 1 g/cm3). The shape of the iridium is irrelevant.
Ratio water : plaster = 45 ml : 100 g You need to find how many lots of 100g are in 250 g and that tells you how many lots of 45 ml you need: lots required = 250g / 100g → need 45 ml × 250g / 100g = 45 ml × 2.5 = 112.5 ml of water.
3 grams
43.2 grams of water
* 50 grams of salt
169.8 grams KBr
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
The answer depends on the temperature, but at room temperature (20 deg C), 100 ml of water would have a mass of 99.82 grams.
gypsum plaster does not burn or catch fire. It is essentially rock.
69
When the water froze into ice it was expanding (thermal expanision) causing the 100 grams of ice to have a greater volume than 100 grams of water!
Depending on what the plaster surface damage is to the pool, it really is pretty easy to repair the plaster on your pool. You just need a chisel, or a small angle grinder if you are really handy, a hammer, a trowel, some water and a sponge. they sell pool patch kits for all the pool surfaces. look for pool plaster patch kits and you will find an easy to use solution.
At standard temperature and pressure, ml = grams for water, so at STP, 134.63 ml of water = 134.63 grams.