200 liters is closest.
3\100= 3% so 3%\100ml=3ml ?? so 3%\1000ml=30ml??? so 3%\950ml= 29.5ml
1 ml = 1cm3So, 100ml = 100cm3
Yes. 35 mL is the same as 0.35 dL. The same as 1 m has 10 dm, 100 cm and 1000 mm, 1L has 10 dL, 100 cL and 1000 mL. 10 dL=1000mL, and if you delete one zero in each side, you get 1 dL=100mL.
0.10 l
20 ml
1000mL = 1L500mL = 1/2L100mL = 1/10LIt's simple. Just divide by 10!!!
No. Firstly length and volume cannot be directly compared. Secondly even if you meant millilitres, as there are 1000ml in a litre, 1 litre would be 1000ml, not 100ml. 100ml is 0.1 litres.
The solubility of NaCl at room temperature is 359g/L. (Wikipedia)To find out how much will dissolve in 100mL, first convert 359g/L to g/mL.359g/L x 1L/1000mL = 0.359g/mLThen multiply 0.359g/mL by 100mL0.359g/mL x 100mL = 35.9gYou should expect 35.9 grams of NaCl to dissolve in 100mL of water.
3/10 of 100cc. Also, since 1cc=1mL, 30cc=30mL which is 30% of 100mL or 3% of 1000mL. Since 1000mL=1 Liter, 30cc=.03Liter. Had enough of this?
204g of sugar is the maximum amount of sugar that will dissolve into 100mL of water.
Measure three different masses of sugar and add enough water to each sample to equal the same volume of water, such as 100mL or 1000mL. Do not just simply add 100 or 1000mL. You add water to each sample up to the volume you want. So you actually will not add the same amount of water to each sample.
1000ml equals 1 litre 10cl equals 1 litre So 100ml equals 1 centilitres
3\100= 3% so 3%\100ml=3ml ?? so 3%\1000ml=30ml??? so 3%\950ml= 29.5ml
100 mL = 100 cc / A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
No, a litre is 1000mL. mL stands for millilitres, and although milli is like million, when it comes to measurements it is always thousandths (like millimetres).
1 litre is 1000ml therefore 15g per 100ml would equal 150g per 1000ml. So 3 Litres would contain 450g.
42 calories in 100ml