1000. This is because ppm commonly means milligram per litre to a chemisty. There are 1000 micrograms per litre in 1 ppm.
30cl
A dekaliter (DL) is 10 Liters. A deciliter (dL) is one tenth of a Liter.
First, cl stands for centiliters and ml stands for milliliters. There are 100 centiliters in a liter and 1000 milliliters in a liter. Basically, this means that 2 cl is 0.02 liters and 35 ml is 0.035 liters. So, there really is only 0.015 difference between the two. Hope this helped.
The usual relation indicated by the prefix "milli": A milliliter is 1/1000 of a liter. (The last two letters of "liter" are usually spelled "re" instead of "er" in British commonwealth countries, but the meaning is the same.
The first solution is more concentrated because it contains 6 moles of H2SO4 per one liter of solution. The second solution is less concentrated because it contains 0.1 moles of H2SO4 in one liter. In equal amounts of each example, the first would have more H2SO4.
ug and mcg both means microgram there is no difference between them Although the exact symbol is µg but of extensive use of computers these days its written as ug and mcg.The conversion formula's are microgram/deciliter = microgram/liter * 0.1microgram/liter = microgram/deciliter * 10
difference between 2.5 and 3 liter engine is .5 of a liter
Yes. The equivalence between weight and volume is usually gram to millilitre. Therefore Dividing gram by a million gets you to microgram and converting millilitre to litre involves multiplying by 1000. So 1,000,000 x 1000 is a billion. i.e. parts per billion.
They are spelt differently :L
The difference is 0.2 litre.
I'm not sure, probably between 250 and 1 000 micrograms per liter, depending on the supplier.
Not newton, Nl used for normal liter
No difference at all.
0.1 liter.
No difference except that one is UK English and the other is US English
There is no difference between a US liter and a UK liter. The liter is a unit of volume that is commonly used and standardized internationally, so one liter in the US is the same as one liter in the UK.
This question doesn't make sense. This is because the term parts per million means either weight per weight i.e. micrograms per gram or milligrams per kilograms, or weight per volume, i.e. milligrams per litre or micrograms per millilitre.