QF = V / t
QF = volumetric flow rate in mL per hr
V = volume in mL
t = time in hr
t = 1.5 hr
V = 250 mL
QF = ( 250 mL ) / ( 1.5 hr ) = 167 mL per hr <--------------------
2.88ml
Slowly add drip, by drip.....from your saltwater aqarium . I use an air tube tied in a knot so it drips about 1 drip per secound. Drip directly from your aquarim into atleast a 2 gallon contaier . Put your fish and the water its in in your bucket. Then let drip on him until your contaier is full. When full pour half the water back into your aqarium. Simply let it fill up again . By the time its full your fish should be fully accimated
Hi im a nursing student so i can answer this question. A macro-giving set has the drip rate of 20dmp (drops per minute) A micro giving set has the drip rate of 60dpm (drops per minute) hope this helps
The answer depends on whether you are measuring the drops from a slow drip or the number of drops of water in an ocean!
Medication calculations - especially in paediatrics as each dose is calculated according to weight. IV drip rates. Working out how many of each different pill quantity will add up to what the Dr prescribed...
Well lets see as a RN you need to know dosages when administering medicine to patients. If you get the dosage wrong you could kill someone. So math and numbers are very important to someone who wants to become an RN. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Calculate patients intake and output of fluids. Keep inventories of ward stock. Provide statistical returns for your employer. In epidemiological studies eg incidence of disease per 1000 of population. You use this to make forecasts so that you can plan your service provision. Calculate body mass index and calories. Calculate expected dates of delivery in pregnant women. Percentage of burns. Concentration of sterilising fluids. Calculate percentages of medical gases eg how many litres per min of oxygen do you give through a 28% oxygen mask. As the first person who answered this question said, medicine dosages have to be worked out carefully. In the UK a few years ago, a doctor meant to give a prem baby 0.1mg of morphine, but he made a mistake and gave 10mg instead, and the baby died. The sums can be complicated, so I'll give you an example: You have an ampoule containing 500mg of a drug. You have to mix it with 10ml sterile water and give 375mg over 6 hours in a drip that contains 1000ml dextrose 5%. The drip dropper drips at 30 drops per ml. So you work out how much 375mg is when drawing up the medicine in the ampoule. You discard the excess. Put the 375mg in the 10000ml dextrose. Work out how many mg of drug are in every ml of the dextrose. Work out how fast the drip has to run to give the dose in 6 hours. And there are lots more uses of maths in nursing.
the word drip is a verb and you have to use like " I Dripped, You drip, it dripped, its dripping"..etc.
(water is dripping) drip "teki" (saline drip) drip tenteki
When water is leaking in droplets from a faucet, it is dripping.
It can be (e.g. dripping water). But it can also be a verb or noun. It is the present participle of the verb "to drip."
Drip wax is just used for dripping on someone during play; votives are usually for decoration but can be used for dripping too.
The drip has hardened.
Dripping may be an adjective (dripping faucets) but not an adverb. It is the present participle of the verb (to drip) and may be a noun, adjective, or participial (e.g. dripping from the tank).
No, it's the present participle of the verb "drip".
Do the liter as a 1000cc and the hours in minutes (9x60=540) and divide that and then x the drip factor. So, it would be 1000 divided by 540 x 15= 27.7
I. Hope so because my window conditioner use to drip but recently has stopped dripping but most likely it is not good if the unit does not drip.
it is dripping : Það er að leka correct answer= leka or dropi
There is no way to answer that as we don't know how fast it is dripping. It may fill a cup in 5 minutes or 4 hours, so how can we tell.