There isn't enough to answer your question. You've given a volume, but haven't given a weight or amount of moles. I also do not know if there is a relevance to your including the graduated cylinder. A solution should always be made up in a volumetric flask.
To prepare 100ml of 70% Ethanol, measure 70ml of 95% ethyl alcohol in a graduated cylinder and add 30ml of distilled water. To prepare 100ml of 70% Ethanol, measure 70ml of 95% ethyl alcohol in a graduated cylinder and add 30ml of distilled water.
(100ml)(0.125M NaOH) = (500ml)(X Molarity) Molarity = 0.025 M
It really depends on how much you are measuring. Like over 100ml and I'd stick to a large graduated cylinder. Under 1 ml (possibly up to 5ml even) and you could keep adjusting a micropipette until all the sample is just taken up for an estimate. 5-100, you could use a graduated cylinder for an estimate and calibrate the graduated cylinder against a burette
Put 0.9g of Nacl in a beaker and add distilled water to make up to 100ml. that is 0.9% Nacl (Normal saline Solution) From Tade Olubunmi Ademola
Add 2g of bentonite in 20 proportions in 100ml of 1% w/v solution of sodium lauryl sulphate into a 100ml graduated measuring cylinder. Allow each portion to settle before adding the next portion. Then let it stand for around 2 hours. If the sedimentation volume is 24ml or more, the sample passes the test.
Because the smaller the cylinder the more accurate the measurement.
100ml
a graduated cylinder
It depends on the smallest unit. For a 10mL graduated cylinder, the smallest unit is usually 0.1mL while a 100mL graduated cylinder is usually 1mL. Therefore: 10mL= (0.1mL/2) is an uncertainty of 0.05mL 100mL=(1mL/2) is an uncertainty of 0.5 mL Another way to think of it is that there are ten 10mL cylinders in an 100mL cylinder, so the 100mL cylinder has an uncertainty of ten times the 10mL. Hope this helped!
To prepare 100ml of 70% Ethanol, measure 70ml of 95% ethyl alcohol in a graduated cylinder and add 30ml of distilled water. To prepare 100ml of 70% Ethanol, measure 70ml of 95% ethyl alcohol in a graduated cylinder and add 30ml of distilled water.
(100ml)(0.125M NaOH) = (500ml)(X Molarity) Molarity = 0.025 M
To find the volume of an irregular object such as a rock, you have to use displacement. If you place the object in a graduated cylinder filled with water, the volume of the object is equal to the amount of water that the object displaces. For example, if a graduated cylinder is filled with 100mL of water, and you place an object such as a rock and the water rises from 100mL to 106mL, then the volume of the rock is 6.
You need to buy a desk that will fit in a very small space. Before you shop, would you use a measurement tool just estimate the space? Explain.How could you use a 100-ml graduated cylinder to measure 100mL?What two tools are used to measure length? When would you use each one?
Commercialized bleach or chlorox is actually 100 percent pure concentrate. If you want to prepare 2% bleach in a 100mL container, just pour 2mL of concentrated bleach/chlorox in a graduated cylinder and add 98mL of distilled water or if you want to prepare 5% in a 1,000mL container just pour 5mL of pure concentrate bleach and add 95mL of distilled water.
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It really depends on how much you are measuring. Like over 100ml and I'd stick to a large graduated cylinder. Under 1 ml (possibly up to 5ml even) and you could keep adjusting a micropipette until all the sample is just taken up for an estimate. 5-100, you could use a graduated cylinder for an estimate and calibrate the graduated cylinder against a burette
Put 0.9g of Nacl in a beaker and add distilled water to make up to 100ml. that is 0.9% Nacl (Normal saline Solution) From Tade Olubunmi Ademola