A graduated cylinder is a type of glass container used in laboratories for measuring volume. A 10 mL graduated cylinder can only hold up to 10 mL of liquid.
when using a smaller, accurate amount of a substance
Up to 10 millilitres of liquid.
10ml
Also 10 mL
You need a simple (class A or B) graduated pipet.
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!
ml
A pipette is good for liquid amounts that are less than 10 mL. Anything bigger, you should use a graduated cylinder
To measure a volume of liquid, laboratory instruments known as glassware are used. The commonly used glassware are burettes, pipettes, volumetric flasks and graduated cylinders.
10 ML
10 ML
The meniscus. Make sure to always measure at that point. If your graduated cylinder/pipet/etc has the meniscus at 10 mL then the glassware has 10 mL in it.
A graduated cylinder
25 ml ~ +/- 0.1 mL 10 mL ~ +- 0.01 mL 25 ml ~ +/- 0.1 mL 10 mL ~ +- 0.01 mL
ml. or milliliters.
Milliliter, or mL.
In your large graduated cylinder, measure 20 ml of water from a beaker It might take some minutes to do it.
You need a graduated cylinder.
The level of the liquid in the cylinder rose by 10 mL when the rock was submerged in the liquid.
Either a 100 mL or a 50 mL The 50 mL is better because you can see the meniscus against the graduated lines of the cylinder better.
A 100 mL graduated cylinder is graded in divisions of 1 mL giving results which have 2 significant figures. Cylinders for measuring up to 10 mL to have divisions at 0.1 mL, so again giving 2 sig figs.2 digits. .