1.5 L because it is .5 Liters more (1000 mL = 1 L).
1000mL is equal to 1 liter or 1 kilogram of water.
Using the ideal gas law, we can calculate the number of moles of gas present in the 15 L volume at 100°C and 1 ATM. Next, we can determine the molecular weight by dividing the given mass (68 g) by the number of moles obtained.
100 mL = 100 cc / A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
normality of A = #gram equivalent weights A divided by #litres of solutionthus: measure a gram equivalent of H2SO4 (49g) and add to 1000ml volumetric flask that has 500ml deionized distilled H2O. stopper flask, mix by swirling, open flask and fill to 1000ml mark, thoroughly mixOR1N H2SO4 = 0.5M H2SO4volumetrically measure 500ml 1M H2SO4volumetrically transfer to 1000ml volumetric flask (using DDH2O)fill to 1000ml mark with DDH2O
The patient will receive 1.67 mEq of potassium chloride per hour if 40 mEq of potassium chloride is infused in 1000ml of sodium chloride and infused over 24 hours. This is calculated by dividing the total amount of potassium chloride by the total number of hours it will run.
15L
15 L is greater by 13.6 L
Neither one is greater they are equal to each other.
10 L
Yes. There are 1000ml in a liter.
10 litres. there are 1000ml in a litre, therefore 10 litres is 10000ml which is larger than 1000ml
1l = 1000ml so both are equal
yes, 1000ml is just 1l
No, they're exactly the same as there are 1000ml in one litre
10 liters (L) is greater than 1000 milliliters (mL). This is because 1 liter is equivalent to 1000 milliliters, so 10 liters equals 10,000 milliliters. Therefore, 10L is significantly larger than 1000mL.
If my 10L you mean 10 litres, then yes, 10L is greater than 1000ml which is only 1 litre. 1L = 1000ml (milliliters). when lesser, more sensitive volumes are being measured. 1kL (kiloliters) = 1000L (litres). When greater, less sensitive volumes are being measured.
Lakh