The density of water (at 4°C) is 1g/mL, so its mass in grams is always equal to its volume in millilitres. (This also holds true for kilograms/litres, tonnes/cubic metres, and approximately for pounds/pints).
It is confusing making comparisons between Pounds and Pints because PINTS are FLUID OUNCES which are Volumes. It is important not to be confused between FLUID Ounces , and WEIGHT Ounces. However it is a fact that UK 1Pint= 20 Fluid Ounce (approx) and because 1 UK Gallon of water weights 10 Pound, then 1 UK Pint weighs 10 divided by 8 which equals 1.25 Pound which just happens to be 20 Weight Ounces.
To be precise, 1 Fluid Ounce Water occupies 31.25 ml and therefore weighs 31.25 gram. BUT 1 ounce WEIGHT = 28.3 gram. This real difference between FLUID Ounce and WEIGHT comes about because a UK Gallon of water is not exactly 10 Pound Weight and a UK Pint is not precisely 20 Fluid Ounce.
The mass of one milliliter of H2O is 1 gram.
because the density equals one gm/cc or one gm/ml
That's only true if you happen to be talking about water.
Millilitres are units of volume and grams are units of mass or weight. They cannot be converted into each other.
It depends! The ml is a unit of volume and the gram is a unit of mass. 100 grams of water would equal 100 ml, but 100 grams of lead would equal about 8.82 ml. This is all down to something called density and density's units are often grams per ml. How heavy something is for the space that it occupies.
100 ml (milliliters) is equal to 6.763 tablespoons.
Yes, since water's density is 1g/ml then 100 g of water does equal 100 ml, but this is not true for every substance. it depends on its density ( Density*volume=mass)
Solute X is soluble in water
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 100 milliliters of pure water weigh 100 grams. Forget syrup or oil. For that calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
That is 100 ml.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 100 milliliters of pure water weigh 100 grams.
Millilitres are units of volume and grams are units of mass or weight. They cannot be converted into each other.
If you have pure water, standard temperature, and standard pressure,then 100 milliliters of water has 100 grams of mass.(Note: 'milliliters', not 'millimeters'.)
I know why a lemon floats on water: the weight of a lemon is less than that of an equal volume of water. Let's throw some numbers out here, although they're ones I just made up to show you what's happening: 100 milliliters of water weighs 100 grams. The lemon you have has a total volume of 120 milliliters, but it weighs 100 grams. When you put the lemon in the water, it will displace 100 milliliters of water, gaining equilibrium. Since the lemon's volume is 120 milliliters, 20 milliliters of it are going to be out of the water. In other words, it will float. If the weight of the lemon was 100 grams and the lemon's volume was 100 milliliters, the whole lemon would be underwater since the displacement and the weight would be the same. And if the weight was 120 grams but the volume 100 milliliters, the lemon would sink since the water wouldn't be able to support the weight of the lemon.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 0.1 milliliters of pure water weigh 0.1 grams or 100 milligrams.
The answer depends on the temperature, but at room temperature (20 deg C), 100 ml of water would have a mass of 99.82 grams.
It depends on what you are trying to measure. Water has a density of 1, so 800 grams of water is 800 milliliters. But for other substances you need to know the density to convert the two measurements.
100 ml of water is 100 grams
Teaspoons are (in Europe) defined as 5ml (five milliliters). So there are twenty teaspoons of water in one deciliter and that weighs exactly 100 grams.
100 grams of water is approximately 20 teaspoons