the difference in the volumes between beakers and measuring cylinders as per calibrations on them is due to different diameters of the beaker and measuring cylinder. Both the apparatus are cylindrical and for a cylinder the formula for volume is: volume = TTr2l, where r=radius, l=length. So, if the radii of a beaker and measuring cylinder are different then the length or height of the calibrations also need to change accordingly to contain the same volume of fluid.
A graduated cylinder allows you to release an amount of liquid and you can determine the amount by reading off where the meniscus sits in relation to the graduations before release and after release.
A measuring cup often only allows a fixed amount to be measured, although some have different marks, I am thinking of cooking measuring cups here. The accuracy is not so good as that of the graduated cylinder because the cup is mush wider and small errors in reading theliquid height against the marks are magnified.
A measuring cylinder is used to measure volumes, meanwhile a burette is used to dispense a known amount of a chemical.
They are different only in their shape and volume
A burette has a hole in the bottom, for one thing. In truth, the two pieces of glassware couldn't be more different.
Pipettes are designed to deliver small and very exact volumes of liquids; sometimes pipettes are metrologically checked.
They can be used to measure the volume of liquids. Sometimes, they can also be used to measure the volumes of small, insoluble solids.
Measuring cylinder
Pipette can hold a small amount of liquid but a graduate cylinder can hold more and its good for accuracy.
A micropipette is very fine pipette for measuring, transferring, or injecting very small quantities of liquid whereas a olumetric pipettes are tools for measuring precise volumes of a liquid. Pipettes are typically long tubes, open on both ends, marked to contain (or deliver) a certain volume of liquid.
A measuring pipette is used to measure specific amounts of liquid. There are many different kinds but they help you accurately measure and transfer small amounts. A transfer pipette is essentially an eye-dropper, they typically do not have measurements on them.
The pipette, as it can be used to dispense microliters [liters * 10 to the power of -6] .
A pipette (aka pipet) is generally considered a very precise instrument used for measuring exact volumes within a small degree of error. It is generally used with a pipette bulb. A beaker is similar to a measuring cup. It also measures volume but in a more approximate manner and less reliable for precise experiments
Pipette can hold a small amount of liquid but a graduate cylinder can hold more and its good for accuracy.
27 mL of liquid can be measured with a graduated cylinder, a burette or a pipette.
Precision describes the repeatability of results, i.e. whether you get the same answer each time you measure something. Used correctly, there is no reason why a measuring cylinder would be the more precise. The exception is if you are using an inappropriate size of pipette, as it's difficult to be precise near the bottom of its range. Too large a measuring cylinder could also be imprecise.
yes
A small graduated cylinder or beaker.graduated cylinderA measuring cylinder, a volumetric flask, a pipette, a burette. In the kitchen a measuring jug.The volume of a liquid can be measured by a graduated cylinder.To measure most liquids in mL you can use a graduated cylinder
Conical flask .Measuring cylinder,Reagent bottle,Condenser,Pipette,Burette,thermometer,Barometer,Forceps
A micropipette is very fine pipette for measuring, transferring, or injecting very small quantities of liquid whereas a olumetric pipettes are tools for measuring precise volumes of a liquid. Pipettes are typically long tubes, open on both ends, marked to contain (or deliver) a certain volume of liquid.
A graduated cylinder is appropriate for "normal" quantities. You may need a micro pipette for very small quantities.
Examples: analytical balance, spectrophotometer, titrimeter, coulometer, emission spectrometer etc.
A measuring pipette is used to measure specific amounts of liquid. There are many different kinds but they help you accurately measure and transfer small amounts. A transfer pipette is essentially an eye-dropper, they typically do not have measurements on them.
The pipette, as it can be used to dispense microliters [liters * 10 to the power of -6] .
The glass with measurements that is attached to a pipette is called a graduated cylinder.