If water is present it will dilute the sulphuric acid.
So if the sulphuric acid has a concentration 1 M , then depending on the volume of water present the concentration will be less than 1M ( < 1M).
The concentration of the acid become lower.
by using a pipette and a suction bulb
Depends on the size of your pipette. Some are volumetric and tell you the amount of fluid. Others are simply for dropping small amounts of liquid.
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.
Graduated pipettes are not as accurate as volumetric pipettes, because each graduation line is not individually calibrated, and any imperfection in the internal diameter will have a greater effect on the volume delivered. In volumetric pipettes, the diameter of the pipette where the graduation mark is located is significantly smaller because the majority of its volume is located in the bulb.
It is not recommended to blown up solutions from the pipettes. Volumetric pipettes are not blow-up.
The purpose of a volumetric pipette is to deliver a precise amount of a liquid. The label on the pipette indicates the volume delivered (e.g. 10.00 mL).
Using a pipette with air bubbles leads to errors.
Pipettes are used to transport liquids. Graduated pipettes are marks similarly to graduated cylinders, indicating different calibrated volumes. Volumetric pipettes only mark a single volume of measurement, and as such require different pipettes for different quantities.
A Mohr pipette is a type of pipette that measures the volume of dispensed liquids. It is less accurate compared to a volumetric pipette.
The purpose of a volumetric pipette is to deliver a precise amount of a liquid. The label on the pipette indicates the volume delivered (e.g. 10.00 mL).
To get a very accurate volume of hydroxylamine.
by using a pipette and a suction bulb
Depends on the size of your pipette. Some are volumetric and tell you the amount of fluid. Others are simply for dropping small amounts of liquid.
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.
Volumetric pipette.
Graduated pipettes are not as accurate as volumetric pipettes, because each graduation line is not individually calibrated, and any imperfection in the internal diameter will have a greater effect on the volume delivered. In volumetric pipettes, the diameter of the pipette where the graduation mark is located is significantly smaller because the majority of its volume is located in the bulb.
The accuracy of different types of pipettes and volumetric flasks is strictly specified by suitabe standards; also they are labelled.