A solution and a mixture.
A litre is a measurement of liquid capacity not weight.
One liter of liquid chlorine weighs approximately 1.45 kilograms.
Is that a trick question? CO2 does not have liquid phase as it goes from solid to gas
half a liter
1 liter of water weighs approximately 2.2 pounds. The weight of other liquids may vary slightly depending on their density.
A litre is a measurement of liquid capacity not weight.
it would be the solute
When a spoonful of sugar is added to half a liter of cold water, the sugar dissolves into the water, resulting in a sweetened solution. The sugar molecules break down and integrate with the water molecules, creating a homogenous mixture.
A litre is a measurement of liquid capacity not weight.
1 liter = 1000milliliters
1.0567 US liquid quarts is equivalent to 1.0000 US liquid quarts.
A liter is a unit of volume in the metric system, equivalent to 1,000 cubic centimeters. An example of a liter would be a standard bottle of water, which typically contains 1 liter of liquid. Another example could be a liter of milk or a liter of gasoline, as these are commonly sold and measured in liters.
The answers to your questions, in order, are yes and no. A liquid liter is a liquid liter, regardless of what liquid it is a liter of. However, lead is (Obviously) denser than apple juice, so it has more mass.
To dilute a liquid to 50 percent, you would need to add an equal volume of water to the original liquid volume. For example, to dilute 1 liter of liquid to 50%, you would add 1 liter of water to make a total of 2 liters at 50% concentration.
Example:4 Meters squared, 5 kiloliters. Any metric length unit squared. All metric units with the suffix "liter"
4.22 cups
No, 1 liter of a gas does not equal 1 liter of a liquid. Gases and liquids are two different states of matter with distinct properties, such as volume, shape, and density. The volume occupied by a gas is not fixed like that of a liquid, as gases will expand to fill the space available to them.