100 ml of water is 100 grams
In water: 55 g/100 mL (at 20 °C); 128.3 g/100 mL (at 100 °C) . Solubility in other solvents: highly soluble in pyridine, nitrobenzene; 4.1 g/100 mL (acetone); 17 g/100 mL (methanol); 2.5 g/100 mL (ethanol).
Density = Mass/Volume = 25.0/100 g/mL = 0.25 g/mL
It's soluble but not very soluble. You can dissolve 2.17 g/100 mL at 25 °C, 18.0 g/100 mL at 80 °C and 67.0 g/100 mL at 100 °C
The answer is 0,065 g.
The mass of 100 mL of a substance depends on its density. You would need to know the density of the substance to calculate the mass. Multiplying the volume (100 mL) by the density (in g/mL) will give you the mass in grams.
Density is calculated as mass divided by volume. In this case, the mass is 1350 g and the volume is 100 ml. Converting 100 ml to cubic centimeters (1 ml = 1 cm^3), the density of mercury is 13.5 g/cm^3.
yes it would, 120 g of ethyl alcohol would be 96 ml.
At 0°C, 120 g of sodium nitrate is soluble in 100 mL of water.
This is not a proper conversion. Milliliters (mL or ml) and liters (L) are measures of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
The concentration of the solution is 62.5 g/100ml. This is calculated by dividing the mass of solute (25g) by the volume of solution (40 ml) and then multiplying by 100 to express the concentration in grams per 100 ml.
That is approximately 105 ml
The density is 100/5 = 20 g/ml .That is some unusual and wonderful stuff you have there.The two most dense elements are-- osmium . . . 22.59-- iridium . . . . 22.56Also, the density of gold is 19.3 .