The two are incompatible; a litre is a current volume measurement and a pound is an obsolete mass measurement.
0.454 litres, approx.
Liters
A liter measures volume where a pound is a measure of weight. You would need the density of whatever you wanted to convert to figure this out.
At standard temperature and pressure (STP), one mole of any ideal gas occupies 22.4 liters. To find the number of moles of ammonia gas (NH₃) required to fill a volume of 50 liters, you can use the formula: moles = volume (liters) / volume per mole (liters/mole). Therefore, the calculation is 50 liters / 22.4 liters/mole = approximately 2.24 moles of NH₃ are needed.
Figure 1 gallon of milk to a pound of cheese, plus or minus.
The molar mass of ammonia (NH3) is 17 g/mol. Therefore, one mole of ammonia weighs 17 grams. Since one liter of gas at STP (standard temperature and pressure) contains 22.4 liters per mole, this means that a liter of ammonia gas would weigh 17 grams.
In a day, a camel drinks over 2 liters of water.
1
You can not equate units of volume and weight directly.
There is 1 pound in a pound.
There are 6.02x10^23 molecules in one mole of anything.