Chlorine is a gas. Its density depends on pressure, temperature and volume of the container.
water density (at standard temp of approx 25C and pressure of 1 atm; "STP") 1 gram per cubic centimeter, or 1 gram per milliliter (density of H2O vs T: http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_water.htm)methylene chloride density, same conditions, 1.3266 grams per cubic centimeter, or 1.3266 grams per milliliter
the molar mass of sodium hydroxide is 40g/mol mike
53.3 kJ
5.32 grams per cubic centimetre.
1.44 grams per cubic centimeter
1.38 grams/milliliter
No. Density is measured in grams per cubic centimeter, sometimes written as grams per milliliter.
yes
Density of ice at 0 degrees Celsius is 916.8 grams per cubic centimeter or milliliter. The density of fresh water is dependant on the temperature: At 3.98 degrees Celsius the density is 0.999975 grams per milliliter. At 100 degrees Celsius the density is 0.958.35 grams per milliliter.
I assume the correct units for the density is 3.14 grams per milliliter. So if you have 93.5 grams of a substance with a density of 3.14 grams per milliliter, then you divide the mass by the density to find volume. 93.5 grams/3.14 grams/ml = 29.77 ml
.703g/ml
That's a unit of density.
About 1.83.
3.7 grams/milliliter x 25 milliliters = 92.5 grams
0.94 g/mL
0.66g/ml
Density = mass/volume so it is 3435/2.25 = 1526.66... grams per litre = 1.5266... g per ml.