the nano part is ok to stay the same. to convert moles to grams you multiply by the molecular weight of the compound. Then if it is in litres already, divide by 1000 to get into millilitres (if in mls, leave it alone)
0.338 grams per mL equals 0.338 kg per liter.
0.9kL equals 900000mL (@1 million mL per kL).
To convert milliliters (ml) to decaliters (daL), you need to divide by 100. So, to convert 1 ml to daL, you would have 0.01 daL.
grams per litre is the same as grams over litres kilograms per millilitre is the same as kilograms over millilitres Convert the numerator and denominator separately and then separate out the numbers: 1 kg = 1000 g → 1 g = 0.001 kg 1 l = 1000 ml → g/l = (0.001 kg)/(1000 ml) = (0.001/1000) kg/ml = 0.000001 kg/ml = 1/1000000 × kg/ml Therefore to convert g/l to kg/ml divide by 1,000,000.
To convert grams to milliliters, you need to know the density of the substance. The formula to convert grams to milliliters is: mass (g) = volume (mL) x density (g/mL). Therefore, you would need to know the density of the substance (in g/mL) in order to convert 0.375g to mL.
To convert nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml) to micromoles per liter (um), you can use the conversion factor of 1 ng/ml 2.78 x 10-6 umol/L.
1 nanogram (ng) = 0.001 microgram (ug). 1 milliliter (mL) = 0.01 deciliter (dL) (ng / mL) * (ug / ng) * (mL / dL) = ug / dL Therefore, 1 ng / mL = (1 ng / mL) * (0.001 ug / ng) * (mL / 0.01 dL) = 0.1 ug / dL
To convert from micrograms per gram (ug/g) to nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL), you need the density of the substance in grams per milliliter. Once you have the density, you can multiply 7 ug/g by the density to convert to ng/mL because 1 ug = 1000 ng and 1 g = 1 mL.
that depends on the liquid in water it would be (5ng)/mg because 1ml=1mg for water
There are 10 nanomoles in a 10 micromolar stock solution due to the conversion factor: 1 micromolar = 1,000 nanomoles/mL.
It is supposed to be 50 nanograms per ml in a standard test
The question, as stated, cannot be answered sensibly. A naongram per microlitre is a measure of density, with dimensions [ML-3]. A nanogram [alone] is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
0,3 IFU/ml
0.005 ug/ml
That depends on what's in the ml. If it's an empty ml, then there are no nanograms in it at all. If it's full of water, it has about 1,000,000,000 nanograms of mass in it. If the ml is full of gold, then there are about 19,000,000,000 nanograms of mass in it.
2.5 g per mL = 2,500 g per Litre.
0.00022