Do you mean how many millimoles are in a mole? If so that'd be 1000. If you mean how many millimeters are in a meter, that'd be 1000. If you mean how many millimeters are in a mole, that'd be none as they're completely different units of measurement.
You can't directly compare the two. A milliliter is a unit of volume, while a mole is a unit of quantity. If you want to find out how many milliliters a mole of a given substance occupies, you'll need to use the substance's molar mass (mass/mol) and density (mass/volume).
That depends entirely on which elements that milligram contains. For example, sodium (Na) has a molar mass of 23 grams per mol. In 1 milligram of sodium there is 0.001 / 23 = 0.000043 moles, or 4.3 x 10^-5 in scientific form.
1 mole = 1000 millimoles
1 millimole = 0.001 moles
See the Related Questions link regarding metric system prefixes!
1 mol is 1000mmol
All millimeters are millimeters.
'mmol' means 'millimoles' , that is 'thousandths of a mole'. It is a symbol used in medical analysis. 1 mmol = 1/1000 moles.
7.66 X 10^5 millimols argon (1 mole argon/1000 mmol)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole Ar) = 4.61 X 10^25 atoms of argon
Yes. In either case they will be 6.02*10^23.
nano is a prefix that means 10-9, so a nanometere is 10-9 of a meter. So a nanomole will be 10-9 of a mole. so a mole is 109 nanomoles.
1 mEq=1 mmol/valence e.g.For sodium, 1 mEq=1mmol/1 (valence of sodium=1) means, 1 mmol sodium=1 mEq of sodium take for calcium,valence=2 1 1 mEq of calcium=1mmol/2=0.5 mmol of calcium
xx mmol x 1 mole/1000 mmol x 58.5 g/mole
'mmol' means 'millimoles' , that is 'thousandths of a mole'. It is a symbol used in medical analysis. 1 mmol = 1/1000 moles.
7.66 X 10^5 millimols argon (1 mole argon/1000 mmol)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole Ar) = 4.61 X 10^25 atoms of argon
mg is milligram, a unit of mass. mmol is millimole - a unit of amount of a substance. 1 mole is equal to 6.023 x 10²³ atoms (or molecules, depending on the substance). For any particular substance, a mole of the substance will have a certain mass. Take hydrogen, for example. Hydrogen exists in nature as a diatomic molecule H2. A hydrogen atom by itself has a mass of 1 gram/mole, so the molecules of hydrogen are 2 grams/mole. So if you had 1 mmol of hydrogen gas, it would be equal to 2 mg. So to answer the question, the particular substance needs to be known.
One mole is Avogadro's number of anything. If you had a mole of donuts, you'd have 6.02 x1023 donuts.
4.98mmol
6.02 ten to the power of 23
1 mol = 103 mmol Conversely, 1 mmol = 10-3 mol For example: 25 mol x 103 mmol/1 mol = 25000 mmol and, 3.2 mmol x 10-3 mol/1 mmol = 0.0032 mol
1 mmol of Kphos = 1.46 KCL
1 mMol of k3po4 = 6 mEq as phospate
Normal plasma potassium is 3.5 to 5.0 mmol/L (millimole per liter). Molecular weight expressed in grams is a mole. In case of potassium, which has a molecular weight of 39; 39 grams of it is 1 mole. Thus 39 mg of potassium is one milli mole (mmol). Their levels are usually expressed in milli moles due to many reasons. One reason is that, their numbers have important influences on osmotic activity, and simple weights in grams fail to convey this fact.
Yes. In either case they will be 6.02*10^23.