Water has a density of 1 g/mL. To convert volume and mass, you can use the equation d=m/v, or density = mass / volume. Water is a special case, since scientists designed the metric system to make this calculation easy, one mL of water has a mass of exactly one gram.
We need to know what the stuff is - if it's water, then water has a mass of around 1 kg per litre, so 20 g is 20/1000 kg, so the volume of water is 20/1000 litres, 20 ml (millilitres).
Anything denser than water will need a smaller volume to make up 20 g (most solids), anything less dense will need more volume to make up 20 g (some liquids, gases).
Tip: Don't change the spelling of units of measure! It's metres and litres, O.K.?
One liter of water has a mass of almost exactly one kilogram, so one milliliter of water has a mass of one gram. In other words, the volume of one gram of water is one milliliter.
20 drops of water is a volume of 1 milliliter or 0.0338 fluid ounces.
At 4°C, 10 grams of water takes up 10 mL of volume.
10g of pure water has a volume of 10ml, at STP
1 cc (at 4 degrees centigrade).
10cm3
Water
q = mC∆T214 cal = (10g)(1cal/g/deg)(∆T)∆T = 214 cal/(10g)(1cal/g/deg) = 21.4 degreesSo, the temperature of the water will increase by 21.4 degrees
Density = (mass) / (volume) = (44 / 106) = 0.4151g/cc (rounded)
10g = 10ml of water, other liquids may vary
first of all its should be cm3 or ml 10g/10.8ml = 0.9259 g/ml
Water
10g
Density is mass/volume so 10g/15cm^3 = .667 g/cm^3
The liquid water has the smallest volume. The steamy gaseous water vapor has the largest volume ... at least at atmospheric pressure ... and the volume of the ice is the intermediate one.
Need more information too answer. Chloroform has greater molar mass.
No, the 10g piece of aluminum and 10g piece of iron would not have the same volume. Different materials have different densities, so even if they have the same mass, their volumes will be different.
Density is just mass per volume (usually g/mL). Take the specified mass, and then just divide it by the specified volume. For example, if you have 10g of a liquid with volume of 5mL, its density is (10g)/(5mL) = 2g/mL.
D=M/V what is te\he volume
q = mC∆T214 cal = (10g)(1cal/g/deg)(∆T)∆T = 214 cal/(10g)(1cal/g/deg) = 21.4 degreesSo, the temperature of the water will increase by 21.4 degrees
10g of jelly beans
Density = (mass) / (volume) = (44 / 106) = 0.4151g/cc (rounded)
10 cubic centimeters (cc) equals 10 milliliters (ml) or the volume equivalent to 10 grams of pure water.