(Micrograms per litre)/(gram molecular weight of solute) = (micromoles per litre).
It depends on the density of the liquid. For water, whose density is 1, each gram is one milliliter. One kg is a liter. If the liquid is heavier, like glycerin, whose density is about 2.5, then each milliliter of it wil weight 2.5 grams, one liter of it will weight 2.5kg, or the other way around, one gram of glycerin contains 1/2.5=0.4ml of glicerin, or 1 kg of it can be put in a 400 ml bottle.
You cannot. The problem here is you have weight per area and you want to convert to weight per volume. You need a third dimension to the area to calculate this.
In order to convert a microliter per liter to a mililiter per liter, just divide by 1,000.
mpg x 0.2642 = miles per liter
830 to 900 grams per liter
(Micrograms per litre)/(gram molecular weight of solute) = (micromoles per litre).
0.54 kg / litre
Given that a liter of water does weight about a kilogram, there would be a million milligrams of water per liter, so yes, one milligram per liter does work out to be one part per million (ppm).
Approx 9.1 newtons.
Only if you mean water, you can say 1 liter of water weighs one kilogram.
It depends on the density of the liquid. For water, whose density is 1, each gram is one milliliter. One kg is a liter. If the liquid is heavier, like glycerin, whose density is about 2.5, then each milliliter of it wil weight 2.5 grams, one liter of it will weight 2.5kg, or the other way around, one gram of glycerin contains 1/2.5=0.4ml of glicerin, or 1 kg of it can be put in a 400 ml bottle.
You cannot. The problem here is you have weight per area and you want to convert to weight per volume. You need a third dimension to the area to calculate this.
formality is the number of formula weight units of solute per liter of solution
The molarity of a solution is the number of moles of a solute per liter of its solution. The normality of a solution is the number of gram equivalent weight of a solute per liter of its solution. As I said before, and precisely, Molarity is moles of solute per VOLUME of solution!
The density of glycerin is about 1.26 grams per cubic centimeter at room temperature.
obviously, specifics depend on the specifics of the question, but generally, adding weight will decrease fuel efficiency.