3681.8mg
There are approximately 0.05 teaspoons in 0.25 grams of liquid medication.
it would have 50grams in it
Yes.
To solve this, we will figure out how many grams there are per litre. To do this, we will divide the overall amount of litres 350 grams goes into by 350, so we are dividing 350 by 10,000. This answer is 0.035. We will then multiply 0.035 (how many grams needed for one litre) by 3300, to get how many are needed for that many litres, which gives us 115.5 grams. 115.5 grams are needed for 3300 litres if 250 grams are needed for 10,000 litres.
To calculate the mass of medication in the solution, multiply the volume of the solution (500 ml) by the concentration of the medication (10%). Convert the percentage to a decimal by dividing by 100 (10% = 0.10). So, 500 ml x 0.10 = 50 grams of medication in 500 ml of a 10% solution.
To produce 1 mole of urea, 1 mole of carbon dioxide is needed. The molar mass of urea is 60 grams/mol, and the molar mass of carbon dioxide is 44 grams/mol. Therefore, to produce 125 grams of urea, 125 grams/60 grams/mol = 2.08 moles of urea is needed. This means 2.08 moles of carbon dioxide is needed, which is 2.08 moles * 44 grams/mol = 91.52 grams of carbon dioxide needed.
Please reread the question that you are trying to answer one more time. I would assume that it was asking you to get 2 grains of medication, not grams. The answer then would be 182 capsules. If it was for grams, it would be 182,000 capsules.
0.2 gram
200
36.267kg/h
Metric units are wonderful in that conversions are simply exponents of ten. 350 milligrams is .35 grams, because 1 milligram is .001 gram.
16,45 g nitrogen are needed.