Millilitres is a unit of volume, therefore you cannot give a defniative weight without knowing what substance is being measured
you could have 110ml of lead shot, or 110ml of sugar
2007-01-16 22:50:43
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answer #1
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answered by Peppers_Ghost 7
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Well it depends, 110 ml of distilled water will weigh 110 grammes, but 110 ml of mercury a hell of a lot as will molten lead. Liquid helium will weigh a lot less. So there you go, yes and no, take your pick.
2007-01-16 23:01:32
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answer #2
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answered by rinfrance 4
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At STP, standard temperature (0C) and presure (760 mm Hg), 1000ml of distilled water weighs 1kg or 1000 grams (ain't the metric system great?) So, assuming that you are looking for the weight of water, you simple convert ml into gm. If the material is something other than water, you have to multily the density of the material (if known) by the number of ml. So:
D = density of material (in relation to water)
X = volume of material in ml
gm = DX
RC
2007-01-16 23:34:23
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The weight is entirely based on the substance. You can calculate this from scratch by using the cehmical formular and mol weights but i gues this is not some thing you want to get involved with. The only suggestion i can make is if you yahoo search the subsatnce to see if any scientist/ manufacturers have already calculated the molecular weight per ml.
2007-01-16 23:52:11
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answer #4
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answered by Mr Corky 1
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at a specific gravity of 1, 1000 litre = 1000kg (tonne).
So if 1 litre = 1000ml and 1kg = 1000 g.
Then 110ml = 110 g at sea level OK?
It will change as the density of the water changes, with where you are on the planet. But for your calc, this will be fine.
2007-01-16 23:05:22
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answer #5
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answered by S B 2
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millilitre (ml) is a unit of volume, a gramme is a unit of weight, so it would depend on the density of the item you are dealing with i.e. 110ml of water will weigh less than 110ml of gold.
If it is water, or mostly water then its easy - One ml of water weighs one gramme, so 110ml would weigh 110 grammes.
2007-01-16 22:52:21
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answer #6
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answered by Never say Never 5
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It depends on what you are measuring.
By definition 110 ml of water will weigh 110 grams.
But 110 ml of say treacle will be a bit heavier.
2007-01-17 01:36:15
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answer #7
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answered by roly 3
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Weight is the degree of gravitation pull on mass. The mass of an merchandise could be an identical everywhere interior the universe, however the burden of that merchandise might selection on diverse planets, or on the moon. although, in the international the gravitational pull on an merchandise of one hundred grams mass is one hundred grams. as a result, that's ideal to assert an merchandise weighs one hundred grams. the completely splendid fact could be, "This merchandise weight one hundred grams in the international, at sea point", yet in uncomplicated utilization it particularly is not needed to state those skills.
2016-12-12 13:22:22
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answer #8
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answered by vasim 4
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110 g if it is pure water.
If it's not water, then find its relative density number to water then multiply by 110g.
For example: A certain substance's relative density is 0.8, then 110ml of this substance weighs 110g x 0.8 = 88g.
2007-01-17 00:12:18
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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110 ml of what ? What is the density of the substance ?
2007-01-16 23:10:55
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answer #10
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answered by ag_iitkgp 7
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