Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1000 mg = 1 g. 1000 mL = 1 L. so 0.0156 g/L = 0.0156 mg/mL, the two factors of 1000 cancel. Yes, the molar mass of chromium is 51.9961 g/mol (or some rounded off version) Flag. Unregistered.
03-30-2006, 02:18 PM. Re: mg to mg/ml. If you want 10 mg of powder per ml of solvent, then: 250 mg / 10 mg/ml = 25 ml. So you would need 25 ml of solvent. You came up with the correct answer, but you came up with it in a weird way. 10 mg/ml is not 1%, and 1% of 250 is 2.5 not 25.
Re: mg to ml ?! by Robert Fogt on 03/23/05 at 01:24:55 Searching with Google, I found that flaxseed oil has a density of 0.93 to 0.94 grams/milliliter That means 1 milliliter weighs 0.93 to 0.94 grams. In your case, you have 1000 milligrams (1 gram) and want to know the milliliters, so you multiply by 1/0.93 or 1/0.94 1 gram * 1/0.93 = 1.08 ...
Welcome to OnlineConversion.com. mg to ml. mg to ml. by Sandi Hardman on 08/19/05 at 13:00:48. My project is: I used to buy puppy wormer in tablet form and 1 tablet = 22.7 mg, now I have liquid of the same medicine that said it was for puppies/dogs, but it tells me how to give dosage to a pony or horse in ml. and I don't know how to convert.
The molar mass is 296.40 g/mol. 50 mg/mL x 1 mol/296.40 g = 168.69 µmol/mL I'm not sure how you would measure this but 100 pmol x 1 mL/168.69 µmol = 592.8 nL of the stock diluted to 10 mL I would make an intermediate solution, 1µL of stock diluted to 1 mL, this intermediate would be 168.69 nmol/mL. I would take 1 uL of intermediate and ...
Originally posted by Unregistered. please convert 1000mg/dL to ng/ml. 1000 mg/dL x 1000000 ng/mg x 1 dL/100 mL = 10^7 ng/mL. (but better written as 10 mg/mL to avoid overly large numbers) Flag. Unregistered.
then take 1 µL of intermediate stock and diluting to 100 mL (10 5 to 1). However, you could use any two factors that multiply out to 13 x 10 6. Or you could dilute 1 µL to 1 mL (1000:1) then dilute 8 µL of intermediate stock to 104 mL (13000 to 1) (ignoring or discarding the extra 4 mL, but it keeps measurements simple)
There are lots of ways of working this out, here is one approach: Your stock: You have 10 mg in 1 ml, so 10/270.24millimoles = 0.037millmoles (37µmoles), in 1mL (1000µL). Your Dilution: You need 3mL/1000mL x 30µmoles = 0.09µmoles. The amount of stock containing 0.09 µmoles is 1000µL x 0.09/37 = 2.5µL.
Multiplying both numerator and denominator by 1000, 400 ng/mL is also 400 µg/L, or 0.4 mg/L. People have a few liters of blood, so a bunch of pills, probably at least 10, maybe 20. I would think the coroner could give a MUCH better estimate than my guess .
Re: 60 mg=?ml. Originally posted by Unregistered View Post. How many ml's is equivilant to 60 mg. Your question regarding ....how many mls in 60 mg? it depends on the bottle concentration. If the bottle say 10mg/ ml, meaning 60 mg = 6 mls .