
PABLO L.
asked 07/07/23how many mmol are in 1 mL of sulfuric acid
1 Expert Answer
J.R. S. answered 07/07/23
Ph.D. University Professor with 10+ years Tutoring Experience
If you have commercially available concentrated H2SO4 (sulfuric acid), it is considered to be 18.0 M, or 18.0 moles/liter. If this is the concentration of your sulfuric acid, then we can do the following conversions:
18.0 moles / liter x 1000 1 liter/ 1000 mls = 0.0180 moles / ml
0.0180 moles / ml x 1000 mmol / mole = 18.0 mmols / ml
If the concentration of the H2SO4 is something other than 18.0 M, then you can use the same approach to find the mmols in 1 ml.
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