higher the volume of
Jessica Cimaroli Lab 1 Purpose To learn about the International System of Units (SI) system and how it relates to measurements in mass, length, temperature, volume, and time. To learn about the common techniques and laboratory equipment used to make SI measurents. Procedure Length Measurements 1. Gather the metric ruler, CD or DVD, key
The Relationship Between Density and Sugar Content Danielle Shaub Partners: Emily Alexander, Bill Dempsey, Shayla Ho Lab Performed 03/11/15 & Lab Report 04/07/15 Abstract: Using solutions of sugar and water alongside cola, density and percent sugar can be related. The purpose of this lab is to discover how and with what benefit these factors can be related. Using assorted measurements and the standard curve of the calculated densities and percentages of sugar solutions, it was learned that cola
Date of Experiment: February 5, 2013 Report Submitted: February 11, 2013 Title: Laboratory Techniques and Measurements Purpose: To gain knowledge about the International System of Units and use it to determine volume, mass, length, and temperature. To learn to use these forms of measurement to determine density and concentration, as well as learning basic lab equipment to create dilutions. Procedure: Part 1: After reading the various information given, I gathered
The density of water is its mass divided by its volume. In this case, the mass of water was determined by subtracting the final mass of the glassware with water by the initial mass of the glassware without water. The volume was determined by observing closely which line (marked on the sides of each glassware) the water reached and reporting the most precise measurement. Based on the class data, the average densities of water and its standard deviations were: 50-mL beaker – avg: 0.90 g/mL, stand dev:
the International System of Units and common laboratory equipment and techniques. To learn how to determine volume, mass, length, and temperature of a wide variety of items. To learn how to calculate density and concentration of dilutions. Procedure: I used a ruler, thermometer, and scale to take measurements. I used a graduated cylinder, short step pipet, scale, and ruler to determine volume and density. I used a volumetric flask, graduated pipet, pipet bulb, scale, and glass beaker to determine
January 30, 2012 1. Title: Laboratory Techniques and Measurements 2. Purpose: The purpose of this lab is to learn laboratory techniques and to how to measure precisely. During this lab I will learn how to measure length, temperatures, volume, density, and mass using laboratory equipment. I will be using laboratory equipment to prepare dilutions and calculate them while using an algebraic formula. 3. Procedure: In order to perform this lab I needed the following materials: a metric
<li value="6"> The new volume of the water and metal cylinder was measured. <li value="7"> The diameter of the
the we found the weight of the 10 ml of water by subtracting the weight of the water and the cylinder by the weight of only the cylinder. We found the volume of the water by seeing how much the water rises but it did not rise from 10 ml mark because no object or weight was in the water. The density of the water is mass divided by volume. Our volume was 1 ml and our, mass was 9.8g, and after dividing those two numbers we got a density of .98g/ml. But the density of pure water is 1.0, and the density
Density is the measurement of an object that has a relative mass and is divided by a specific volume. Mass is the amount of matter an object possesses. Volume is the amount of space of an object occupies (solid, liquid or gas.) In chemistry the term density can be described as a physical and intensive property of matter. The term intensive property means, it is independent on the size and amount of a substance. Many chemist compare different types of densities of elements and substance with water