How Do You Convert 10 Micrograms per Deciliter to Milligrams per Liter?

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SUMMARY

The conversion of 10 micrograms per deciliter to milligrams per liter is achieved using the Factor Label Method. By applying the conversion factors, the calculation simplifies to 1/10 milligrams per liter. Specifically, the conversion process involves multiplying by the appropriate fractions: 10 micrograms per deciliter multiplied by 10 deciliters per liter and 1000 milligrams per 1,000,000 micrograms. This results in a definitive conversion of 10 micrograms per deciliter equating to 0.1 milligrams per liter.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of metric prefixes, specifically micro (10^-6) and milli (10^-3).
  • Familiarity with the Factor Label Method for unit conversion.
  • Basic knowledge of fractions and multiplication of fractions.
  • Concept of dimensional analysis in scientific calculations.
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the Factor Label Method in detail for various unit conversions.
  • Learn about metric prefixes and their applications in scientific measurements.
  • Explore dimensional analysis techniques for complex unit conversions.
  • Practice converting other units of measurement, such as grams to kilograms or liters to milliliters.
USEFUL FOR

Students in chemistry or biology, educators teaching unit conversions, and professionals in scientific fields requiring precise measurements.

claire kt
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Please can someone explain to me how you convert:
10 micrograms per decilitre
into
miiligrams per litre

I think I had some notes on it somewhere but they have gone awol !
 
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Easiest way for multiple units (something per something) is using "fenceposts", as some teachers call them, which basically look like this...

\frac{10 micrograms}{1 deciliter} \times \frac{10 deciliters}{1 liter} \times \frac{1000 milligrams}{1000000 micrograms}

NOTE: I don't remember exactly what micrograms are...it's either 1 g x 10^6 or 1g x 10^9...I think it's 6, 9 is nano.

But basically what you have there is one giant fraction. The first fraction in the multiplication is your original given information, and all the other fractions within are equal to 1.

So, that fraction simplifies to \frac {1 milligram}{10 liters}

So, 10 micrograms per decilitre = 1/10 milligrams per liter.

Someone may want to just double check on what exactly a microgram is in relationship to a gram...it's been so long since I've had to do that, I can't remember for sure. If I am wrong, that "fencepost" concept should be a pretty easy one to understand and remember for future use.
 
Last edited:
claire kt said:
Please can someone explain to me how you convert:
10 micrograms per decilitre
into
miiligrams per litre

I think I had some notes on it somewhere but they have gone awol !

Use the Factor Label Method.

What is awol?
 
Thanks Inspector Gadget.
You are right micro is -3 and nano -9.

NSX AWOL = absent without leave. Half my notes have just completely vanished !
 
"micro" is 10-6 (one millionth)
 
Yes, and 10^-3 is milli...
 

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