Approximately 16 drops is equal to 0.8 ml.
If the drop is considered equal to 0,05 mL the answer is 0,35 mL.
0.75mL is 15 drops.
that is 560 ml.
Each dose from a 15 ml container would be 4 ml (15 ml / 60 doses). Given that 1 ml equals 32 drops, each dose would contain 128 drops (4 ml * 32 drops).
yes and no because water has a volumic mass of 0,89g/mL Approximative so 1g/mL is not right.
1 tsp is equal to 5ml. 1 gtt ( 1 drop) is equal to 0.05 ml....because 20 drops in 1 ml. so 5ml divided by 0.05= 100 gtt or drops. so I think 100 gtt or drops in 1 tsp.
20 drops = 1ml 20 drops = 1cc 1ml = 1cc
Each dose would be 2.5 ml, which means each dose would require 80 drops (2.5 ml * 32 drops/ml).
There are approximately 240 drops in 10 ml. Therefore 2.5 ml contains about 60 drops.
Neither is greater because 56 mL and 0.056 L are equal to the same volume.
3 x 60 x 24 = 4320 drops... The reference to ml is irrelevant.