The density of gasoline is 0.7025 g/mL at 20°C. When gasoline is added to water:
Added by Miguel W.
Step 1
Gasoline has a density of 0.7025 g/mL, which is less than the density of water (approximately 1.0 g/mL). This means that gasoline is less dense than water. Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Jennifer Hudspeth and 65 other Chemistry 101 educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
Jennifer H.
If the density of a gasoline is 0.7025 g/mL at 20 degrees Celsius. What will be the mass of one liter of gasoline?
Shalini T.
Gasoline and water do not mix. Regular grade ( 87 octane) gasoline has a lower density $(0.73 \mathrm{g} / \mathrm{mL})$ than water $(1.00 \mathrm{g} / \mathrm{m})$ $\mathrm{mL}) .$ A $100 \mathrm{mL}$ graduated cylinder with an inside diameter of $3.2 \mathrm{cm}$ contains $34.0 \mathrm{g}$ of gasoline and $34.0 \mathrm{g}$ of water. What is the combined height of the two liquid layers in the cylinder? The volume of a cylinder is $\pi r^{2} b,$ where $r$ is the radius and $b$ is the height.
Recommended Textbooks
Chemistry: Structure and Properties
Chemistry The Central Science
Chemistry
Transcript
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD