A chemist needs 2.00 grams of a liquid compound with a density of 0.785 g/cm^3 density. what volume of compund is required?

Mass= Volume X Density

2.00g x 0.785 g/Cm^3 = 1.57g/cm^3

Not sure is this is correct......

To find the volume of the liquid compound required, you can rearrange the equation:

Volume = Mass / Density

Substituting the given values:

Volume = 2.00 g / 0.785 g/cm^3

Volume ≈ 2.55 cm^3

Therefore, approximately 2.55 cm^3 of the compound is required.

To find the required volume of the compound, we can use the formula:

Volume = Mass / Density

In this case, the given mass of the compound is 2.00 grams and the density is 0.785 g/cm^3. Plugging the values into the formula, we have:

Volume = 2.00 grams / 0.785 g/cm^3

Calculating this, we get:

Volume = 2.55 cm^3

So, the required volume of the compound is 2.55 cm^3.

No. Yes, mass = volume x density so

volume = mass/density = 2/0.785 = ?