I had probable messed up by not drying the graduated cylinder before pouring the liquid into the cylinder. Because there was probably leftover water in the graduated cylinder, it had caused the volume to be higher than it’s actual volume. V=? Therefore the density of the liquid was lower than the actual density. A good example where this would have occurred is liquid D. The calculated density that I got for liquid D was 0.66 g/mL. However the actual density of liquid D is 1 g/mL. I believe that because I had liquid already in the graduated cylinder it caused the volume to be higher and the density to be
I had probable messed up by not drying the graduated cylinder before pouring the liquid into the cylinder. Because there was probably leftover water in the graduated cylinder, it had caused the volume to be higher than it’s actual volume. V=? Therefore the density of the liquid was lower than the actual density. A good example where this would have occurred is liquid D. The calculated density that I got for liquid D was 0.66 g/mL. However the actual density of liquid D is 1 g/mL. I believe that because I had liquid already in the graduated cylinder it caused the volume to be higher and the density to be