Capacity and Mass
Connect volume, capacity and mass through $1\ \text{cm}^3 = 1\ \text{mL} = 1\ \text{g}$ (water) and master the full conversion chain.
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A 1-litre water bottle has a mass of 1 kg when full. A swimming pool holds 250,000 litres of water. Make a prediction: what is the mass of all that water? Write your reasoning below.
Volume, capacity and mass are linked by a chain of 1000s. For water, a single beautiful fact connects all three:
Key link 1 cm³ = 1 mL = 1 g (water)
Scale up: $1\ \text{L} = 1000\ \text{cm}^3 = 1\ \text{kg}$ (water)
Largest scale: $1\ \text{m}^3 = 1000\ \text{L} = 1\ \text{t}$ (water)
Hook answer: 250,000 L = 250,000 kg = 250 tonnes!
Know
- $1\ \text{cm}^3 = 1\ \text{mL}$ and $1\ \text{L} = 1000\ \text{cm}^3$
- $1\ \text{m}^3 = 1{,}000{,}000\ \text{cm}^3 = 1000\ \text{L}$
- For water: 1 mL = 1 g; 1 L = 1 kg; 1 m³ = 1 t
Understand
- Why volume conversions use powers of 10³ (linear × 3)
- How to chain volume → capacity → mass conversions
- Why mass rules only apply to water (density = 1)
Can Do
- Convert between mm³, cm³, m³
- Convert between mL, L, kL
- Find capacity from volume and mass from capacity (water)
- Solve multi-step real-world problems
All three measurement systems use factors of 1000 between steps, and the rows align:
Because each linear dimension scales by a factor, the cubic units scale by the cube of that factor:
- $1\ \text{m} = 100\ \text{cm}$, so $1\ \text{m}^3 = 100^3\ \text{cm}^3 = 1{,}000{,}000\ \text{cm}^3$
- $1\ \text{cm} = 10\ \text{mm}$, so $1\ \text{cm}^3 = 10^3\ \text{mm}^3 = 1000\ \text{mm}^3$
Converting down (to smaller units): multiply. Converting up (to larger units): divide.
Example: 2.5 m³ to cm³: $2.5 \times 10^6 = 2{,}500{,}000\ \text{cm}^3$
Example: 45,000 cm³ to m³: $45{,}000 \div 10^6 = 0.045\ \text{m}^3$
Key trap: Students write 1 m³ = 100 cm³ because 1 m = 100 cm. Wrong! The exponent 3 applies to the factor: $(100)^3 = 1{,}000{,}000$.
What to write in your book
- 1 m³ = 10&sup6; cm³ = 10&sup9; mm³
- 1 cm³ = 10³ mm³
- Multiply to convert to smaller units; divide for larger units.
Capacity conversions all use a factor of 1000:
- $1\ \text{kL} = 1000\ \text{L}$
- $1\ \text{L} = 1000\ \text{mL}$
Bridging to volume: $1\ \text{mL} = 1\ \text{cm}^3$, so $1\ \text{L} = 1000\ \text{cm}^3$ and $1\ \text{m}^3 = 1000\ \text{L} = 1\ \text{kL}$.
Example: Tank $20 \times 15 \times 10$ cm. $V = 3000\ \text{cm}^3 = 3000\ \text{mL} = 3\ \text{L}$.
Shortcut: cm³ to L: divide by 1000. cm³ to mL: no conversion needed (they are equal).
What to write in your book
- 1 kL = 1000 L; 1 L = 1000 mL.
- 1 mL = 1 cm³ (no conversion).
- 1 L = 1000 cm³; 1 m³ = 1000 L.
Mass units: $1\ \text{t} = 1000\ \text{kg} = 1{,}000{,}000\ \text{g}$.
For water only: $1\ \text{mL} = 1\ \text{g}$, $1\ \text{L} = 1\ \text{kg}$, $1\ \text{m}^3 = 1\ \text{t}$.
Example: 8 L of water: $8 \times 1\ \text{kg} = 8\ \text{kg}$.
Example: 2500 mL of water: $2500\ \text{g} = 2.5\ \text{kg}$.
Important: Only water has density 1 g/cm³. Other liquids have different densities, so the mass rule does not apply to them.
What to write in your book
- 1 t = 1000 kg; 1 kg = 1000 g.
- Water: 1 mL = 1 g; 1 L = 1 kg; 1 m³ = 1 t.
- Mass links apply to water ONLY.
For water in a container, chain the conversions step by step:
- Volume (cm³) → Capacity (mL): 1:1
- Capacity (mL) → Capacity (L): ÷ 1000
- Capacity (L) → Mass (kg): × 1
- Mass (kg) → Mass (t): ÷ 1000
Example: Box 50 × 40 × 30 cm full of water.
$V = 60{,}000\ \text{cm}^3 = 60{,}000\ \text{mL} = 60\ \text{L} = 60\ \text{kg}\ \text{water}$
Quick chain: cm³ = mL ÷ 1000 = L = kg (water) ÷ 1000 = t
What to write in your book
- Chain: V (cm³) = capacity (mL) ÷ 1000 = L = kg ÷ 1000 = t.
- Always find volume first, then convert step by step.
- Write units at every step to avoid errors.
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
- 1m³ to cm³2.5 m³ × 10&sup6; = 2,500,000 cm³1 m³ = 1,000,000 cm³ (multiply by 10&sup6;).
- 2cm³ to mL2,500,000 cm³ = 2,500,000 mL1 cm³ = 1 mL exactly — no arithmetic needed.
- 3mL to L2,500,000 ÷ 1000 = 2500 LOr directly: 2.5 m³ × 1000 = 2500 L.
- 1Find volumeV = 40 × 30 × 25 = 30,000 cm³
- 2Convert to mL30,000 cm³ = 30,000 mL1 cm³ = 1 mL.
- 3Convert to L30,000 mL ÷ 1000 = 30 LCapacity = 30 litres.
- 1Convert capacity to volume12 L = 12,000 mL = 12,000 cm³
- 2Find base areaA = 30 × 40 = 1200 cm²
- 3Solve for heighth = 12,000 ÷ 1200 = 10 cmHeight = 10 cm.
Volume
- 1 m³ = 10&sup6; cm³
- 1 cm³ = 10³ mm³
Capacity
- 1 kL = 1000 L; 1 L = 1000 mL
- 1 mL = 1 cm³; 1 m³ = 1000 L
Mass (water)
- 1 mL = 1 g; 1 L = 1 kg; 1 m³ = 1 t
Chain
- cm³ = mL ÷1000 = L = kg ÷1000 = t
How are you completing this lesson?
Brain Trainer · 10 problems
No calculator needed for most. Write units in every answer!
1 5000 mL = ? L
5 L2 3 L = ? mL
3000 mL3 4500 cm³ = ? mL = ? L
4500 mL = 4.5 L4 0.5 m³ = ? L
0.5 × 1000 = 500 L5 Mass of 8 L of water?
8 kg6 2500 mL of water → ? g and ? kg
2500 g = 2.5 kg7 Box 20×10×15 cm: capacity in L?
V = 3000 cm³ = 3000 mL = 3 L8 3.5 m³ = ? cm³
3.5 × 10&sup6; = 3,500,000 cm³9 6 m³ of water → mass in t?
6 t10 250,000 L = ? m³ = ? kL
250,000 ÷ 1000 = 250 m³ = 250 kL
Quick Check · 5 questions
Show Your Working · 3 questions
Q6. A rectangular cistern measures 120 cm × 80 cm × 60 cm. Find its capacity in litres and the cost to fill it with water at 8 cents per litre. (3 marks)
Q7. A pool measures 8 m × 4 m × 1.5 m. Find the volume in m³ and the mass of the water in tonnes. (2 marks)
Q8. A cylindrical tank has r = 0.8 m and h = 2 m. Find: (i) volume in m³, (ii) capacity in litres, (iii) mass of water in kg, (iv) cost to fill at 0.3 cents per litre. Give answers to 1 d.p. (4 marks)
Quick Check
1. C — 1 L = 1000 mL.
2. B — 2000 cm³ = 2000 mL = 2 L.
3. A — 3.5 × 1000 = 3500 L.
4. C — 15 L = 15 kg.
5. A — 500 mL = 500 cm³.
Model Answers
Q6: V = 576,000 cm³ = 576 L [2]. Cost = 576 × $0.08 = $46.08 [1].
Q7: V = 8 × 4 × 1.5 = 48 m³ [1]. Mass = 48 t [1].
Q8: V = π × 0.64 × 2 = 1.28π ≈ 4.0 m³ [1]. Capacity ≈ 4021 L [1]. Mass ≈ 4021 kg [1]. Cost = 4021 × $0.003 ≈ $12.06 [1].
Capacity and Mass Stretch
A cistern 120 cm × 80 cm × 60 cm is currently 40% full of water.
Part A: How many litres are needed to fill it completely from 40% full?
Part B: At 8 cents per litre, what is the cost to top it up?
Part C: If water flows in at 2 L/min, how long (hours and minutes) to fill from empty?
Reveal solution
Total: 576 L. At 40%: 576 × 0.4 = 230.4 L inside. A: 576 − 230.4 = 345.6 L. B: $27.65. C: 576 ÷ 2 = 288 min = 4 h 48 min.
1 cm³ = 1 mL
Volume and capacity equal at this scale.
1 L = 1000 mL
Divide cm³ by 1000 to get litres.
1 m³ = 1000 L
= 1 kilolitre (kL).
Water: 1 L = 1 kg
Mass bridge — water only!
Water: 1 m³ = 1 t
Largest scale mass link.
Chain
cm³ = mL ÷1000 = L = kg ÷1000 = t
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