EasyUnitConverter.com

Gram/milliliter to Kilogram/cubic meter Converter

Enter the value that you want to convert gram/milliliter (g/mL) to kilogram/cubic meter (kg/m³) or kilogram/cubic meter to gram/milliliter.Also written as G/ML to KG/M³ conversion.

1 gram/milliliter = 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter

Formula: kilogram/cubic meter = gram/milliliter value × 1000.0000000

G/ML to KG/M³gram/milliliter to kilogram/cubic meter

g/mL
10000.00000kg/m³

10 gram/milliliter = 10000.00000 kilogram/cubic meter

Popular Density Converters:

Why Convert Gram/milliliter to Kilogram/cubic meter?

What is Gram/milliliter?

Gram/milliliter (g/mL) is a unit of density measurement. 1 gram/milliliter is equal to 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter.

The Kilogram/cubic meter in Engineering

Kilogram/cubic meter (kg/m³) is a unit of density measurement. 1 kilogram/cubic meter is equal to 0.0010000 gram/milliliter.

Density Conversions in Materials Science

Density units vary by industry: chemists use g/mL or g/cm³, engineers use kg/m³, and American petroleum standards use lb/ft³ or lb/gal. Quality control in manufacturing, buoyancy calculations in naval architecture, concrete mix design, and oil/gas well logging all require converting between density units. Different countries and standards bodies specify materials in different density units.

gram/milliliter to kilogram/cubic meter metric conversion table

0.01 g/mL=10.00000 kg/m³
0.1 g/mL=100.00000 kg/m³
1 g/mL=1000.00000 kg/m³
2 g/mL=2000.00000 kg/m³
3 g/mL=3000.00000 kg/m³
4 g/mL=4000.00000 kg/m³
5 g/mL=5000.00000 kg/m³
6 g/mL=6000.00000 kg/m³
7 g/mL=7000.00000 kg/m³
8 g/mL=8000.00000 kg/m³
9 g/mL=9000.00000 kg/m³
10 g/mL=10000.00000 kg/m³
11 g/mL=11000.00000 kg/m³
12 g/mL=12000.00000 kg/m³
13 g/mL=13000.00000 kg/m³
14 g/mL=14000.00000 kg/m³
15 g/mL=15000.00000 kg/m³
16 g/mL=16000.00000 kg/m³
17 g/mL=17000.00000 kg/m³
18 g/mL=18000.00000 kg/m³
19 g/mL=19000.00000 kg/m³
20 g/mL=20000.00000 kg/m³
30 g/mL=30000.00000 kg/m³
40 g/mL=40000.00000 kg/m³
50 g/mL=50000.00000 kg/m³
60 g/mL=60000.00000 kg/m³
70 g/mL=70000.00000 kg/m³
80 g/mL=80000.00000 kg/m³
90 g/mL=90000.00000 kg/m³
100 g/mL=100000.00000 kg/m³
200 g/mL=200000.00000 kg/m³
300 g/mL=300000.00000 kg/m³
400 g/mL=400000.00000 kg/m³
500 g/mL=500000.00000 kg/m³
600 g/mL=600000.00000 kg/m³
700 g/mL=700000.00000 kg/m³
800 g/mL=800000.00000 kg/m³
900 g/mL=900000.00000 kg/m³
1000 g/mL=1000000.00000 kg/m³

How to Convert G/ML to KG/M³ (Gram/milliliter to Kilogram/cubic meter)?

We can convert gram/milliliter to kilogram/cubic meter by using an example.

Example:

Convert 20 Gram/milliliter to Kilogram/cubic meter?

We know 1 Gram/milliliter = 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter; 1 Kilogram/cubic meter = 0.0010000 gram/milliliter.

20 gram/milliliter = ___kg/m³

20 × 1000.0000000 = 20000.00000 kg/m³ (we know 1 gram/milliliter = 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter)

Answer:

20 gram/milliliter = 20000.00000 kilogram/cubic meter

Converting g/mL to kg/m³: From Laboratory Pipettes to Industrial Tanks

Grams per milliliter (g/mL) is the everyday density unit in chemistry labs, food testing, and quality control. To use these values in engineering contexts (pressure drops, tank design, flow modeling), you need kg/m³. The conversion factor is 1 g/mL = 1,000 kg/m³. This thousand-fold factor reflects that 1 mL = 10⁻⁶ m³ and 1 g = 10⁻³ kg.

  1. Start with the measured density in g/mL.
  2. Multiply by 1,000.
  3. The result is density in kg/m³.
  4. Verify: water = 1.000 g/mL = 1,000 kg/m³.
💡 Tip: This is the same as moving the decimal three places right. A liquid measuring 0.850 g/mL on a hydrometer equals 850 kg/m³ for engineering calculations.

Laboratory Liquids: g/mL to kg/m³

Common lab chemicals and solutions with their engineering-unit equivalents:

Gram/milliliterKilogram/cubic meter
1.000 g/mL1,000 kg/m³
0.789 g/mL789 kg/m³
1.049 g/mL1,049 kg/m³
1.840 g/mL1,840 kg/m³
1.492 g/mL1,492 kg/m³
0.879 g/mL879 kg/m³
1.587 g/mL1,587 kg/m³
0.659 g/mL659 kg/m³

Solved Examples: g/mL to kg/m³

Question 1: A chemistry student measures a liquid sample density at 1.105 g/mL using a pycnometer. Express in kg/m³ for a fluid dynamics report.

Solution:

Density in kg/m³ = g/mL × 1,000

= 1.105 × 1,000

= 1,105 kg/m³

Answer: 1.105 g/mL = 1,105 kg/m³ — likely a concentrated salt solution or light organic acid.

Question 2: Biodiesel (B100) has a density of 0.880 g/mL. Convert to kg/m³ for fuel system modeling.

Solution:

Density in kg/m³ = g/mL × 1,000

= 0.880 × 1,000

= 880 kg/m³

Answer: 0.880 g/mL = 880 kg/m³ for biodiesel — slightly denser than petroleum diesel (830–860 kg/m³).

Question 3: A food scientist measures honey density at 1.420 g/mL. What is this in kg/m³?

Solution:

Density in kg/m³ = g/mL × 1,000

= 1.420 × 1,000

= 1,420 kg/m³

Answer: 1.420 g/mL = 1,420 kg/m³ for pure honey — the high density indicates low moisture content (quality indicator).

Practice: g/mL to kg/m³

Try solving these on your own to test your understanding:

  1. Convert 1.261 g/mL (glycerol) to kg/m³. (Answer: 1,261 kg/m³)
  2. Express 0.713 g/mL (hexane) in kg/m³. (Answer: 713 kg/m³)
  3. Formaldehyde solution (37%) at 1.09 g/mL to kg/m³. (Answer: 1,090 kg/m³)
  4. Coconut oil at 0.925 g/mL — convert. (Answer: 925 kg/m³)
  5. Bromine at 3.103 g/mL to kg/m³. (Answer: 3,103 kg/m³)

Measuring Density in the Lab: Pycnometers and Hydrometers

Laboratory density measurements yield g/mL directly. A pycnometer is a precision glass flask of known volume — filling it with sample and weighing gives mass/volume in g/mL. Hydrometers float at a depth proportional to liquid density, with scales calibrated in g/mL (or equivalent specific gravity). Digital density meters (oscillating U-tube method) display g/mL to 4–5 decimal places for pharmaceutical and petroleum quality control.

Food Quality and Density Measurement

Food scientists use density (g/mL) as a quality indicator: honey below 1.40 g/mL may have excessive moisture (>20%), indicating potential fermentation risk. Maple syrup must be ≥1.33 g/mL (66° Brix) for grade A classification. Milk fat content correlates with density: skim milk at 1.035 g/mL vs. whole milk at 1.030 g/mL. Converting to kg/m³ is required when scaling from lab testing to production-line inline density meters.

Key Takeaways

  • 1 g/mL = 1,000 kg/m³ (multiply by 1,000).
  • Move the decimal three places right.
  • g/mL is the standard lab measurement unit for liquid density.
  • Numerically identical to g/cm³ and kg/L.
  • Commonly measured with pycnometers, hydrometers, or digital density meters.

Gram/milliliter to Kilogram/cubic meter Conversion Formula

kilogram/cubic meter = gram/milliliter × 1000.0000000

1 gram/milliliter = 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter

1 kilogram/cubic meter = 0.0010000 gram/milliliter

Reverse: gram/milliliter = kilogram/cubic meter × 0.0010000

Frequently Asked Questions

How many kilogram/cubic meter are in 1 gram/milliliter?

There are 1000.0000000 kilogram/cubic meter in 1 gram/milliliter. To convert gram/milliliter to kilogram/cubic meter, multiply the value by 1000.0000000.

How do I convert gram/milliliter to kilogram/cubic meter?

Multiply your gram/milliliter value by 1000.0000000 to get the equivalent in kilogram/cubic meter. For example, 5 gram/milliliter = 5 × 1000.0000000 = 5000.00000 kilogram/cubic meter.

How do I convert kilogram/cubic meter to gram/milliliter?

Multiply your kilogram/cubic meter value by 0.0010000 to get the equivalent in gram/milliliter. Alternatively, divide by 1000.0000000.

What is 10 gram/milliliter in kilogram/cubic meter?

10 gram/milliliter is equal to 10000.00000 kilogram/cubic meter.

What is 100 gram/milliliter in kilogram/cubic meter?

100 gram/milliliter is equal to 100000.00000 kilogram/cubic meter.