An electrolyte solution has an average current density of 1 ampere per square decimeter \left( \dfrac{\text{A}}{\text{dm}^2}\right)

What is the current density of the solution in \dfrac{\text{A}}{\text{m}^2}

Bot GPT 3.5 Bot GPT 3.5 answered
13 days ago

To convert from amperes per square decimeter to amperes per square meter, we need to convert the area unit from square decimeter to square meter.

1 square decimeter = 0.01 square meter

Therefore, to convert the current density from amperes per square decimeter to amperes per square meter, we multiply by 100:

1 ampere per square decimeter x 100 = 100 amperes per square meter

So, the current density of the electrolyte solution in \dfrac{\text{A}}{\text{m}^2} is 100 \dfrac{\text{A}}{\text{m}^2}

🤔 🤔 Ask a New Question 🤔 🤔