Should I convert all units of volume to liters for future problems just to make things simple?
Difficult decision...
My personal choice (having made other choices before) is SI units, plain and vanilla, everywhere and for every profession. At least they're consistent and exist for every job. Their drawback is that complete professions use other units (grams in chemistry, cm
3 in microelectronics...) so one has to be vigilant at every data. Be prepared: this is not the last time you'll get trouble with units, it's daily life.
The incentive for SI came as I made mechanical engineering. There the length unit is mm, the force has been daN (then stress and stiffness moduli were in myriapieze) but shifted meanwhile to N, with stress and moduli in MPa. But as I wanted to compute resonant frequencies, the mm & MPa system collapsed, without a simple path to seconds and hertz. Though, I did need both resistances and frequencies - and SI offered this compatibility. The hard adaptation was worth it.
Units are a huge source of errors in any system. Besides being aware of them, you should have a few figures in memory for double-checking. In the present case, some 0.024m
3 per mole of gas under usual conditions, so 10 mol in <1L shall raise an alarm. Knowing a few hundred figures suffices for varied professions.
Whatever your job and unit system, you must live with other units, so you need a unit converter.
https://joshmadison.com/convert-for-windows/ (English)
or "SI-Konverter" (German and English)
and certainly more.