perrys chemical-engineers-handbook-1999

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  1. 1. Perrys Chemical Engineers Handbook Liquid-Liquid Extraction Operations and Equipment Gas Absorption and Gas-Liquid System Design Distillation Psychrometry, Evaporative Cooling, and Solids Drying Heat-Transfer Equipment Transport and Storage of Fluids Process Economics Process Control Reaction Kinetics Fluid and Particle Dynamics Heat and Mass Transfer Thermodynamics Mathematics Physical and Chemical Data Conversion Factors and Mathematical Symbols Contents Index Analysis of Plant Performance Process Machinery Drives Materials of Construction Energy Resources, Conversion and Utilization Process Safety Waste Management Biochemical Engineering Chemical Reactors Alternative Separation Processes Handling of Bulk Solids and Packaging of Solids and Liquids Size Reduction and Size Enlargement Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment Gas-Solid Operations and Equipment Adsorption
  2. 2. Perrys Chemical Engineers Handbook Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  3. 3. OTHER McGRAW-HILL CHEMICAL ENGINEERING BOOKS OF INTEREST CASCIO, WOODSIDE, MITCHELL ISO 14000: A Guide to the New International Environmental Management Standards CHOPEY Handbook of Chemical Engineering Calculations, Second Edition CHOPEY Instrumentation and Process Control CONNELL Process Instrumentation Applications Manual CONSIDINE Process/Industrial Instruments and Controls Handbook, Fourth Edition DATTA-BARUA Natural Gas Measurement and Control DEAN Langes Handbook of Chemistry, Fourteenth Edition DESHOTELS, ZIMMERMAN Cost-Effective Risk Assessment for Process Design DILLON Materials Selection for the Chemical Process Industries FITZGERALD Control Valves for the Chemical Process Industries HARPER Handbook of Plastics, Elastomers, and Composites, Third Edition KISTER Distillation Design LIEBERMAN, LIEBERMAN A Working Guide to Process Equipment MANSFIELD Engineering Design for Process Facilities MEYERS Handbook of Petroleum Refining Processes, Second Edition MILLER Flow Measurement Engineering Handbook, Third Edition MYERS Aboveground Storage Tanks POWER Steam Jet Ejectors for the Process Industries REID, PRAUSNITZ, POLING Properties of Gases and Liquids, Fourth Edition REIST Aerosol Science and Technology, Second Edition RHINE, TUCKER Modeling of Gas-Fired Furnaces and Boilers and Other Industrial Heating Processes ROSSITER Waste Minimization Through Process Design SAMDANI Safety and Risk Management Tools and Techniques in the CPI SAMDANI Heat Transfer Technologies and Practices for Effective Energy Management SAWERS, EASTMAN Process Industry Procedures and Training Manual SCHWEITZER Handbook of Separation Techniques for Chemical Engineers, Third Edition SHINSKEY Process Control Systems, Fourth Edition SHUGAR, BALLINGER Chemical Technicians Ready Reference Handbook, Fourth Edition SHUGAR, DEAN The Chemists Ready Reference Handbook, Third Edition SIKICH Emergency Management Planning Handbook SMALLWOOD Solvent Recovery Handbook SMITH Chemical Process Design TATTERSON Fluid Mixing and Gas Dispersion in Agitated Tanks TATTERSON Scaleup and Design of Industrial Mixing Processes Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  4. 4. McGraw-Hill New York San Francisco Washington, D.C. Auckland Bogot Caracas Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi San Juan Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto Prepared by a staff of specialists under the editorial direction of Late Editor Robert H. Perry Editor Don W. Green Deane E. Ackers Professor of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Kansas Associate Editor James O. Maloney Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering, University of Kansas PERRYS CHEMICAL ENGINEERS HANDBOOK SEVENTH EDITION Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  5. 5. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Perrys chemical engineers handbook. 7th ed. / prepared by a staff of specialists under the editorial direction of late editor Robert H. Perry : editor, Don W. Green : associate editor, James OHara Maloney. p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 0-07-049841-5 (alk. paper) 1. Chemical engineeringHandbooks, manuals, etc. I. Perry, Robert H., date. II. Green, Don W. III. Maloney, James O. TP151.P45 1997 660dc21 96-51648 CIP Copyright 1997, 1984, 1973, 1963, 1950, 1941, 1934 by The McGraw- Hill Companies, Inc. Copyright renewed 1962, 1969 by Robert H. Perry. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a data base or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the pub- lisher. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 DOW/DOW 9 0 2 1 0 9 8 7 ISBN 0-07-049841-5 INTERNATIONAL EDITION Copyright 1997. Exclusive rights by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., for manufacture and export. This book cannot be re-exported from the country to which it is consigned by McGraw-Hill. The International Edi- tion is not available in North America. When ordering this title, use ISBN 0-07-115448-5. The sponsoring editors for this book were Zoe Foundotos and Robert Esposito, the editing supervisor was Marc Campbell, and the production supervisor was Pamela A. Pelton. It was set in Caledonia by North Market Street Graphics. Printed and bound by R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company. This book was printed on acid-free paper. Information contained in this work has been obtained by The McGraw- Hill Companies, Inc. (McGraw-Hill) from sources believed to be reli- able. However, neither McGraw-Hill nor its authors guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information published herein, and neither McGraw-Hill nor its authors shall be responsible for any errors, omissions, or damages arising out of use of this information. This work is published with the understanding that McGraw-Hill and its authors are supplying information but are not attempting to render engineering or other professional services. If such services are required, the assis- tance of an appropriate professional should be sought. Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  6. 6. Dedicated to Robert H. Perry Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  7. 7. ABOUT THE EDITORS The late Robert H. Perry served as chairman of the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Oklahoma and program director for graduate research facilities at the National Sci- ence Research Foundation. He was a consultant to various United Nations and other international organizations. From 1973 until his death in 1978 Dr. Perry devoted his time to a study of the cross impact of technologies within the next half century. The subjects under his investigation on a global basis were energy, minerals and metals, transportation and communications, medicine, food production, and the environment. Don W. Green is Chair and the Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of chemical and petro- leum engineering and codirector of the Tertiary Oil Recovery Project at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas, where he has taught since 1964. He received his doctorate in chemical engi- neering in 1963 from the University of Oklahoma, where he was Dr. Perrys first doctoral student. Dr. Green has won several teaching awards at the University of Kansas, and he is a fellow of the AIChE and a distinguished member of the Society of Petroleum Engineers. He is the author of numerous articles in technical journals. James O. Maloney is Professor Emeritus of the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engi- neering, University of Kansas. He holds a Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering from Pennsylva- nia State University. In 1941 he began his professional career at the DuPont de Nemours Company, before joining the University of Kansas in 1945, where he taught for 40 years. He served as department chairman for nineteen years. He is a fellow of the AIChE. Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  8. 8. vii Contents For the detailed contents of any section, consult the title page of that section. See also the alphabetical index in the back of the handbook. Section Conversion Factors and Mathematical Symbols James O. Maloney 1 Physical and Chemical Data Peter E. Liley, George H. Thomson, D. G. Friend, Thomas E. Daubert, Evan Buck 2 Mathematics Bruce A. Finlayson, James F. Davis, Arthur W. Westerberg, Yoshiyuki Yamashita 3 Thermodynamics Hendrick C. Van Ness, Michael M. Abbott 4 Heat and Mass Transfer James G. Knudsen, Hoyt C. Hottel, Adel F. Sarofim, Phillip C. Wankat, Kent S. Knaebel 5 Fluid and Particle Dynamics James N. Tilton 6 Reaction Kinetics Stanley M. Walas 7 Process Control Thomas F. Edgar, Cecil L. Smith, F. Greg Shinskey, George W. Gassman, Paul J. Schafbuch, Thomas J. McAvoy, Dale E. Seborg 8 Process Economics F. A. Holland, J. K. Wilkinson 9 Transport and Storage of Fluids Meherwan P. Boyce 10 Heat-Transfer Equipment Richard L. Shilling, Kenneth J. Bell, Patrick M. Bernhagen, Thomas M. Flynn, Victor M. Goldschmidt, Predrag S. Hrnjak, F. C. Standiford, Klaus D. Timmerhaus 11 Psychrometry, Evaporative Cooling, and Solids Drying Charles G. Moyers, Glenn W. Baldwin 12 Distillation J. D. Seader, Jeffrey J. Siirola, Scott D. Barnicki 13 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  9. 9. Gas Absorption and Gas-Liquid System Design James R. Fair, D. E. Steinmeyer, W. R. Penny, B. B. Crocker 14 Liquid-Liquid Extraction Operations and Equipment Lanny A. Robbins, Roger W. Cusack 15 Adsorption and Ion Exchange M. Douglas LeVan, Giorgio Carta, Carmen M. Yon 16 Gas-Solid Operations and Equipment Mel Pell, James B. Dunson 17 Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment Donald A. Dahlstrom, Richard C. Bennett, Robert G. Emmet, Peter Harriott, Tim Laros, Wallace Leung, Shelby A. Miller, Brooker Morey, James Y. Oldshue, George Priday, Charles E. Silverblatt, J. Stephen Slottee, Julian C. Smith 18 Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment Kalanadh V. S. Sastry, Harrison Cooper, Richard Hogg, T. L. P. Jespen, Frank Knoll, Bhupendra Parekh, Raj K. Rajamani, Thomas Sorenson, Ionel Wechsler, Chad McCleary, David B. Todd 19 Size Reduction and Size Enlargement Richard L. Snow, Terry Allen, Bryan J. Ennis, James D. Litster 20 Handling of Bulk Solids and Packaging of Solids and Liquids Grantges J. Raymus 21 Alternative Separation Processes Joseph D. Henry, Jr., Michael E. Prudich, William Eykamp, T. Alan Hatton, Keith P. Johnston, Richard M. Lemert, Robert Lemlich, Charles G. Moyers, John Newman, Herbert A. Pohl, Kent Pollock, Michael P. Thien 22 Chemical Reactors Stanley M. Walas 23 Biochemical Engineering Henry R. Bungay, Arthur E. Humphrey, George T. Tsao 24 Waste Management Louis Theodore, Anthony J. Buonicore, John D. McKenna, Irwin J. Kugelman, John S. Jeris, Joseph J. Santoleri, Thomas F. McGowan 25 Process Safety Stanley M. Englund, Frank T. Bodurtha, Laurence G. Britton, Daniel A. Crowl, Stanley Grossel, W. G. High, Trevor A. Kletz, Robert W. Ormsby, John E. Owens, Carl A. Schiappa, Richard Siwek, Robert E. White, David Winegardner, John L. Woodward 26 Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization Walter F. Podolski, Shelby A. Miller, David K. Schmalzer, Anthony G. Fonseca, Vincent Conrad, Douglas E. Lowenhaupt, John Bacha, Lawrence K. Rath, Hsue-peng Loh, Edgar B. Klunder, Howard G. McIlvried, III, Gary J. Stiegel, Rameshwar D. Srivastava, Peter J. Loftus, Charles E. Benson, John M. Wheeldon, Michael Krumpelt 27 Materials of Construction Oliver W. Siebert, John G. Stoecker 28 Process Machinery Drives Heinz P. Bloch, R. H. Daugherty, Fred K. Geitner, Meherwan P. Boyce, Judson S. Swearingen, Eric Jennet, Michael M. Calistrat 29 Analysis of Plant Performance Colin S. Howat 30 Index follows Section 30. viii CONTENTS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  10. 10. ix List of Contributors Michael M. Abbott, Ph.D., Howard P. Isermann Department of Chemical Engineering, Rens- selaer Polytechnic Institute; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 4, Ther- modynamics) Terry Allen, Ph.D., Senior Research Associate (retired), DuPont Central Research and Devel- opment (Section 20, Size Reduction and Size Enlargement) John D. Bacha, Ph.D., Consulting Scientist, Chevron Products Company; Member, ASTM (American Society for Testing and Materials), Committee D02 on Petroleum Products and Lubri- cants; American Chemical Society; International Association for Stability and Handling of Liquid Fuels, Steering Committee (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Glenn W. Baldwin, M.S., P.E., Staff Engineer, Union Carbide Corporation; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 12, Psychrometry, Evaporative Cooling, and Solids Drying) Scott D. Barnicki, Ph.D., Senior Research Chemical Engineer, Eastman Chemical Company (Section 13, Distillation) Kenneth J. Bell, Ph.D., P.E., Regents Professor Emeritus, School of Chemical Engineering, Oklahoma State University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) Richard C. Bennett, B.S., Ch.E., Registered Professional Engineer, Illinois; Member, Ameri- can Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE); President of Crystallization Technology, Inc.; For- mer President of Swenson Process Equipment, Inc. (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Charles E. Benson, M.Eng., M.E., Director, Combustion Technology, Arthur D. Little, Inc.; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Combustion Institute (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Patrick M. Bernhagen, P.E., B.S.M.E., Senior Mechanical Engineer, Foster Wheeler USA Cor- poration, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  11. 11. Heinz P. Bloch, P.E., B.S.M.E., M.S.M.E., Consulting Engineer, Process Machinery Consult- ing; American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Vibration Institute; Registered Professional Engi- neer (New Jersey, Texas) (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) Frank T. Bodurtha, Sc.D., E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co., Inc. (retired), Wilmington, Delaware (retired); Consultant, Frank T. Bodurtha, Inc. (Section 26, Process Safety) Meherwan P. Boyce, P.E., Ph.D., President, Boyce Engineering International; ASME Fellow; Registered Professional Engineer (Texas, Oklahoma) (Section 10, Transport and Storage of Fluids; Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) Laurence G. Britton, Ph.D., Research Scientist, Union Carbide Corporation (Section 26, Process Safety) Evan Buck, M.S.Ch.E., Manager, Thermophysical Property Skill Center, Central Technology, Union Carbide Corporation (Section 2, Physical and Chemical Data) Henry R. Bungay, P.E., Ph.D., Professor of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Rens- selaer Polytechnic Institute; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, American Society for Microbiology, American Society for Engineering Educa- tion, Society for General Microbiology (Section 24, Biochemical Engineering) Anthony J. Buonicore, M.Ch.E., P.E., Diplomate AAEE, CEO, Environmental Data Resources, Inc.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Air and Waste Management Association (Section 25, Waste Management) Michael M. Calistrat, B.S.M.E., M.S.M.E., Owner, Michael Calistrat and Associates; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) Giorgio Carta, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, International Adsorption Society (Section 16, Adsorption and Ion Exchange) Vincent Conrad, Ph.D., Group Leader, Technical Services Development Laboratory, CONSOL, Inc.; Member, Spectroscopy Society of Pittsburgh, Society for Analytical Chemistry of Pittsburgh, Society for Applied Spectroscopy (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Harrison Cooper, Ph.D., Harrison R. Cooper Systems, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) B. B. Crocker, S.M., P.E., Consulting Chemical Engineer; Fellow, American Institute of Chem- ical Engineers; Member, Air Pollution Control Association (Section 14, Gas Absorption and Gas- Liquid System Design) Daniel A. Crowl, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, Chemical Engineering Depart- ment, Michigan Technological University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society (Section 26, Process Safety) Roger W. Cusack, Vice President, Glitsch Process Systems, Inc.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 15, Liquid-Liquid Extraction Operations and Equipment) Donald A. Dahlstrom, Ph.D., Research Professor, Chemical and Fuels Engineering Depart- ment and Metallurgical Engineering Department, University of Utah; Member, National Acad- emy of Engineering, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), American Chemical Society (ACS), Society of Mining, Metallurgic Exploration (SME) of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers (AIME), American Society of Engineering Edu- cation (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Thomas E. Daubert, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, The Pennsylva- nia State University (Section 2, Physical and Chemical Data) R. H. Daugherty, Ph.D., Consulting Engineer, Research Center, Reliance Electric Company; Member, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) x LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  12. 12. James F. Davis, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, Ohio State University (Section 3, Mathematics) James B. Dunson, B.S., Principal Consultant, E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co.; Member Amer- ican Institute of Chemical Engineers; Registered Professional Engineer (Delaware) (Section 17, Gas-Solid Operation and Equipment) Thomas F. Edgar, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas, Austin, Texas (Section 8, Process Control) Robert C. Emmet, Jr., B.S., Ch.E., Senior Process Consultant, EIMCO Process Equipment Co.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE), American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers (AIME), Society of Mining, Metallurgical and Explo- ration Engineers (SME) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Stanley M. Englund, M.S., Ch.E., Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Process Consultant, The Dow Chemical Company (retired) (Section 26, Process Safety) Bryan J. Ennis, Ph.D., President, E&G Associates, and Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engi- neering, Vanderbilt University; Member and Chair of Powder Technology Programming Group of the Particle Technology Forum, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 20, Size Reduction and Size Enlargement) William Eykamp, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engineering, Tufts University; For- merly President, Koch Membrane Systems; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science, North Amer- ican Membrane Society, European Society of Membrane Science and Technology (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) James R. Fair, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas; National Academy of Engineering; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society, American Society for Engineering Education, National Society of Professional Engineers (Section 14, Gas Absorption and Gas-Liquid System Design) Bruce A. Finlayson, Ph.D., Rehnberg Professor and Chair, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Washington; Member, National Academy of Engineering (Section 3, Mathematics) Thomas M. Flynn, Ph.D., P.E., Cryogenic Engineer, President CRYOCO, Louisville, Colorado; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) Anthony G. Fonseca, Ph.D., Director, Coal Utilization, CONSOL, Inc.; Member, American Chemical Society, Society for Mining, Metallurgy, and Extraction (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) D. G. Friend, National Institutes of Standards and Technology, Boulder, Colorado (Section 2, Physical and Chemical Data) George W. Gassman, B.S.M.E., Senior Research Specialist, Final Control Systems, Fisher Con- trols International, Inc., Marshalltown, Iowa (Section 8, Process Control) Fred K. Geitner, P.Eng., B.S.M.E., M.S.M.E., Consulting Engineer, Registered Professional Engineer (Ontario, Canada) (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) Victor M. Goldschmidt, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) Stanley Grossel, President, Process Safety & Design, Inc.; Fellow, American Institute of Chem- ical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society; Member, The Combustion Institute; Mem- ber, Explosion Protection Systems Committee of NFPA (Section 26, Process Safety) Peter Harriott, Ph.D., Professor, School of Chemical Engineering, Cornell University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineering, American Chemical Society (ACS) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS xi Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  13. 13. T. Alan Hatton, Ph.D., Ralph Landau Professor and Director of the David H. Koch School of Chemical Engineering Practice, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Founding Fellow, Ameri- can Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, International Association of Colloid and Interface Scien- tists, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Neutron Scattering Society of Amer- ica (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) Joseph D. Henry, Jr., Ph.D., P.E., Senior Fellow, Department of Engineering and Public Pol- icy, Carnegie Mellon University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society for Engineering Education (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) W. G. High, C.Eng., B.Sc., F.I.Mech.E., Burgoyne Consultants Ltd., W. Yorks, England (Sec- tion 26, Process Safety) Richard Hogg, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Mineral Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) F. A. Holland, D.Sc., Ph.D., Consultant in Heat Energy Recycling; Research Professor, Univer- sity of Salford, England; Fellow, Institution of Chemical Engineers, London (Section 9, Process Economics) Hoyt C. Hottel, S.M., Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Member, National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Combustion Institute (Section 5, Heat and Mass Transfer) Colin S. Howat, Ph.D., P.E., John E. & Winfred E. Sharp Professor, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Kansas; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Society of Engineering Education (Section 30, Analysis of Plant Performance) Predrag S. Hrnjak, Ph.D., V.Res., Assistant Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana Cham- paign and Principal InvestigatorU. of I. Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Center, Assistant Professor, University of Belgrade; Member, International Institute of Refrigeration, American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) Arthur E. Humphrey, Ph.D., Retired, Professor of Chemical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University; Member, U.S. National Academy of Engineering, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, American Society for Microbiology (Section 24, Bio- chemical Engineering) Eric Jenett, M.S.Ch.E., Manager, Process Engineering, Brown & Root, Inc.; Associate Member, AIChE, Project Management Institute; Registered Professional Engineer (Texas) (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) John S. Jeris, Sc.D., P.E., Professor of Environmental Engineering, Manhattan College; Envi- ronmental Consultant; Member, American Water Works Association, Water Environment Feder- ation Section Director (Section 25, Waste Management) T. L. P. Jespen, M.S., Min. Proc., Metallurgical Engineer, Basic, Inc., Gabbs, Nevada (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Keith P. Johnston, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Texas (Austin); Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, University of Texas Separations Research Program (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) Trevor A. Kletz, D.Sc., Senior Visiting Research Fellow, Department of Chemical Engineering, Loughborough University, U.K.; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Royal Acad- emy of Engineers (U.K.), Institution of Chemical Engineers (U.K.), and Royal Society of Chem- istry (U.K.) (Section 26, Process Safety) Edgar B. Klunder, Ph.D., Project Manager, Energy Technology Center (Pittsburgh), U.S. Department of Energy (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) xii LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  14. 14. Kent S. Knaebel, Ph.D., President, Adsorption Research, Inc.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, International Adsorption Society. Professional Engineer (Ohio) (Section 5, Heat and Mass Transfer) Frank Knoll, M.S., Min. Proc., President, Carpco, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida (Section 19, Solid- Solid Operations and Equipment) James G. Knudsen, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering, Oregon State Univer- sity; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society; Registered Professional Engineer (Oregon) (Section 5, Heat and Mass Transfer) Michael Krumpelt, Ph.D., Manager, Fuel Cell Technology, Argonne National Laboratory; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Electrochemi- cal Society (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Irwin J. Kugelman, Sc.D., Professor of Civil Engineering, Lehigh University; Member, American Society of Civil Engineering, Water Environmental Federation (Section 25, Waste Management) Tim Laros, M.S. Mineral Processing, Senior Process Consultant, EIMCO Process Equipment Co.; Member, Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration (SME of AIME) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Richard M. Lemert, Ph.D., P.E., Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Toledo; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Society of Mining Engineers, American Society for Engineering Education (Section 22, Alternative Sepa- ration Processes) Robert Lemlich, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Chemical Engineering Emeritus, University of Cincinnati; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society, American Society for Engineering Education, American Chemical Society (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) Wallace Leung, Sc.D., Director, Process Technology, Bird Machine Company; Member, Amer- ican Filtration and Separation Society (Director) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) M. Douglas LeVan, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Vir- ginia; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Interna- tional Adsorption Society (Section 16, Adsorption and Ion Exchange) Peter E. Liley, Ph.D., D.I.C., School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University (Section 2, Physical and Chemical Data) James D. Litster, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Queensland; Member, Institute of Chemical EngineersAustralia (Section 20, Size Reduction and Size Enlargement) Peter J. Loftus, D. Phil., Arthur D. Little, Inc.; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Hsue-peng Loh, Ph.D., P.E., Federal Energy Technology Center (Morgantown), U.S. Depart- ment of Energy; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society of Infor- mation Sciences (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Douglas E. Lowenhaupt, M.S., Group Leader, Coke Laboratory, CONSOL, Inc.; Member, American Society for Testing and Materials, Iron and Steel Making Society, International Com- mittee for Coal Petrology (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) James O. Maloney, Ph.D., P.E., Emeritus Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Kansas; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineering; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member, American Chemical Society, American Society for Engi- neering Education (Section 1, Conversion Factors and Mathematical Symbols) LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS xiii Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  15. 15. Thomas J. McAvoy, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland (Section 8, Process Control) Chad McCleary, EIMCO Process Equipment Company, Process Consultant (Section 18, Liq- uid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Thomas F. McGowan, P.E., Senior Consultant, RMT/Four Nines; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Air and Waste Management Association (Section 25, Waste Management) Howard G. McIlvried, III, Ph.D., Senior Engineer, Burns and Roe Services Corporation, Fed- eral Energy Technology Center (Pittsburgh), Member, American Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) John D. McKenna, Ph.D., President and Chairman, ETS International, Inc., Member, Ameri- can Institute of Chemical Engineers, Air and Waste Management Association (Section 25, Waste Management) Shelby A. Miller, Ph.D., P.E., Resident Retired Senior Engineer, Argonne National Laboratory; American Association for the Advancement of Science (Fellow), American Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Fellow), American Institutes of Chemists (Fellow), Fil- tration Society, New York Academy of Sciences, Society of Chemical Industry (Section 18, Liquid- Solid Operations and Equipment; Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Booker Morey, Ph.D., Senior Consultant, SRI International; Member, Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration (SME of AIME), The Filtration Society, Air and Waste Management Association; Registered Professional Engineer (California and Massachusetts) (Section 18, Liquid- Solid Operations and Equipment) Charles G. Moyers, Ph.D., P.E., Principal Engineer, Union Carbide Corporation; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 12, Psychrometry, Evaporative Cooling, and Solids Drying; Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) John Newman, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley; Principle Investigator, Inorganic Materials Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) James Y. Oldshue, Ph.D., President, Oldshue Technologies International, Inc.; Member, National Academy of Engineering; Adjunct Professor of Chemical Engineering at Beijing Institute of Chemical Technology, Beijing, China; Member, American Chemical Society (ACE), American Institute of Chemical Engineering (AIChE), Traveler Century Club, Executive Committee on the Transfer of Appropriate Technology for the World Federation of Engineering Organizations (Sec- tion 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Robert W. Ormsby, M.S., Ch.E. P.E., Manager of Safety, Chemical Group, Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.; Air Products Corp.; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 26, Process Safety) John E. Owens, B.E.E., Electrostatic Consultant, Condux, Inc.; Member, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Electrostatics Society of America (Section 26, Process Safety) Bhupendra Parekh, Ph.D., Associate Director, Center for Applied Energy Research, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Mel Pell, Ph.D., Senior Consultant, E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co.; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Registered Professional Engineer (Delaware) (Section 17, Gas-Solid Operations and Equipment) W. R. Penney, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Arkansas; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 14, Gas Absorption and Gas-Liquid System Design) xiv LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  16. 16. Walter F. Podolski, Ph.D., Chemical Engineer, Electrochemical Technology Program, Argonne National Laboratory; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Herbert A. Pohl, Ph.D. (deceased), Professor of Physics, Oklahoma State University (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) Kent Pollock, Ph.D., Member of Technical Staff, Group 91, Space Surveillance Techniques, MIT Lincoln Laboratory (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) George Priday, B.S., Ch.E., EIMCO Process Equipment Company; Member, American Insti- tute of Chemical Engineering (AIChE), Instrument Society of America (ISA) (Section 18, Liquid- Solid Operations and Equipment) Michael E. Prudich, Ph.D., Professor and Chair of Chemical Engineering, Ohio University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Society of Min- ing Engineers, American Society for Engineering Education (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) Raj K. Rajamani, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Metallurgy and Metallurgical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Lawrence K. Rath, B.S., P.E., Federal Energy Technology Center (Morgantown), U.S. Depart- ment of Energy; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Grantges J. Raymus, M.E., M.S., President, Raymus Associates, Incorporated, Packaging Con- sultants; Adjunct Professor and Program Coordinator, Center for Packaging Science and Engi- neering, College of Engineering, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; formerly Manager of Packaging Engineering, Union Carbide Corporation; Registered Professional Engineer, Cali- fornia; Member, Institute of Packaging Professionals, ASME (Section 21, Handling of Bulk Solids and Packaging of Solids and Liquids) Lanny A. Robbins, Ph.D., Research Fellow, Dow Chemical Company; Member, American Insti- tute of Chemical Engineers (Section 15, Liquid-Liquid Extraction Operations and Equipment) Joseph J. Santoleri, P.E., Senior Consultant, RMT/Four Nines; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Air and Waste Management Association (Section 25, Waste Management) Adel F. Sarofim, Sc.D., Lammot DuPont Professor of Chemical Engineering and Assistant Director, Fuels Research Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, Combustion Institute (Section 5, Heat and Mass Transfer) Kalanadh V. S. Sastry, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Materials Science and Mineral Engineer- ing, University of California, Berkeley, CA; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Society for Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Paul J. Schafbuch, Ph.D., Senior Research Specialist, Final Control Systems, Fisher Controls International, Inc., Marshalltown, Iowa (Section 8, Process Control) Carl A. Schiappa, B.S., Ch.E., Process Engineering Associate, Michigan Division Engineering, The Dow Chemical Company; Member, AIChE and CCPS (Section 26, Process Safety) David K. Schmalzer, Ph.D., P.E., Fossil Energy Program Manager, Argonne National Labora- tory; Member, American Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) J. D. Seader, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society; Member, American Society for Engineering Education (Section 13, Distillation) LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS xv Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  17. 17. Dale E. Seborg, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of California, Santa Bar- bara, California (Section 8, Process Control) Richard L. Shilling, P.E., B.S.M., B.E.M.E., Manager of Engineering Development, Brown Fintube Companya Koch Engineering Company; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) F. Greg Shinskey, B.S.Ch.E., Consultant (retired from Foxboro Co.), North Sandwich, New Hampshire (Section 8, Process Control) Oliver W. Siebert, P.E., B.S.M.E., Washington University, Graduate Metallurgical Engineering, Sever Institute of Technology; Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, Washington Uni- versity, St. Louis, Missouri; President, Siebert Materials Engineering, Inc., St. Louis, Missouri; Senior Engineering Fellow (retired), Monsanto Co.; Mechanical Designer, Sverdrup Corp.; Met- allurgist, Carondelet Foundry; United Nations Consultant to the Peoples Republic of China; Fel- low, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Life Fellow, American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Past Elected Director and Fellow, National Association of Corrosion Engineers, Intl; American Society for Metals, Intl; American Welding Society; Pi Tau Sigma, Sigma Xi, and Tau Beta Pi (Section 28, Materials of Construction) Jeffrey J. Siirola, Ph.D., Research Fellow, Eastman Chemical Company; Member, National Academy of Engineering; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, American Association for Artificial Intelligence, American Society for Engineering Edu- cation (Section 13, Distillation) Charles E. Silverblatt, M.S., Ch.E., Peregrine International Associates, Inc.; Consultant to WesTech Engineering, Inc., American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engines (AIME) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Richard Siwek, M.S., Explosion Protection Manager, Corporate Unit Safety and Environment, Ciba-Geigy Ltd., Basel, Switzerland (Section 26, Process Safety) J. Stephen Slottee, M.S., Ch.E., Manager, Technology and Development, EIMCO Process Equipment Co.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Cecil L. Smith, Ph.D., Principal, Cecil L. Smith Inc., Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Section 8, Process Control) Julian C. Smith, B. Chem., Ch.E., Professor Emeritus Chemical Engineering, Cornell Univer- sity; Member, American Chemical Society (ACS), American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Richard H. Snow, Ph.D., Engineering Advisor, IIT Research Institute; Member, American Chemical Society, Sigma Xi; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 20, Size Reduction and Size Enlargement) Thomas Sorenson, M.B.A., Min. Eng., President, Galigher Ash (Canada) Ltd. (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Rameshwar D. Srivastava, Ph.D., Fuels Group Manager, Burns and Roe Services Corporation, Federal Energy Technology Center (Pittsburgh) (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) F. C. Standiford, M.S., P.E., Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) D. E. Steinmeyer, M.A., M.S., P.E., Distinguished Fellow, Monsanto Company; Fellow, Amer- ican Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society (Section 14, Gas Absorption and Gas-Liquid System Design) Gary J. Stiegel, M.S., P.E., Program Coordinator, Federal Energy Technology Center (Pitts- burgh), U.S. Department of Energy (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) xvi LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  18. 18. John G. Stoecker II, B.S.M.E., University of Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy; Princi- pal Consultant, Stoecker & Associates, St. Louis, Missouri; Principal Materials Engineering Specialist (retired), Monsanto Co.; High-Temperature Design/Application Engineer, Abex Corporation; Member, NACE International, ASM International (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) Judson S. Swearingen, Ph.D., Retired President, Rotoflow Corporation (Section 29, Process Machinery Drives) Louis Theodore, Sc.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, Manhattan College; Member, Air and Waste Management Association (Section 25, Waste Management) Michael P. Thien, Sc.D., Senior Research Fellow, Merck & Co., Inc.; Member, American Insti- tute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, International Society for Pharmaceutical Engineers (Section 22, Alternative Separation Processes) George H. Thomson, AIChE Design Institute for Physical Property Data (Section 2, Physical and Chemical Data) James N. Tilton, Ph.D., P.E., Senior Consultant, Process Engineering, E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co.; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Registered Professional Engineer (Delaware) (Section 6, Fluid and Particle Dynamics) Klaus D. Timmerhaus, Ph.D., P.E., Professor and Presidents Teaching Scholar, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Soci- ety for Engineering Education, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member, American Astronautical Society, National Academy of Engineering, Austrian Academy of Science, International Institute of Refrigeration, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Con- ditioning Engineers, American Society of Environmental Engineers, Engineering Society for Advancing Mobility on Land, Sea, Air, and Space, Sigma Xi, The Research Society (Section 11, Heat-Transfer Equipment) David B. Todd, Ph.D., President, Todd Engineering; Member, American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), American Chemical Society (ACS), American Institute of Chemical Engineering (AIChE), American Oil Chemists Society (AOCS), Society of Plastics Engi- neers (SPE), and Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI); Registered Professional Engineer, Michi- gan (Section 18, Liquid-Solid Operations and Equipment) George T. Tsao, Ph.D., Director, Laboratory for Renewable Resource Engineering, Purdue University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, American Society for Microbiology (Section 24, Biochemical Engineering) Hendrick C. Van Ness, D.Eng., Howard P. Isermann Department of Chemical Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Member, American Chemical Society (Section 4, Thermodynamics) Stanley M. Walas, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engi- neering, University of Kansas; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 7, Reaction Kinetics; Section 23, Chemical Reactors) Phillip C. Wankat, Ph.D., Professor of Chemical Engineering, Purdue University; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Chemical Society, International Adsorp- tion Society (Section 5, Heat and Mass Transfer) Ionel Wechsler, M.S., Min. and Met., Vice President, Sala Magnetics, Inc., Cambridge, Massa- chusetts (Section 19, Solid-Solid Operations and Equipment) Arthur W. Westerberg, Ph.D., Swearingen University Professor of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University; Member, National Academy of Engineering (Section 3, Mathematics) John M. Wheeldon, Ph.D., Electric Power Research Institute (Section 27, Energy Resources, Conversion, and Utilization) LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS xvii Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  19. 19. Robert E. White, Ph.D., Principal Engineer, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Division, Southwest Research Institute (Section 26, Process Safety) J. K. Wilkinson, M.Sc., Consultant Chemical Engineer; Fellow, Institution of Chemical Engi- neers, London (Section 9, Process Economics) David Winegarder, Ph.D., Engineering Associate, Michigan Division Engineering, The Dow Chemical Company; Member AIChE and CCPS (Section 26, Process Safety) John L. Woodward, Ph.D., Principal, DNV Technica, Inc. (Section 26, Process Safety) Yoshiyuki Yamashita, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan (Section 3, Mathematics) Carmen M. Yon, M.S., Development Associate, UOP, Des Plaines, Illinois; Member, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (Section 16, Adsorption and Ion Exchange) xviii LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  20. 20. xix Preface to the Seventh Edition Perrys has been an important source for chemical engineering information since 1934. The signif- icant contributions of the editors who have guided preparation of the previous editions is acknowl- edged. These include John H. Perry (first to third editions), Robert H. Perry (fourth to sixth editions), Cecil H. Chilton (fourth and fifth editions), and Sidney D. Kirkpatrick (fourth edition). Ray Genereaux (DuPont) contributed to each of the first six editions, and Shelby Miller (Argonne National Lab) worked on the second through the seventh. The current editors directed both the sixth and seventh editions. Advances in the technology of chemical engineering have continued as we have moved toward the twenty-first century, and this edition will carry us into that century. The Handbook has been reorganized. The first group of sections focuses on chemical and physi- cal property data and the fundamentals of chemical engineering. The second and largest group of sections deals with processes, generally divided as heat transfer operations, distillation, kinetics, liquid-liquid, liquid-solid, and so on. The last group treats auxiliary information such as materials of construction, process machinery drives, waste management, and process safety. All sections have been revised and updated, and several sections are entirely new or have been extensively revised. Examples of these sections are mathematics, mass transfer, reaction kinetics, process control, trans- port and storage of fluids, alternative separation processes, heat-transfer equipment, chemical reac- tions, liquid-solid operations and equipment, process safety, and analysis of plant performance. Significant new information has also been included in the physical and chemical data sections. Several section editors and contributors worked on this seventh edition, and these persons and their affiliations are listed as a part of the front material. Approximately one-half of the section edi- tors are fellows of the AIChE. In addition, the following chemical engineering students at the Uni- versity of Kansas assisted in the preparation of the index: Jason Canter, Pau Ying Chong, Mei Ling Chuah, Li Phoon Hor, Siew Pouy Ng, Francis J. Orzulak, Scott C. Renze, Page B. Surbaugh, and Stephen F. Weller. Shari L. Gladman and Sarah Smith provided extensive secretarial assistance. Much of Bob Perrys work carries over into this edition and his influence is both recognized and remembered. DON W. GREEN JAMES O. MALONEY University of Kansas April, 1997 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  21. 21. blank page xx Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  22. 22. Perrys Chemical Engineers Handbook Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  23. 23. blank page xxii Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  24. 24. CONVERSION FACTORS Fig. 1-1 Graphic Relationships of SI Units with Names . . . . . . . . . 1-2 Table 1-1 SI Base and Supplementary Quantities and Units. . . . . . . 1-3 Table 1-2a Derived Units of SI that Have Special Names. . . . . . . . . . 1-3 Table 1-2b Additional Common Derived Units of SI . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3 Table 1-3 SI Prefixes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3 Table 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4 Table 1-5 Metric Conversion Factors as Exact Numerical Multiples of SI Units. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-13 Table 1-6 Alphabetical Listing of Common Conversions . . . . . . . . . 1-15 Table 1-7 Common Units and Conversion Factors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-18 Table 1-8 Kinematic-Viscosity Conversion Formulas . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-18 Table 1-9 Values of the Gas-Law Constant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-18 Table 1-10 United States Customary System of Weights and Measures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-19 Table 1-11 Temperature Conversion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-19 Table 1-12 Specific Gravity, Degrees Baum, Degrees API, Degrees Twaddell, Pounds per Gallon, Pounds per Cubic Foot . . . 1-20 Table 1-13 Wire and Sheet-Metal Gauges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-21 Table 1-14 Fundamental Physical Constants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-22 CONVERSION OF VALUES FROM U.S. CUSTOMARY UNITS TO SI UNITS MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS Table 1-15 Mathematical Signs, Symbols, and Abbreviations . . . . . . . 1-24 Table 1-16 Greek Alphabet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-24 1-1 Section 1 Conversion Factors and Mathematical Symbols* James O. Maloney, Ph.D., P.E., Emeritus Professor of Chemical Engineering, Univer- sity of Kansas; Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineering; Fellow, American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science; Member, American Chemical Society, American Society for Engineering Education * Much of the material was taken from Sec. 1. of the fifth edition. The contribution of Cecil H. Chilton in developing that material is acknowledged. Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  25. 25. 1-2 FIG. 1-1 Graphic relationships of SI units with names (U.S. National Bureau of Standards, LC 1078, December 1976.) Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  26. 26. 1-3 TABLE 1-1 SI Base and Supplementary Quantities and Units SI unit symbol (abbreviation); Use roman Quantity or dimension SI unit (upright) type Base quantity or dimension length meter m mass kilogram kg time second s electric current ampere A thermodynamic temperature kelvin K amount of substance mole* mol luminous intensity candela cd Supplementary quantity or dimension plane angle radian rad solid angle steradian sr *When the mole is used, the elementary entities must be specified; they may be atoms, molecules, ions, electrons, other particles, or specified groups of such particles. TABLE 1-2a Derived Units of SI that Have Special Names Quantity Unit Symbol Formula frequency (of a periodic phenomenon) hertz Hz l/s force newton N (kgm)/s2 pressure, stress pascal Pa N/m2 energy, work, quantity of heat joule J Nm power, radiant flux watt W J/s quantity of electricity, electric charge coulomb C As electric potential, potential difference, volt V W/A electromotive force capacitance farad F C/V electric resistance ohm V/A conductance siemens S A/V magnetic flux weber Wb Vs magnetic-flux density tesla T Wb/m2 inductance henry H Wb/A luminous flux lumen lm cdsr illuminance lux lx lm/m2 activity (of radionuclides) becquerel Bq l/s absorbed dose gray Gy J/kg TABLE 1-2b Additional Common Derived Units of SI Quantity Unit Symbol acceleration meter per second squared m/s2 angular acceleration radian per second squared rad/s2 angular velocity radian per second rad/s area square meter m2 concentration (of amount of mole per cubic meter mol/m3 substance) current density ampere per square meter A/m2 density, mass kilogram per cubic meter kg/m3 electric-charge density coulomb per cubic meter C/m3 electric-field strength volt per meter V/m electric-flux density coulomb per square meter C/m2 energy density joule per cubic meter J/m3 entropy joule per kelvin J/K heat capacity joule per kelvin J/K heat-flux density, watt per square meter W/m2 irradiance luminance candela per square meter cd/m2 magnetic-field strength ampere per meter A/m molar energy joule per mole J/mol molar entropy joule per mole-kelvin J/(molK) molar-heat capacity joule per mole-kelvin J/(molK) moment of force newton-meter Nm permeability henry per meter H/m permittivity farad per meter F/m radiance watt per square-meter- W/(m2 sr) steradian radiant intensity watt per steradian W/sr specific-heat capacity joule per kilogram-kelvin J/(kgK) specific energy joule per kilogram J/kg specific entropy joule per kilogram-kelvin J/(kgK) specific volume cubic meter per kilogram m3 /kg surface tension newton per meter N/m thermal conductivity watt per meter-kelvin W/(mK) velocity meter per second m/s viscosity, dynamic pascal-second Pas viscosity, kinematic square meter per second m2 /s volume cubic meter m3 wave number 1 per meter 1/m TABLE 1-3 SI Prefixes Multiplication factor Prefix Symbol 1 000 000 000 000 000 000 = 1018 exa E 1 000 000 000 000 000 = 1015 peta P 1 000 000 000 000 = 1012 tera T 1 000 000 000 = 109 giga G 1 000 000 = 106 mega M 1 000 = 103 kilo k 100 = 102 hecto* h 10 = 101 deka* da 0.1 = 101 deci* d 0.01 = 102 centi c 0.001 = 103 milli m 0.000 001 = 106 micro 0.000 000 001 = 109 nano n 0.000 000 000 001 = 1012 pico p 0.000 000 000 000 001 = 1015 femto f 0.000 000 000 000 000 001 = 1018 atto a *Generally to be avoided. Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  27. 27. TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Space, time Length naut mi km 1.852* E + 00 mi km 1.609 344* E + 00 chain m 2.011 68* E + 01 link m 2.011 68* E 01 fathom m 1.828 8* E + 00 yd m 9.144* E 01 ft m 3.048* E 01 cm 3.048* E + 01 in mm 2.54* E + 01 in cm 2.54 E + 00 mil m 2.54* E + 01 Length/length ft/mi m/km 1.893 939 E 01 Length/volume ft/U.S. gal m/m3 8.051 964 E + 01 ft/ft3 m/m3 1.076 391 E + 01 ft/bbl m/m3 1.917 134 E + 00 Area mi2 km2 2.589 988 E + 00 section ha 2.589 988 E + 02 acre ha 4.046 856 E 01 ha m2 1.000 000* E + 04 yd2 m2 8.361 274 E 01 ft2 m2 9.290 304* E 02 in2 mm2 6.451 6* E + 02 cm2 6.451 6* E + 00 Area/volume ft2 /in3 m2 /cm3 5.699 291 E 03 ft2 /ft3 m2 /m3 3.280 840 E + 00 Volume cubem km3 4.168 182 E + 00 acreft m3 1.233 482 E + 03 ham 1.233 482 E 01 yd3 m3 7.645 549 E 01 bbl (42 U.S. gal) m3 1.589 873 E 01 ft3 m3 2.831 685 E 02 dm3 L 2.831 685 E + 01 U.K. gal m3 4.546 092 E 03 dm3 L 4.546 092 E + 00 U.S. gal m3 3.785 412 E 03 dm3 L 3.785 412 E + 00 U.K. qt dm3 L 1.136 523 E + 00 U.S. qt dm3 L 9.463 529 E 01 U.S. pt dm3 L 4.731 765 E 01 U.K. fl oz cm3 2.841 307 E + 01 U.S. fl oz cm3 2.957 353 E + 01 in3 cm3 1.638 706 E + 01 Volume/length (linear bbl/in m3 m 6.259 342 E + 00 displacement) bbl/ft m3 /m 5.216 119 E 01 ft3 /ft m3 /m 9.290 304* E 02 U.S. gal/ft m3 /m 1.241 933 E 02 L/m 1.241 933 E + 01 Plane angle rad rad 1 deg () rad 1.745 329 E 02 min () rad 2.908 882 E 04 sec () rad 4.848 137 E 06 Solid angle sr sr 1 Time year a 1 week d 7.0* E + 00 h s 3.6* E + 03 min 6.0* E + 01 min s 6.0* E + 01 h 1.666 667 E 02 ms ns 1 Mass, amount of substance Mass U.K. ton Mg t 1.016 047 E + 00 U.S. ton Mg t 9.071 847 E 01 U.K. cwt kg 5.080 234 E + 01 U.S. cwt kg 4.535 924 E + 01 lbm kg 4.535 924 E 01 oz (troy) g 3.110 348 E + 01 oz (av) g 2.834 952 E + 01 gr mg 6.479 891 E + 01 1-4 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  28. 28. 1-5 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Amount of substance lbmmol kmol 4.535 924 E 01 std m3 (0C, 1 atm) kmol 4.461 58 E 02 std ft3 (60F, 1 atm) kmol 1.195 30 E 03 Enthalpy, calorific value, heat, entropy, heat capacity Calorific value, enthalpy Btu/lbm MJ/kg 2.326 000 E 03 (mass basis) kJ/kg J/g 2.326 000 E + 00 kWh/kg 6.461 112 E 04 cal/g kJ/kg J/g 4.184* E + 00 cal/lbm J/kg 9.224 141 E + 00 Caloric value, enthalpy kcal/(gmol) kJ/kmol 4.184* E + 03 (mole basis) Btu/(lbmol) kJ/kmol 2.326 000 E + 00 Calorific value (volume Btu/U.S. gal MJ/m3 kJ/dm3 2.787 163 E 01 basissolids and liquids) kJ/m3 2.787 163 E + 02 kWh/m3 7.742 119 E 02 Btu/U.K. gal MJ/m3 kJ/dm3 2.320 800 E 01 kJ/m3 2.320 800 E + 02 Btu/ft3 kWh/m3 6.446 667 E 02 MJ/m3 kJ/dm3 3.725 895 E 02 kJ/m3 3.725 895 E + 01 kWh/m3 1.034 971 E 02 cal/mL MJ/m3 4.184* E + 00 (ftlbf)/U.S. gal kJ/m3 3.581 692 E 01 Calorific value (volume cal/mL kJ/m3 J/dm3 4.184* E + 03 basisgases) kcal/m3 kJ/m3 J/dm3 4.184* E + 00 Btu/ft3 kJ/m3 J/dm3 3.725 895 E + 01 kWh/m3 1.034 971 E 02 Specific entropy Btu/(lbmR) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 4.186 8* E + 00 cal/(gK) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 4.184* E + 00 kcal/(kgC) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 4.184* E + 00 Specific-heat capacity (mass kWh/(kgC) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 3.6* E + 03 basis) Btu/(lbmF) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 4.186 8* E + 00 kcal/(kgC) kJ/(kgK) J/(gK) 4.184* E + 00 Specific-heat capacity (mole Btu/(lbmolF) kJ/(kmolK) 4.186 8* E + 00 basis) cal/(gmolC) kJ/(kmolK) 4.184* E + 00 Temperature, pressure, vacuum Temperature (absolute) R K 5/9 K K 1 Temperature (traditional) F C 5/9(F 32) Temperature (difference) F K, C 5/9 Pressure atm (760 mmHg at 0C or 14,696 psi) MPa 1.013 250* E 01 kPa 1.013 250* E + 02 bar 1.013 250* E + 00 bar MPa 1.0* E 01 kPa 1.0* E + 02 mmHg (0C) = torr MPa 6.894 757 E 03 kPa 6.894 757 E + 00 bar 6.894 757 E 02 mHg (0C) kPa 3.376 85 E + 00 bar kPa 2.488 4 E 01 mmHg = torr (0C) kPa 1.333 224 E 01 cmH2O (4C) kPa 9.806 38 E 02 lbf/ft2 (psf) kPa 4.788 026 E 02 mHg (0C) Pa 1.333 224 E 01 bar Pa 1.0* E + 05 dyn/cm2 Pa 1.0* E 01 Vacuum, draft inHg (60F) kPa 3.376 85 E + 00 inH2O (39.2F) kPa 2.490 82 E 01 inH2O (60F) kPa 2.488 4 E 01 mmHg (0C) = torr kPa 1.333 224 E 01 cmH2O (4C) kPa 9.806 38 E 02 Liquid head ft m 3.048* E 01 in mm 2.54* E + 01 cm 2.54* E + 00 Pressure drop/length psi/ft kPa/m 2.262 059 E + 01 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  29. 29. 1-6 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Density, specific volume, concentration, dosage Density lbm/ft3 kg/m3 1.601 846 E + 01 g/m3 1.601 846 E + 04 lbm/U.S. gal kg/m3 1.198 264 E + 02 g/cm3 1.198 264 E 01 lbm/U.K. gal kg/m3 9.977 633 E + 01 lbm/ft3 kg/m3 1.601 846 E + 01 g/cm3 1.601 846 E 02 g/cm3 kg/m3 1.0* E + 03 lbm/ft3 kg/m3 1.601 846 E + 01 Specific volume ft3 /lbm m3 /kg 6.242 796 E 02 m3 /g 6.242 796 E 05 ft3 /lbm dm3 /kg 6.242 796 E + 01 U.K. gal/lbm dm3 /kg cm3 /g 1.002 242 E + 01 U.S. gal/lbm dm3 /kg cm3 /g 8.345 404 E + 00 Specific volume (mole basis) L/(gmol) m3 /kmol 1 ft3 /(lbmol) m3 /kmol 6.242 796 E 02 Specific volume bbl/U.S. ton m3 /t 1.752 535 E 01 bbl/U.K. ton m3 /t 1.564 763 E 01 Yield bbl/U.S. ton dm3 /t L/t 1.752 535 E + 02 bbl/U.K. ton dm3 /t L/t 1.564 763 E + 02 U.S. gal/U.S. ton dm3 /t L/t 4.172 702 E + 00 U.S. gal/U.K. ton dm3 /t L/t 3.725 627 E + 00 Concentration (mass/mass) wt % kg/kg 1.0* E 02 g/kg 1.0* E + 01 wt ppm mg/kg 1 Concentration (mass/volume) lbm/bbl kg/m3 g/dm3 2.853 010 E + 00 g/U.S. gal kg/m3 2.641 720 E 01 g/U.K. gal kg/m3 g/L 2.199 692 E 01 lbm/1000 U.S. gal g/m3 mg/dm3 1.198 264 E + 02 lbm/1000 U.K. gal g/m3 mg/dm3 9.977 633 E + 01 gr/U.S. gal g/m3 mg/dm3 1.711 806 E + 01 gr/ft3 mg/m3 2.288 351 E + 03 lbm/1000 bbl g/m3 mg/dm3 2.853 010 E + 00 mg/U.S. gal g/m3 mg/dm3 2.641 720 E 01 gr/100 ft3 mg/m3 2.288 351 E + 01 Concentration (volume/volume) ft3 /ft3 m3 /m3 1 bbl/(acreft) m3 /m3 1.288 931 E 04 vol% m3 /m3 1.0* E 02 U.K. gal/ft3 dm3 /m3 L/m3 1.605 437 E + 02 U.S. gal/ft3 dm3 /m3 L/m3 1.336 806 E + 02 mL/U.S. gal dm3 /m3 L/m3 2.641 720 E 01 mL/U.K. gal dm3 /m3 L/m3 2.199 692 E 01 vol ppm cm3 /m3 1 dm3 /m3 L/m3 1.0* E 03 U.K. gal/1000 bbl cm3 /m3 2.859 403 E + 01 U.S. gal/1000 bbl cm3 /m3 2.380 952 E + 01 U.K. pt/1000 bbl cm3 /m3 3.574 253 E + 00 Concentration (mole/volume) (lbmol)/U.S. gal kmol/m3 1.198 264 E + 02 (lbmol)/U.K. gal kmol/m3 9.977 644 E + 01 (lbmol)/ft3 kmol/m3 1.601 846 E + 01 std ft3 (60F, 1 atm)/bbl kmol/m3 7.518 21 E 03 Concentration (volume/mole) U.S. gal/1000 std ft3 (60F/60F) dm3 /kmol L/kmol 3.166 91 E + 00 bbl/million std ft3 (60F/60F) dm3 /kmol L/kmol 1.330 10 E 01 Facility throughput, capacity Throughput (mass basis) U.K. ton/year t/a 1.016 047 E + 00 U.S. ton/year t/a 9.071 847 E 01 U.K. ton/day t/d 1.016 047 E + 00 t/h 4.233 529 E 02 U.S. ton/day t/d 9.071 847 E 01 t/h 3.779 936 E 02 U.K. ton/h t/h 1.016 047 E + 00 U.S. ton/h t/h 9.071 847 E 01 lbm/h kg/h 4.535 924 E 01 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  30. 30. 1-7 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Throughput (volume basis) bbl/day t/a 5.803 036 E + 01 m3 /d 1.589 873 E 01 ft3 /day m3 /h 1.179 869 E 03 bbl/h m3 /h 1.589 873 E 01 ft3 /h m3 /h 2.831 685 E 02 U.K. gal/h m3 /h 4.546 092 E 03 L/s 1.262 803 E 03 U.S. gal/h m3 /h 3.785 412 E 03 L/s 1.051 503 E 03 U.K. gal/min m3 /h 2.727 655 E 01 L/s 7.576 819 E 02 U.S. gal/min m3 /h 2.271 247 E 01 L/s 6.309 020 E 02 Throughput (mole basis) (lbmmol)/h kmol/h 4.535 924 E 01 kmol/s 1.259 979 E 04 Flow rate Flow rate (mass basis) U.K. ton/min kg/s 1.693 412 E + 01 U.S. ton/min kg/s 1.511 974 E + 01 U.K. ton/h kg/s 2.822 353 E 01 U.S. ton/h kg/s 2.519 958 E 01 U.K. ton/day kg/s 1.175 980 E 02 U.S. ton/day kg/s 1.049 982 E 02 million lbm/year kg/s 5.249 912 E + 00 U.K. ton/year kg/s 3.221 864 E 05 U.S. ton/year kg/s 2.876 664 E 05 lbm/s kg/s 4.535 924 E 01 lbm/min kg/s 7.559 873 E 03 lbm/h kg/s 1.259 979 E 04 Flow rate (volume basis) bbl/day m3 /d 1.589 873 E 01 L/s 1.840 131 E 03 ft3 /day m3 /d 2.831 685 E 02 L/s 3.277 413 E 04 bbl/h m3 /s 4.416 314 E 05 L/s 4.416 314 E 02 ft3 /h m3 /s 7.865 791 E 06 L/s 7.865 791 E 03 U.K. gal/h dm3 /s L/s 1.262 803 E 03 U.S. gal/h dm3 /s L/s 1.051 503 E 03 U.K. gal/min dm3 /s L/s 7.576 820 E 02 U.S. gal/min dm3 /s L/s 6.309 020 E 02 ft3 /min dm3 /s L/s 4.719 474 E 01 ft3 /s dm3 /s L/s 2.831 685 E + 01 Flow rate (mole basis) (lbmol)/s kmol/s 4.535 924 E 01 (lbmol)/h kmol/s 1.259 979 E 04 million scf/D kmol/s 1.383 45 E 02 Flow rate/length (mass basis) lbm/(sft) kg/(sm) 1.488 164 E + 00 lbm/(hft) kg/(sm) 4.133 789 E 04 Flow rate/length (volume basis) U.K. gal/(minft) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 2.485 833 E 04 U.S. gal/(minft) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 2.069 888 E 04 U.K. gal/(hin) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 4.971 667 E 05 U.S. gal/(hin) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 4.139 776 E 05 U.K. gal/(hft) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 4.143 055 E 06 U.S. gal/(hft) m2 /s m3 /(sm) 3.449 814 E 06 Flow rate/area (mass basis) lbm/(sft2 ) kg/(sm2 ) 4.882 428 E + 00 lbm/(hft2 ) kg/(sm2 ) 1.356 230 E 03 Flow rate/area (volume basis) ft3 /(sft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 3.048* E 01 ft3 /(minft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 5.08* E 03 U.K. gal/(hin2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 1.957 349 E 03 U.S. gal/(hin2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 1.629 833 E 03 U.K. gal/(minft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 8.155 621 E 04 U.S. gal/(minft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 6.790 972 E 04 U.K. gal/(hft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 1.359 270 E 05 U.S. gal/(hft2 ) m/s m3 /(sm2 ) 1.131 829 E 05 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  31. 31. 1-8 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Energy, work, power Energy, work therm MJ 1.055 056 E + 02 kJ 1.055 056 E + 05 kWh 2.930 711 E + 01 U.S. tonfmi MJ 1.431 744 E + 01 hph MJ 2.684 520 E + 00 kJ 2.684 520 E + 03 kWh 7.456 999 E 01 chh or CVh MJ 2.647 780 E + 00 kJ 2.647 780 E + 03 kWh 7.354 999 E 01 kWh MJ 3.6* E + 00 kJ 3.6* E + 03 Chu kJ 1.899 101 E + 00 kWh 5.275 280 E 04 Btu kJ 1.055 056 E + 00 kWh 2.930 711 E 04 kcal kJ 4.184* E + 00 cal kJ 4.184* E 03 ftlbf kJ 1.355 818 E 03 lbfft kJ 1.355 818 E 03 J kJ 1.0* E 03 (lbfft2 )/s2 kJ 4.214 011 E 05 erg J 1.0* E 07 Impact energy kgfm J 9.806 650* E + 00 lbfft J 1.355 818 E + 00 Surface energy erg/cm2 mJ/m2 1.0* E + 00 Specific-impact energy (kgfm)/cm2 J/cm2 9.806 650* E 02 (lbfft)/in2 J/cm2 2.101 522 E 03 Power million Btu/h MW 2.930 711 E 01 ton of refrigeration kW 3.516 853 E + 00 Btu/s kW 1.055 056 E + 00 kW kW 1 hydraulic horsepowerhhp kW 7.460 43 E 01 hp (electric) kW 7.46* E 01 hp [(550 ftlbf)/s] kW 7.456 999 E 01 ch or CV kW 7.354 999 E 01 Btu/min kW 1.758 427 E 02 (ftlbf)/s kW 1.355 818 E 03 kcal/h W 1.162 222 E + 00 Btu/h W 2.930 711 E 01 (ftlbf)/min W 2.259 697 E 02 Power/area Btu/(sft2 ) kW/m2 1.135 653 E + 01 cal/(hcm2 ) kW/m2 1.162 222 E 02 Btu/(hft2 ) kW/m2 3.154 591 E 03 Heat-release rate, mixing power hp/ft3 kW/m3 2.633 414 E + 01 cal/(hcm3 ) kW/m3 1.162 222 E + 00 Btu/(sft3 ) kW/m3 3.725 895 E + 01 Btu/(hft3 ) kW/m3 1.034 971 E 02 Cooling duty (machinery) Btu/(bhph) W/kW 3.930 148 E 01 Specific fuel consumption (mass lbm/(hph) mg/J kg/MJ 1.689 659 E 01 basis) kg/kWh 6.082 774 E 01 Specific fuel consumption (volume m3 /kWh dm3 /MJ mm3 /J 2.777 778 E + 02 basis) U.S. gal/(hph) dm3 /MJ mm3 /J 1.410 089 E + 00 U.K. pt/(hph) dm3 /MJ mm3 /J 2.116 806 E 01 Fuel consumption U.K. gal/mi dm3 /100 km L/100 km 2.824 807 E + 02 U.S. gal/mi dm3 /100 km L/100 km 2.352 146 E + 02 mi/U.S. gal km/dm3 km/L 4.251 437 E 01 mi/U.K. gal km/dm3 km/L 3.540 064 E 01 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  32. 32. 1-9 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Velocity (linear), speed knot km/h 1.852* E + 00 mi/h km/h 1.609 344* E + 00 ft/s m/s 3.048* E 01 cm/s 3.048* E + 01 ft/min m/s 5.08* E 03 ft/h mm/s 8.466 667 E 02 ft/day mm/s 3.527 778 E 03 m/d 3.048* E 01 in/s mm/s 2.54* E + 01 in/min mm/s 4.233 333 E 01 Corrosion rate in/year (ipy) mm/a 2.54* E + 01 mil/year mm/a 2.54* E 02 Rotational frequency r/min r/s 1.666 667 E 02 rad/s 1.047 198 E 01 Acceleration (linear) ft/s2 m/s2 3.048* E 01 cm/s2 3.048* E + 01 Acceleration (rotational) rpm/s rad/s2 1.047 198 E 01 Momentum (lbmft)/s (kgm)/s 1.382 550 E 01 Force U.K. tonf kN 9.964 016 E + 00 U.S. tonf kN 8.896 443 E + 00 kgf (kp) N 9.806 650* E + 00 lbf N 4.448 222 E + 00 dyn mN 1.0 E 02 Bending moment, torque U.S. tonfft kNm 2.711 636 E + 00 kgfm Nm 9.806 650* E + 00 lbfft Nm 1.355 818 E + 00 lbfin Nm 1.129 848 E 01 Bending moment/length (lbfft)/in (Nm)/m 5.337 866 E + 01 (lbfin)/in (Nm)/m 4.448 222 E + 00 Moment of inertia lbmft2 kgm2 4.214 011 E 02 Stress U.S. tonf/in2 MPa N/mm2 1.378 951 E + 01 kgf/mm2 MPa N/mm2 9.806 650* E + 00 U.S. tonf/ft2 MPa N/mm2 9.576 052 E 02 lbf/in2 (psi) MPa N/mm2 6.894 757 E 03 lbf/ft2 (psf) kPa 4.788 026 E 02 dyn/cm2 Pa 1.0* E 01 Mass/length lbm/ft kg/m 1.488 164 E + 00 Mass/area structural loading, U.S. ton/ft2 Mg/m2 9.764 855 E + 00 bearing capacity (mass lbm/ft2 kg/m2 4.882 428 E + 00 basis) Miscellaneous transport properties Diffusivity ft2 /s m2 /s 9.290 304* E 02 m2 /s mm2 /s 1.0* E + 06 ft2 /h m2 /s 2.580 64* E 05 Thermal resistance (Cm2 h)/kcal (Km2 )/kW 8.604 208 E + 02 (Fft2 h)/Btu (Km2 )/kW 1.761 102 E + 02 Heat flux Btu/(hft2 ) kW/m2 3.154 591 E 03 Thermal conductivity (calcm)/(scm2 C) W/(mK) 4.184* E + 02 (Btuft)/(hft2 F) W/(mK) 1.730 735 E + 00 (kJm)/(hm2 K) 6.230 646 E + 00 (kcalm)/(hm2 C) W/(mK) 1.162 222 E + 00 (Btuin)/(hft2 F) W/(mK) 1.442 279 E 01 (calcm)/(hcm2 C) W/(mK) 1.162 222 E 01 Heat-transfer coefficient cal/(scm2 C) kW/(m2 K) 4.184* E + 01 Btu/(sft2 F) kW/(m2 K) 2.044 175 E + 01 cal/(hcm2 C) kW/(m2 K) 1.162 222 E 02 Btu/(hft2 F) kW/(m2 K) 5.678 263 E 03 kJ/(hm2 K) 2.044 175 E + 01 Btu/(hft2 R) kW/(m2 K) 5.678 263 E 03 kcal/(hm2 C) kW/(m2 K) 1.162 222 E 03 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  33. 33. 1-10 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Volumetric heat-transfer Btu/(sft3 F) kW/(m3 K) 6.706 611 E + 01 coefficient Btu/(hft3 F) kW/(m3 K) 1.862 947 E 02 Surface tension dyn/cm mN/m 1 Viscosity (dynamic) (lbfs)/in2 Pas (Ns)/m2 6.894 757 E + 03 (lbfs)/ft2 Pas (Ns)/m2 4.788 026 E + 01 (kgfs)/m2 Pas (Ns)/m2 9.806 650* E + 00 lbm/(fts) Pas (Ns)/m2 1.488 164 E + 00 (dyns)/cm2 Pas (Ns)/m2 1.0* E 01 cP Pas (Ns)/m2 1.0* E 03 lbm/(fth) Pas (Ns)/m2 4.133 789 E 04 Viscosity (kinematic) ft2 /s m2 /s 9.290 304* E 02 in2 /s mm2 /s 6.451 6* E + 02 m2 /h mm2 /s 2.777 778 E + 02 ft2 /h m2 /s 2.580 64* E 05 cSt mm2 /s 1 Permeability darcy m2 9.869 233 E 01 millidarcy m2 9.869 233 E 04 Thermal flux Btu/(hft2 ) W/m2 3.152 E + 00 Btu/(sft2 ) W/m2 1.135 E + 04 cal/(scm2 ) W/m2 4.184 E + 04 Mass-transfer coefficient (lbmol)/[hft2 (lbmol/ft3 )] m/s 8.467 E 05 (gmol)/[sm2 (gmol/L)] m/s 1.0 E + 01 Electricity, magnetism Admittance S S 1 Capacitance F F 1 Charge density C/mm3 C/mm3 1 Conductance S S 1 (mho) S 1 Conductivity S/m S/m 1 /m S/m 1 m /m mS/m 1 Current density A/mm2 A/mm2 1 Displacement C/cm2 C/cm2 1 Electric charge C C 1 Electric current A A 1 Electric-dipole moment Cm Cm 1 Electric-field strength V/m V/m 1 Electric flux C C 1 Electric polarization C/cm2 C/cm2 1 Electric potential V V 1 mV mV 1 Electromagnetic moment Am2 Am2 1 Electromotive force V V 1 Flux of displacement C C 1 Frequency cycles/s Hz 1 Impedance 1 Linear-current density A/mm A/mm 1 Magnetic-dipole moment Wbm Wbm 1 Magnetic-field strength A/mm A/mm 1 Oe A/m 7.957 747 E + 01 gamma A/m 7.957 747 E 04 Magnetic flux mWb mWb 1 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  34. 34. 1-11 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Continued) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Magnetic-flux density mT mT 1 G T 1.0* E 04 gamma nT 1 Magnetic induction mT mT 1 Magnetic moment Am2 Am2 1 Magnetic polarization mT mT 1 Magnetic potential A A 1 difference Magnetic-vector potential Wb/mm Wb/mm 1 Magnetization A/mm A/mm 1 Modulus of admittance S S 1 Modulus of impedance 1 Mutual inductance H H 1 Permeability H/m H/m 1 Permeance H H 1 Permittivity F/m F/m 1 Potential difference V V 1 Quantity of electricity C C 1 Reactance 1 Reluctance H1 H1 1 Resistance 1 Resistivity cm cm 1 m m 1 Self-inductance mH mH 1 Surface density of change mC/m2 mC/m2 1 Susceptance S S 1 Volume density of charge C/mm3 C/mm3 1 Acoustics, light, radiation Absorbed dose rad Gy 1.0* E 02 Acoustical energy J J 1 Acoustical intensity W/cm2 W/m2 1.0* E + 04 Acoustical power W W 1 Sound pressure N/m2 N/m2 1.0* Illuminance fc lx 1.076 391 E + 01 Illumination fc lx 1.076 391 E + 01 Irradiance W/m2 W/m2 1 Light exposure fcs lxs 1.076 391 E + 01 Luminance cd/m2 cd/m2 1 Luminous efficacy lm/W lm/W 1 Luminous exitance lm/m2 lm/m2 1 Luminous flux lm lm 1 Luminous intensity cd cd 1 Radiance W/m2 sr W/m2 sr 1 Radiant energy J J 1 Radiant flux W W 1 Radiant intensity W/sr W/sr 1 Radiant power W W 1 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  35. 35. 1-12 TABLE 1-4 Conversion Factors: U.S. Customary and Commonly Used Units to SI Units (Concluded) Conversion factor; multiply Customary or commonly Alternate customary unit by factor to Quantity used unit SI unit SI unit obtain SI unit Wavelength nm 1.0* E 01 Capture unit 103 cm1 m1 1.0* E + 01 103 cm1 1 m1 m1 1 Radioactivity Ci Bq 3.7* E + 10 *An asterisk indicates that the conversion factor is exact. Conversion factors for length, area, and volume are based on the international foot. The international foot is longer by 2 parts in 1 million than the U.S. Survey foot (land-measurement use). NOTE: The following unit symbols are used in the table: Unit symbol Name Unit symbol Name A ampere lm lumen a annum (year) lx lux Bq becquerel m meter C coulomb min minute cd candela minute Ci curie N newton d day naut mi U.S. nautical mile C degree Celsius Oe oersted degree ohm dyn dyne Pa pascal F farad rad radian fc footcandle r revolution G gauss S siemens g gram s second gr grain second Gy gray sr steradian H henry St stokes h hour T tesla ha hectare t tonne Hz hertz V volt J joule W watt K kelvin Wb weber L, , l liter NOTE: Copyright SPE-AIME, The SI Metric System of Units and SPEs Tentative Metric Standard, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Dallas, 1977. Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  36. 36. 1-13 TABLE 1-5 Metric Conversion Factors as Exact Numerical Multiples of SI Units The first two digits of each numerical entry represent a power of 10. For example, the entry 02 2.54 expresses the fact that 1 in = 2.54 102 m. To convert from To Multiply by To convert from To Multiply by abampere ampere +01 1.00 fluid ounce (U.S.) meter3 05 2.957 352 abcoulomb coulomb +01 1.00 foot meter 01 3.048 abfarad farad +09 1.00 foot (U.S. survey) meter 01 3.048 006 abhenry henry 09 1.00 foot of water (39.2F) newton/meter2 +03 2.988 98 abmho mho +09 1.00 footcandle lumen/meter2 +01 1.076 391 abohm ohm 09 1.00 footlambert candela/meter2 +00 3.426 259 abvolt volt 08 1.00 furlong meter +02 2.011 68 acre meter2 +03 4.046 856 gal (galileo) meter/second2 02 1.00 ampere (international of ampere 01 9.998 35 gallon (U.K. liquid) meter3 03 4.546 087 1948) gallon (U.S. dry) meter3 03 4.404 883 angstrom meter 10 1.00 gallon (U.S. liquid) meter3 03 3.785 411 are meter2 +02 1.00 gamma tesla 09 1.00 astronomical unit meter +11 1.495 978 gauss tesla 04 1.00 atmosphere newton/meter2 +05 1.013 25 gilbert ampere turn 01 7.957 747 bar newton/meter2 +05 1.00 gill (U.K.) meter3 04 1.420 652 barn meter2 28 1.00 gill (U.S.) meter3 04 1.182 941 barrel (petroleum 42 gal) meter3 01 1.589 873 grad degree (angular) 01 9.00 barye newton/meter2 01 1.00 grad radian 02 1.570 796 British thermal unit (ISO/ joule +03 1.055 06 grain kilogram 05 6.479 891 TC 12) gram kilogram 03 1.00 British thermal unit joule +03 1.055 04 hand meter 01 1.016 (International Steam Table) hectare meter2 +04 1.00 British thermal unit (mean) joule +03 1.055 87 henry (international of 1948) henry +00 1.000 495 British thermal unit joule +03 1.054 350 hogshead (U.S.) meter3 01 2.384 809 (thermochemical) horsepower (550 ft lbf/s) watt +02 7.456 998 British thermal unit (39F) joule +03 1.059 67 horsepower (boiler) watt +03 9.809 50 British thermal unit (60F) joule +03 1.054 68 horsepower (electric) watt +02 7.46 bushel (U.S.) meter3 02 3.523 907 horsepower (metric) watt +02 7.354 99 cable meter +02 2.194 56 horsepower (U.K.) watt +02 7.457 caliber meter 04 2.54 horsepower (water) watt +02 7.460 43 calorie (International Steam joule +00 4.1868 hour (mean solar) second (mean solar) +03 3.60 Table) hour (sidereal) second (mean solar) +03 3.590 170 calorie (mean) joule +00 4.190 02 hundredweight (long) kilogram +01 5.080 234 calorie (thermochemical) joule +00 4.184 hundredweight (short) kilogram +01 4.535 923 calorie (15C) joule +00 4.185 80 inch meter 02 2.54 calorie (20C) joule +00 4.181 90 inch of mercury (32F) newton/meter2 +03 3.386 389 calorie (kilogram, joule +03 4.186 8 inch of mercury (60F) newton/meter2 +03 3.376 85 International Steam Table) inch of water (39.2F) newton/meter2 +02 2.490 82 calorie (kilogram, mean) joule +03 4.190 02 inch of water (60F) newton/meter2 +02 2.4884 calorie (kilogram, joule +03 4.184 joule (international of 1948) joule +00 1.000 165 thermochemical) kayser 1/meter +02 1.00 carat (metric) kilogram 04 2.00 kilocalorie (International joule +03 4.186 74 Celsius (temperature) kelvin tK = tc + 273.15 Steam Table) centimeter of mercury (0C) newton/meter2 +03 1.333 22 kilocalorie (mean) joule +03 4.190 02 centimeter of water (4C) newton/meter2 +01 9.806 38 kilocalorie (thermochemical) joule +03 4.184 chain (engineers) meter +01 3.048 kilogram mass kilogram +00 1.00 chain (surveyors or meter +01 2.011 68 kilogram-force (kgf) newton +00 9.806 65 Gunters) kilopond-force newton +00 9.806 65 circular mil meter2 10 5.067 074 kip newton +03 4.448 221 cord meter3 +00 3.624 556 knot (international) meter/second 01 5.144 444 coulomb (international of coulomb 01 9.998 35 lambert candela/meter2 +04 1/ 1948) lambert candela/meter2 +03 3.183 098 cubit meter 01 4.572 langley joule/meter2 +04 4.184 cup meter3 04 2.365 882 lbf (pound-force, newton +00 4.448 221 curie disintegration/second +10 3.70 avoirdupois) day (mean solar) second (mean solar) +04 8.64 lbm (pound-mass, kilogram 01 4.535 923 day (sidereal) second (mean solar) +04 8.616 409 avoirdupois) degree (angle) radian 02 1.745 329 league (British nautical) meter +03 5.559 552 denier (international) kilogram/meter 07 1.111 111 league (international meter +03 5.556 dram (avoirdupois) kilogram 03 1.771 845 nautical) dram (troy or apothecary) kilogram 03 3.887 934 league (statute) meter +03 4.828 032 dram (U.S. fluid) meter3 06 3.696 691 light-year meter +15 9.460 55 dyne newton 05 1.00 link (engineers) meter 01 3.048 electron volt joule 19 1.602 10 link (surveyors or Gunters) meter 01 2.011 68 erg joule 07 1.00 liter meter3 03 1.00 Fahrenheit (temperature) kelvin tK = (5/9)(tF + lux lumen/meter2 +00 1.00 459.67) maxwell weber 08 1.00 Fahrenheit (temperature) Celsius tc = (5/9)(tF meter wavelengths Kr 86 +06 1.650 763 32) micrometer meter 06 1.00 farad (international of 1948) farad 01 9.995 05 mil meter 05 2.54 faraday (based on carbon coulomb +04 9.648 70 mile (U.S. statute) meter +03 1.609 344 12) mile (U.K. nautical) meter +03 1.853 184 faraday (chemical) coulomb +04 9.649 57 mile (international nautical) meter +03 1.852 faraday (physical) coulomb +04 9.652 19 mile (U.S. nautical) meter +03 1.852 fathom meter +00 1.828 8 millibar newton/meter2 +02 1.00 fermi (femtometer) meter 15 1.00 millimeter of mercury (0C) newton/meter2 +02 1.333 224 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  37. 37. 1-14 TABLE 1-5 Metric Conversion Factors as Exact Numerical Multiples of SI Units (Concluded) The first two digits of each numerical entry represent a power of 10. For example, the entry 02 2.54 expresses the fact that 1 in = 2.54 102 To convert from To Multiply by To convert from To Multiply by minute (angle) radian 04 2.908 882 second (ephemeris) second +00 1.000 000 minute (mean solar) second (mean solar) +01 6.00 second (mean solar) second (ephemeris) Consult minute (sidereal) second (mean solar) +01 5.983 617 American month (mean calendar) second (mean solar) +06 2.628 Ephemeris nautical mile (international) meter +03 1.852 and Nautical nautical mile (U.S.) meter +03 1.852 Almanac nautical mile (U.K.) meter +03 1.853 184 second (sidereal) second (mean solar) 01 9.972 695 oersted ampere/meter +01 7.957 747 section meter2 +06 2.589 988 ohm (international of 1948) ohm +00 1.000 495 scruple (apothecary) kilogram 03 1.295 978 ounce-force (avoirdupois) newton 01 2.780 138 shake second 08 1.00 ounce-mass (avoirdupois) kilogram 02 2.834 952 skein meter +02 1.097 28 ounce-mass (troy or apothecary) kilogram 02 3.110 347 slug kilogram +01 1.459 390 ounce (U.S. fluid) meter3 05 2.957 352 span meter 01 2.286 pace meter 01 7.62 statampere ampere 10 3.335 640 parsec meter +16 3.083 74 statcoulomb coulomb 10 3.335 640 pascal newton/meter2 +00 1.00 statfarad farad 12 1.112 650 peck (U.S.) meter3 03 8.809 767 stathenry henry +11 8.987 554 pennyweight kilogram 03 1.555 173 statmho mho 12 1.112 650 perch meter +00 5.0292 statohm ohm +11 8.987 554 phot lumen/meter2 +04 1.00 statute mile (U.S.) meter +03 1.609 344 pica (printers) meter 03 4.217 517 statvolt volt +02 2.997 925 pint (U.S. dry) meter3 04 5.506 104 stere meter3 +00 1.00 pint (U.S. liquid) meter3 04 4.731 764 stilb candela/meter2 +04 1.00 point (printers) meter 04 3.514 598 stoke meter2 /second 04 1.00 poise (newton-second)/meter2 01 1.00 tablespoon meter3 05 1.478 676 pole meter +00 5.0292 teaspoon meter3 06 4.928 921 pound-force (lbf newton +00 4.448 221 ton (assay) kilogram 02 2.916 666 avoirdupois) ton (long) kilogram +03 1.016 046 pound-mass (lbm kilogram 01 4.535 923 ton (metric) kilogram +03 1.00 avoirdupois) ton (nuclear equivalent of TNT) joule +09 4.20 pound-mass (troy or kilogram 01 3.732 417 ton (register) meter3 +00 2.831 684 apothecary) ton (short, 2000 lb) kilogram +02 9.071 847 poundal newton 01 1.382 549 tonne kilogram +03 1.00 quart (U.S. dry) meter3 03 1.101 220 torr (0C) newton/meter2 +02 1.333 22 quart (U.S. liquid) meter3 04 9.463 529 township meter2 +07 9.323 957 rad (radiation dose joule/kilogram 02 1.00 unit pole weber 07 1.256 637 absorbed) volt (international of 1948) volt +00 1.000 330 Rankine (temperature) kelvin tK = (5/9)tR watt (international of 1948) watt +00 1.000 165 rayleigh (rate of photon 1/second-meter2 +10 1.00 yard meter 01 9.144 emission) year (calendar) second (mean solar) +07 3.1536 rhe meter2 /(newton- +01 1.00 year (sidereal) second (mean solar) +07 3.155 815 second) year (tropical) second (mean solar) +07 3.155 692 rod meter +00 5.0292 year 1900, tropical, Jan., day second (ephemeris) +07 3.155 692 roentgen coulomb/kilogram 04 2.579 76 0, hour 12 rutherford disintegration/second +06 1.00 year 1900, tropical, Jan., day second +07 3.155 692 second (angle) radian 06 4.848 136 0, hour 12 Copyright 1999 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Use of this product is subject to the terms of its license agreement. Click here to view.
  38. 38. TABLE 1-6 Alphabetical Listing of Common Conversions To convert from To Multiply by To convert from To Multiply by Acres Square feet 43,560 B.t.u. (60F.) per degree Fahrenheit Calories per degree centigrade 453.6 Acres Square meters 4074 Bushels (U.S. dry) Cubic feet 1.2444 Acres Square miles 0.001563 Bushels (U.S. dry) Cubic meters 0.03524 Acre-feet Cubic meters 1233 Calories, gram B.t.u. 3.968 103 Ampere-hours (absolute) Coulombs (absolute) 3600 Calories, gram Foot-pounds 3.087 Angstrom units Inches 3.937 109 Calories, gram Joules 4.1868 Angstrom units Meters 1 1010 Calories, gram Liter-atmospheres 4.130 102 Angstrom units Microns 1 104 Calories, gram Horsepower-hours 1.5591 106 Atmospheres Millimeters of mercury at 32F 760 Calories, gram, per gram per degree C. Joules per kilogram per degree Kelvin 4186.8 Atmospheres Dynes per square centimeter 1.0133 106 Calories, kilogram Kilowatt-hours 0.0011626 Atmospheres Newtons per square meter 101,325 Calories, kilogram per second Kilowatts 4.185 Atmospheres Feet of water at 39.1F 33.90 Candle power (spherical) Lumens 12.556 Atmospheres Grams per square centimeter 1033.3 Carats (metric) Grams 0.2 Atmospheres Inches of mercury at 32F 29.921 Centigrade heat units B.t.u. 1.8 Atmospheres Pounds per square foot 2116.3 Centimeters Angstrom units 1 108 Atmospheres Pounds per square inch 14.696 Centimeters Feet 0.03281 Bags (cement) Pounds (cement) 94 Centimeters Inches 0.3937 Barrels (cement) Pounds (cement) 376 Centimeters Meters 0.01 Barrels (oil) Cubic meters 0.15899 Centimeters Microns 10,000 Barrels (oil) Gallons 42 Centimeters of mercury at 0C. Atmospheres 0.013158 Barrels (U.S. liquid) Cubic meters 0.11924 Centimeters of mercury at 0C. Feet of water at 39.1F. 0.4460 Barrels (U.S. liquid) Gallons 31.5 Centimeters of mercury at 0C Newtons per square meter 1333.2 Barrels per day Gallons per minute 0.02917 Centimeters of mercury at 0C. Pounds per square foot 27.845 Bars Atmospheres 0.9869 Centimeters of mercury at 0C. Pounds per square inch 0.19337 Bars Newtons per square meter 1 105 Centimeters per second Feet per minute 1.9685 Bars Pounds per square inch 14.504 Centimeters of water at 4C. Newtons per square meter 98.064 Board feet Cubic feet 112 Centistokes Square meters per second 1 106 Boiler horsepower B.t.u. per hour 33,480 Circular mils Square centimeters 5.067 106 Boiler horsepower Kilowatts 9.803 Circular mils Square inches 7.854 107 B.t.u. Calories (gram) 252 Circular mils Square mils 0.7854 B.t.u. Centigrade heat units (c.h.u. or p.c.u.) 0.55556 Cords Cubic feet 128 B.t.u. Foot-pounds 777.9 Cubic centimeters Cubic feet 3.532 105 B.t.u. Horsepower-hours 3.929 104 Cubic centimeters Gallons 2.6417 104 B.t.u. Joules 1055.1 Cubic centimeters Ounces (U.S. fluid) 0.03381 B.t.u. Liter-atmospheres 10.41 Cubic centimeters Quarts (U.S. fluid) 0.0010567 B.t.u. Pounds carbon to CO2 6.88 105 Cubic feet Bushels (U.S.) 0.8036 B.t.u. Pounds water evaporated from and Cubic feet Cubic centimeters 28,317 at 212F 0.001036 Cubic feet Cubic meters 0.028317 B.t.u. Cubic foot-atmospheres 0.3676 Cubic feet Cubic yards 0.03704 B.t.u. Kilowatt-hours 2.930 104 Cubic feet Gallons 7.481 B.t.u. per cubic foot Joules per cubic meter 37,260 Cubic feet Liters 28.316 B.t.u. per hour Watts 0.29307 Cubic foot-atmospheres Foot-pounds 2116.3 B.t.u. per minute Horsepower 0.02357 Cubic foot-atmospheres Liter-atmospheres 28.316 B.t.u. per po