380
However, this figure is quite approximate as gasoline expands with temperature. A gallon of gasoline weighs around 6 pounds (US) but can approach 5 pounds in extreme heat. (Buying gasoline in the summer in Phoenix or Houston gives you less energy per dollar than you are paying for.)
1 metric ton = 1000 kg
Water weight = 1 kg / liter
So 1000 liters of water weights 1000 kg.
Convert liters to gallons:
1000 liters / 3.785 liters/gal
So 264 gallons of water weighs 1 metric ton.
Ethane is a gas and as such its volume depends on its container. Even if ethane were not a gas all substances' volumes are affected by their temperatures. Therefore a metric ton of ethane can fill any volume of space given appropriate temperatures and pressures.
At 1.013 bar and 15 °C (59 °F) the density of propane [gas] is: 1.91 kg/m3.
1 m3 ≈ 219.969 imperial gallons ≈ 264.172 US gallons
1 tonne of propane [gas] at 1.013 bar and 15 °C takes up a volume of:
volume = 1000 kg ÷ 1.91 kg/m3
≈ 523.56 m3.
To Imperial gallons:
523.56 m3 ≈ 523.56 x 219.969 imperial gallons
≈ 115167 imperial gallons
To US gallons:
523.56 m3 ≈ 523.56 x 264.172 US gallons
≈ 138310 US gallons
Liquid propane at 1.013 bar and 15 °C is 311 times more dense:
1 tonne of [liquid] propane at 1.013 bar and 15 °C takes up a volume of:
1234.6 Liters of Eethanol weighs about 1 metric tonne 1234.6 Liters of Eethanol weighs about 1 metric tonne
At 20oC ethanol has a density of 0.78945kg/l.
A tonne is 1 000kg.
So if we divide the mass by the density we get the volume.
1 000/ 0.78945= 1 266.7 litres.
Heat capacity of ethane: 1 561 kJ/mol
Molar mass of ethane; 30,07 g
Density of ethane: 1,356 g/cm3
And the heat capacity of 1 metric ton ethane is in BTU: 4,8.10ex.7.
1,400 cubic feet per hour of liquid propane is about 10,472.7 US gallons per hour.
If there are 93,000 btu's per gallon of propane, and you are burning 25,000 per hour. That would be 3.72 hours per gallon or approx .27 gallons per hour. 6.45 gallons per day.
.02 gallons. A pilot uses roughly 15 gallons of propane per month. Take 15 gallons, divide it into 30 days = 0.5 gallons a day. Divide that answer by 24 = .020833 gallons per hour.
100.000.000gallons of diesel = metric ton
According to the Wikipedia entry for propane, liquid propane has thermal energy 91,600 BTU per gallon. So 1 therm which is 100,000 BTU will correspond to 100,000/91,600 gallons, result = 1.092 gallons.
1,400 cubic feet per hour of liquid propane is about 10,472.7 US gallons per hour.
Propane weighs 4.4 lbs per gallon, so 20 lbs of propane 4.54 gallons.
pizza pies
7.1 gallons @ 4.2lbs per gallon.
Propane = 91,600 btu per gallon
100 pound propane tank will hold 23.58 gallon. 100 pounds / 4.24 pounds per gallon = 23.58 gallons
If there are 93,000 btu's per gallon of propane, and you are burning 25,000 per hour. That would be 3.72 hours per gallon or approx .27 gallons per hour. 6.45 gallons per day.
.02 gallons. A pilot uses roughly 15 gallons of propane per month. Take 15 gallons, divide it into 30 days = 0.5 gallons a day. Divide that answer by 24 = .020833 gallons per hour.
According to the Wikipedia entry for propane, liquid propane has thermal energy 91,600 BTU per gallon. So 1 therm which is 100,000 BTU will correspond to 100,000/91,600 gallons, result = 1.092 gallons.
100.000.000gallons of diesel = metric ton
1 pound of propane is a little less than 1/4 of a gallon.
1 cubic foot = 7.4805 gallons