Ther are 1,050 BTU in one cubic foot of natural gas.
Approx 1000 BTU per standard cubic foot
BTU`s are measured in cubic feet
1 standard cubic foot of natural gas gives about 1030 BTU
A standard cubic foot of natural gas has 1000 BTU. A Barrel of Oil equivalent has 5800000 BTU. It is 0.000172 BBL per cufic foot of gas.
In US units, one standard cubic foot of natural gas produces around 1,030 BTU.
Specifically 1013.2 btu per standard cubic foot, for pure methane.
102,000 BTU = 1 ccf
For one cubic foot of natural gas: 1ft³ = 1031BTU 1ft³ = 1.08 Megajoules
1 cubic foot of natural gas can be burned to generate about 1000 btu of heat. A 105000 btu/hr appliance would therefore require about 105 cubic feet of natural gas per hour; this is 0.1 thousand cubic feet, or 0.1mcf/hr.
Natural gas produces approximately 1000 BTU's per cubic foot. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_gas
1 Therm is 100,000 BTU, and as there are 1000 BTU in 1 cubic foot of gas, 1 Therm = 100 cubic feet. Density of methane = 0.72 kg/cubic meter which is 35.3 cubic feet, so 100 cubic feet = 2.04 kg
Roughly, yes. Actually it is slightly more. A cubic foot of natural gas has approximately 1000 btus of heat energy when burned. Figures range as high as 1017 btu/cu.ft. based on the proportions of the mixed gases, primarily methane and propane, which have different heating values. The more propane the more heat in a cubic foot. A generalization made by gas distributors is that a hundred cubic feet [ccf] is equal to one therm [ 100,000 btu] of heat.