One million btu equals 10 therms. One hundred thousand btu equals one therm.
You can't convert from BTU to degrees; BTU is a unit of energy (it is approximately 1054 joules) and a degree is a unit of temperature.
1 therm = 100,000 BTU
1 Decatherm = 1 MMBTU Because: 1 Therm = 100,000 BTU 10 Therms (1 Decatherm) = 1,000,000 BTU 1,000,000 BTU = 1 MMBTU Therefore: 10 Therms = 1 Decatherm = 1,000,000 BTU = 1 MMBTU
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Converting CFH to CCF is hard, and there are several online converters to improve this operation. However, the general rule of thumb for conversion is: 1 Therms (u's) to Cubic Feet Of Natural Gas = 99.9761.
1030-1060 BTU/cf 1 gal (US) = 0.133 cf (cubic foot) 1 cf = 7.48 gal converting units, 138 - 142 BTU/gal X 600 ( the approximate volume change from liquid to gas = 84,000 BTU/galhttp://www.retailenergy.com/hybrid/Liquified%20Natural%20Gas.htm The previous answer neglected to account for the difference in the BTU/vol of methane as a liquid vs the BTU/vol of methane as a gas
1250
1 BTU is 0.00001 therms.
1 million BTU = 10 Therms
110 therms.
1 therm unit equals 100000 btu's
13,000 Therms equates to 1,300,000,000 BTU
1 Decatherm = 1 MMBTU Because: 1 Therm = 100,000 BTU 10 Therms (1 Decatherm) = 1,000,000 BTU 1,000,000 BTU = 1 MMBTU Therefore: 10 Therms = 1 Decatherm = 1,000,000 BTU = 1 MMBTU
180 thousand BTU,s or 1.8 Therms.
I was just researching this same question today. Here's what I found hope it helps. 1 Therm = 100,000 BTU 10 Therms = 1MMBTU ( Million BTU's ) Therefore to convert from MMBTU to Therms, multiply the MMBTU figure by 10 to get Therms. Note: Therm to BTU conversion is based on the amount of energy obtained from burning 1 Therm (100 cubic feet of natural gas). This value is not exact, but close, and could be different from one natural gas field to another.
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A decatherm, which is 10 therms. One decatherm equals one million BTU. These are quantities of heat (energy).
A decatherm, which is 10 therms. One decatherm equals one million BTU. These are quantities of heat (energy).
Converting propane gas to liquid propane is a state change, not a chemical one. Therefore there is no loss of BTU/liter generated when it is burned.