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v = Air velocity ( m/s ) A = Cross-sectional Area ( m2 ) 1 m3 = 1000 L Q = v*A, where Q= volumetric flow rate Q = ( m/s ) * ( m2 ) = ( m3 / s ) Now to convert L/s, multiple by 1000 (Since: (m3/s)*(1000L/1m3) = L/s Example: Pipe inner radius = 1 m, air velocity = 10 m/s Q = (pi * 12)*(10) = 31.4159 m3/s *(1000 L/ 1m3)= 31415.9 L/s Hope this helps!

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15y ago
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14y ago

One cubic meter also equals 1000 liters or one million cubic centimeters.

thus if a pool is emptying at a rate of 1 liter per second it is the same as saying it is emptying at a rate of .0001 cubic meters per second.

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15y ago

you can say a liquid pours at 10 liters per second but you cant convert that to a length

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10y ago

Metres is length, litres is volume. You need to have the other two dimensions to make it volume

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10y ago

you need to divide by the density of the liquid (usually in g/ml, or kg/litre will do)

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11y ago

Equation: cubic meters per second x 60,000 = liters per minute

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14y ago

You probably mean meters cubed ... I hope !

Anyway, here's the conversion factor that should get you all fixed up: 1 m3 = 1,000 liters.

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Q: How do you convert 1 liters per second to cubic meters per second?
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