1000 litres = 1 cubic metre: of LPG or air or concrete.
There are 1,000 liters of liquid gas in 1 cubic meter of LPG gas. The answer would be different if the conversion is from pressurized volume to unpressurized volume.
Remember the table for liquid volumes 1000 cm^3 = 1 litre# 1000 litres = 1 m^3 The last line of the table is the answer to your question. =
1886 kg
1 cubic meter = 264.2 gallons (rounded), regardless of what's in it, or even if it's empty.
1 cubic meter = 1 kiloliter Regardless of what's in it. Even if it's completely empty.
There are 1,000 liters of liquid gas in 1 cubic meter of LPG gas. The answer would be different if the conversion is from pressurized volume to unpressurized volume.
Remember the table for liquid volumes 1000 cm^3 = 1 litre# 1000 litres = 1 m^3 The last line of the table is the answer to your question. =
As a liquid, propane has a density of 553Kg per cubic meter. 43200Kg of propane has a volume of 78 cubic meters, so that translates to 78000 liters.
1886 kg
1 cubic meter = 264.2 gallons (rounded), regardless of what's in it, or even if it's empty.
1 cubic meter = 1 kiloliter Regardless of what's in it. Even if it's completely empty.
No, it's 3.85 litres. This is because LPG is pressurised.
The density of domestic LPG in gaseous form is 2.155 kilograms per cubic meter. Its density in liquid form is 553 kilograms per cubic meter.
1000 liters to 1 m^3, that is true for all liquids or gasses. Isn't metric much simpler? However, if you wish to know how much volume 1m^3 of liquid LPG would occupy as a gas at room temperature and 1 bar, then apply avogadro's law: pv=nrt
It is 28.316 lts of LPG.
65 liters of LPG is about 17.171 US or 14.298 UK gallons.
Without a temperature and pressure, you can't, besides which LPG is usually a liquid until just before use.