medium pressure
NO!! Black iron pipe has a special coating to resist the highly corrosive effect of natural gas. Galvenized pipe CANNOT be used for gas service.
Natural gas burns very cleanly.
It can be really deep, I would help you out but my pockets are not that deep
MolSieve 3ASystem diagram is on page 3 of this linkhttp://www.c-a-m.com/cam/search/showdocw.cfm?DOCUMENT_ID=8547
Compressed natural gas is natural gas under pressure which remains clear, odorless, and non-corrosive. This is when natural gas is compressed to less than 1% of its volume at standard atmospheric pressure.
Because at standard temperature an pressure it meets all the criteria expected of a gas.
STP stands for Standard Temperature and Pressure. At STP, the pressure of natural gas is 1 atm, and 1 mole of gas takes up 22.4 liters.
Liquified natural gas has about 1/600th of the volume of natural gas at standard temperature and pressure, so 1 m3 of natural gas would be about 0.001666 m3, or 1.67 liters, of LNG.
Under standard conditions of temperature and pressure Fluorine is a yellowish brown gas.
The pressure in a residence after the gas meter is 5-7 w.c. (inches of water column)or 0.18 PSI to 0.25 PSIThe conversion rate is 1 inAq = .036126 psi
The volume of gas in a cubic meter is one cubic meter. But perhaps that is not the real question?
The average is about 20,000 BTU's per pound at standard temperature and pressure.
Without knowing whether this is atmospheric-pressure natural gas, pipeline-pressure or compressed natural gas (and the pressure it's been compressed to), or liquefied natural gas, this is an unanswerable question.
If you mean a residential gas fireplace, it would burn natural gas, which is mostly methane (CH4).
The incoming pressure of natural gas in the UK is somewhere between 19-23 mbar.
1 scf = 1 standard cubic foot 1 scf is the volume of gas at STP STP = Standard Temperature and Pressure STP (USA system of units) Standard Temperature = 60 degrees Fahrenheit Standard Pressure = 1 atmosphere at sea level = 14.696 pounds per square inch absolute The energy content of 1 scf natural gas = 1020 BTU (British Thermal Units)