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
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.
At standard temperature and pressure, 1 kg of liquid nitrogen will expand to approximately 0.696 cubic meters of gaseous nitrogen.
To calculate the volume of natural gas in standard cubic meter at standard pressure, you can use the ideal gas law equation: V = nRT/P, where V is the volume in standard cubic meters, n is the number of moles of gas, R is the ideal gas constant, T is the temperature in Kelvin, and P is the standard pressure. Given that standard pressure is typically defined as 1 atmosphere or 101.325 kPa, you can plug in these values along with the temperature and number of moles of gas to calculate the volume of natural gas in standard cubic meter at standard pressure.
Approximately 860 liters of gaseous oxygen can be obtained from 1 cubic foot of liquid oxygen when it vaporizes. This expansion occurs due to the change in state from liquid to gas.
The weight of 1 cubic meter (m3) of LPG gas depends on its density, which can vary. On average, 1 cubic meter of LPG gas weighs around 540-580 kilograms.
There are approximately 93,000 liters of oil in 93 cubic meters of gas, as 1 cubic meter is equivalent to 1000 liters.
1 cubic meter of bio-gas is equivalent to 1000 liters.
Multiply cubic meters by 1,000 to get liters.
Each cubic meter comprises 1,000 liters. Therefore, cubic meters x 1,000 = liters.
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.
1 cubic meter is 1000 liters, so 48 m³ is 48000 liters.
1 m3 = 1000 litres
One cubic meter always has 1000 liters, no matter what is inside. On the other hand, 6 bars is approximately 6 times the normal atmospheric pressure, so - according to the ideal gas law - the cubic meter of compressed air would be equivalent to 6 cubic meters of "normal" air.
Multiply by 1000 0.95 cubic meters = 950 liters
first you have to fart two liters of gas then you measure it with a ruler and then you find out that two liters of gas make how many cubic centimeters. Nazir Hadaya
approx. 8 gal. of gas = 1000 cubic feet of natural gas. water can't be compared to natural gas in cubic feet
.10 liters. You can fit 28.32 liters of liquid into a cubic foot. However liquid propane has an expansion ration of 1:270. 28.32 liters divided by 270 = 1 cubic foot of gas/ .104888888