Roughly, yes. Actually it is slightly more. A cubic foot of natural gas has approximately 1000 btus of heat energy when burned.
Figures range as high as 1017 btu/cu.ft. based on the proportions of the mixed gases, primarily methane and propane, which have different heating values. The more propane the more heat in a cubic foot.
A generalization made by gas distributors is that a hundred cubic feet [ccf] is equal to one therm [ 100,000 btu] of heat.
1 dekatherm is equivalent to approximately 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas.
A measure of volume- Ccf is one hundred (C) cubic feet (cf)
One gallon of liquefied natural gas (LNG) is equivalent to about 0.136 cubic feet.
1 MCF (thousand cubic feet) is a unit of measurement commonly used in the oil and gas industry to quantify natural gas volume. It is equivalent to 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas.
Doesn't work. Square feet is a measure of area and cubic feet is a measure of volume.
One pound of natural gas is equivalent to approximately 1.546 cubic feet or 92.6 cubic inches.
2200 cubic inches is equivalent to 1.27 cubic feet when converted.
1 Mcf (thousand cubic feet) is equivalent to 1,000 cubic feet.
27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yard 837 cubic feet = 31 cubic yards
One kilogram of natural gas is approximately equivalent to about 35.3 cubic feet. This conversion can vary slightly based on the specific composition of the gas, but this figure provides a general estimate for standard natural gas.
One MCF (thousand cubic feet) of natural gas is equivalent to approximately 10 therms.
500 liters equates to about 17.66 (17.6573334) cubic feet.