One cannot be converted into the other Kwh,s is a measure of energy while cubic meters per hour is a measure of the flow of mass.
Did you have in mind how much energy is required to pump one cubic meter of water sayto a height of 100m per second this can be calculated and the result would be inWatts.
As I read the question, I think I know what 'kWh' is (are), but I'm not so sure about 'Nm3' .
I'm assuming that 'kWh' means 'kilowatt-hour', a unit of energy equal to 3,600,000 joules.
I'm having trouble recognizing 'Nm3' as a unit of energy, and if it's not a unit of energy,
then it has no relationship to kilowatt-hours.
Cubic meters is a measure of volume, kWh is a unit of energy. The two are totally unrelated, you can't convert them.
Cubic meters is a measure of volume, kWh is a unit of energy. The two are totally unrelated, you can't convert them.
Cubic meters is a measure of volume, kWh is a unit of energy. The two are totally unrelated, you can't convert them.
Cubic meters is a measure of volume, kWh is a unit of energy. The two are totally unrelated, you can't convert them.
That depends in what units the gas is measured. If it is measured in cubic meters (or some other unit of volume, you would also have to know how much energy a specific gas produces per cubic meter.
Nice answer Hilmarz. Looking on my gas bill - my energy supplier converts it like this...
(U x V x C) over K or - Units x 1.02264 x 40.3791 / 3.6
U = cubic metres
V = volume conversion factor
C = calorific value
K = kw hour
1 cubic metre of gas equates to 11.47 kw/h
A kilowatt hour is used to measure energy, whereas a cubic metre is used to measure volume. There is no conversion factor between them, as they are different quantities.
Cubic meters is a measure of volume, kWh is a unit of energy. The two are totally unrelated, you can't convert them.
The units are incompatible.
1 Joule = 1 watt-second, therefore, you divide by 3,600,000.
4.5 tons of refrigeration is a unit of power while kwh or kw-hr is unit of energy. Its not possible. Maybe you mean kw only not kwhr. 1ton of ref= 12000btu/hr = 3.51 kw
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh
Typically you would use 0.276 litres/kWh for HSD and 0.234 litres/kWh for HFO
1 kwh = 3,600,000 Joules
These are incompatible measures. Cubic meters is a measure of volume, while kWh (Kilowatt-Hours) is a measure of electric energy.
MW*100*24= is how you convert Megawatt to Megawatt hour.
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh by Lyon
In the US Natural Gas output is measured in cubic feet, First you must convert feet to meters: 3.28084 fpm, then we must determine cubic feet per cubic meter, 3.28084 X 3.28084 X 3.28084 = 21.528 cubic ft in a cubic meter and since there are 1000 btu in a cubic foot of Natural Gas 21.528 x 1000 btu = 21,528 btu/cmtr. Then you must convert kWh to btu. 1kWh=3413 btu, so 21528 btu divided by 3413 btu = 6.307 kWh in a cubic meter of NG: so 1 cubic meter divided by 6.307= 0.1585 cubic meters of NG = 1 kWh. Of course these are output ratings not input. So depending on the efficiency rating of the NG furnace being used one would need to add the heat that is lost up the chimney or the inefficiency rating for an accurate answer. For example with an 80% efficient gas furnace one would need to add 20% or 0.032 to the 0.1585 cubic meter value we got earlier to allow for waste and the answer is actually 0.1905 cubic meters total input of NG needed per kWh produced. I hope this is right... End -H2045
50
20 kwh for one metric ton of limestone
Multiply the gas units (imperial) by 100, then divide by three. This will give you how many kilo watts an hour. If you want a more accurate answers, multiply the gas units by 31.6. For metric metres (cubic meteres) multiply by 11.06 to get KWH
Divide the dollars per kWh by 3,412.14163
KWH (kilowatt-hours) is an energy (Power in KW x time in Hours if steady power, or otherwise the integral of power with respect to time). KW per minute means a rate of increasing power, and the fact that it is inside a cubic metre doesn't alter the fact that there is no equivalence, and cannot be related.
Normally, gas is measured by volume units. It can be either cubic meters (m^3) or cubic feet (ft^3) or any other volume unit. No mater what is the volume unit, this volume contains a heating value. This heating value is expressed in kWh. You can ask your local gas company how many kWh does a m^3 (or ft^3) of your gas contains. It depends on the type of gas that is distributed in your area.
kWh stands for kiloWatthours, the amount of electrical energy an appliance uses or generates in one hour measured in kiloWatts. It has nothing to do with one cubic metre of water.
If you mean dollars PER mwh and cents PER kwh, divide by 10.