There are no BTUs in an office water-cooler. But you can calculate how many BTUs are removed by the cooler. One BTU or British Thermal Unit is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. There for when you remove one BTU you are lowering one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. So if you know how many pounds of water you have and the temperature of the water you start with and the temperature of the water comming out of the cooler you can calculate how many BTUs the cooling unit of the water cooler has removed. BTU=Temp1 - Temp 2 X LB water
13000
about 12,000
80000
It depends on the volume of the room.
A fourty two (42) gallon barrel of oil generates approximately 5,600,000 btus. A cubit foor of nat gas generates 1,200 btus ,there for you would need 4,666.67 cubic feet of gas or 4.6 mcf. Today, an mcf of nat gas costs $2.6 an mcf, a barrel of oil $106. The btu per dollar breakdown looks like this. 5,600,000 btus = 1 barrel of crude oil = $106 5.6m btu / $106 = 52,830 btus per dollar 5,600,000 btus = 4.66 mcf = $12.12 5.6m btus / $12.12 = 462,046 btus per dollar
10
2870 mcf
There are 7,480 gallons per mcf
One MCF (thousand cubic feet) of water is equivalent to 7,480 gallons of water.
One MCF (thousand cubic feet) of natural gas is equivalent to approximately 10 therms.
1 mmbtu is equivalent to approximately 1.0257 mcf, so 2500 mmbtu is equivalent to approximately 2564 mcf.
1 MCF (mille cubic feet) = 1000 CF = 10 CCF (hundreds of cubic feet) 1 MCF = 28.317 m3
One ton of TNT is equivalent to approximately 4.184 billion British Thermal Units (BTUs).
1 Mcf (thousand cubic feet) is equivalent to 1,000 cubic feet.
One thousand cubic feet (MCF) of natural gas weighs approximately 84.8 pounds.
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh