9.54
There are 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot
Approximately 10-15 cubic feet of air is needed to burn 1 cubic foot of gas, depending on the type of gas and the specific combustion conditions. This is known as the stoichiometric ratio, which ensures complete combustion of the gas.
1 Therm is 100,000 BTU, and as there are 1000 BTU in 1 cubic foot of gas, 1 Therm = 100 cubic feet. Density of methane = 0.72 kg/cubic meter which is 35.3 cubic feet, so 100 cubic feet = 2.04 kg
841 cubic feet of gases
.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
359 is the number of standard cubic per lb-mol of a gas. The initial answer is actually the inverse. An easy mistake to make. Example: 18 lbs of water is one lb-mol. As a gas it would be 359 cubic feet of gas at standard temp and pressure.
There are approximately 40.54 gallons in 6 cubic feet of gas.
100 cubic feet equals 1 therm
Cubic feet is a measure of volume (i.e. a cube measuring one foot x one foot x one foot). Pounds is a measure of weight (mass). Therefore the relationship between cubic feet and pounds is called density (lbs per cubic foot) and will vary for each substance: a gas (at atmospheric pressure) will have less than one pound per cubic foot, while a block of wood will have a density of approximately 60 lbs per cubic foot.
There are approximately 28,316.8 liters in 1000 cubic feet.
Ther are 1,050 BTU in one cubic foot of natural gas.