kilopound per square inch (ksi) to centimeters of mercury (cmHg) conversion

1 ksi = 5171.493 cmHgcmHgksi
Formula
1 ksi = 5171.493 cmHg

Understanding kilopound per square inch to centimeters of mercury Conversion

The kilopound per square inch (ksi) equals 1,000 pounds-force per square inch and is the customary unit for reporting the yield and tensile strength of steel, aluminium, and other structural metals in the United States. The centimeter of mercury (cmHg) is a pressure unit equal to the static pressure exerted by a 1 cm column of mercury, roughly 1,333 pascals, and is common in barometry and vacuum work. Converting between them bridges high-stress engineering values and column-height pressure readings.

Conversion Formula

1 ksi=5171.49 cmHg1\ \text{ksi} = 5171.49\ \text{cmHg}

To convert kilopound per square inch to centimeters of mercury, multiply by this factor:

cmHg=ksi×5171.493\text{cmHg} = \text{ksi} \times 5171.493

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 kilopound per square inch to centimeters of mercury.

cmHg=25×5171.493=129287 cmHg\text{cmHg} = 25 \times 5171.493 = 129287\ \text{cmHg}

How to Convert kilopound per square inch to centimeters of mercury

Turning a ksi stress value into centimeters of mercury takes a single multiplication.

  1. Identify the ksi value: Note the pressure or stress in kilopound per square inch, for example 25 ksi.
  2. Apply the factor: Multiply by 5171.493, the number of cmHg in one ksi.
  3. Compute the product: 25×5171.493=12928725 \times 5171.493 = 129287.
  4. State the result: 25 ksi equals about 129287 cmHg.

kilopound per square inch to centimeters of mercury conversion table

kilopound per square inch (ksi)centimeters of mercury (cmHg)
00
15171.493
210342.99
315514.48
420685.97
525857.46
631028.96
736200.45
841371.94
946543.43
1051714.93
1577572.39
20103429.9
25129287.3
30155144.8
40206859.7
50258574.6
60310289.6
70362004.5
80413719.4
90465434.3
100517149.3
150775723.9
2001034299
2501292873
3001551448
4002068597
5002585746
6003102896
7003620045
8004137194
9004654343
10005171493
200010342990
300015514480
400020685970
500025857460
1000051714930
25000129287300
50000258574600
100000517149300
2500001292873000
5000002585746000
10000005171493000

What is the kilopound per square inch?

Kilopound per square inch (ksi) is a unit of pressure commonly used in engineering, especially in North America. It represents a high amount of pressure, making it suitable for measuring the strength of materials.

Definition of Kilopound per Square Inch (ksi)

Ksi stands for "kilopound per square inch." It's a unit of pressure defined as 1,000 pounds of force applied per square inch of area.

1ksi=1000lbfin21 \, \text{ksi} = 1000 \, \frac{\text{lbf}}{\text{in}^2}

Formation of Kilopound per Square Inch

The unit is derived from the combination of two units:

  • Kilopound (kip): A unit of force equal to 1,000 pounds-force (lbf).

  • Square Inch (in²): A unit of area equal to the area of a square with sides of 1 inch.

Relationship to Other Pressure Units

Kilopound per square inch can be converted to other common units of pressure:

  • Pascal (Pa): The SI unit of pressure. 1ksi6.895×106Pa1 \, \text{ksi} \approx 6.895 \times 10⁶ \, \text{Pa} or 6.895MPa6.895 \, \text{MPa}
  • Pound per Square Inch (psi): 1ksi=1000psi1 \, \text{ksi} = 1000 \, \text{psi}

Applications and Examples

Ksi is frequently used in material science and structural engineering to express the yield strength and tensile strength of materials like steel, concrete, and aluminum.

  • Steel Strength: The yield strength of high-strength steel might be around 50 ksi to 100 ksi or even higher.
  • Concrete Strength: Concrete compressive strength is often specified in psi or ksi. For example, high-performance concrete may have a compressive strength of 10 ksi or more.
  • Hydraulic Systems: High-pressure hydraulic systems, such as those used in heavy machinery, can operate at pressures measured in ksi.

Historical Context and Notable Figures

While there isn't a specific law or person directly associated with the invention of ksi, its usage is deeply rooted in engineering practices developed throughout the 20th century. The adoption of ksi reflects a practical approach to dealing with large pressure values in material testing and structural design. Figures like Stephen Timoshenko, a pioneer in engineering mechanics, indirectly influenced the widespread use of such units through their work on material strength and structural analysis.

What is the centimeter of mercury?

The centimeter of mercury (cmHg) is a unit of pressure equal to the pressure exerted by a one-centimeter-high column of mercury under standard conditions. It is a scaled-up form of the millimeter of mercury (torr) used in some scientific and industrial settings.

Definition

The conventional centimeter of mercury is based on a 1 cm column of mercury with a density of 13,595.1 kg/m³ under standard gravity (9.80665 m/s²):

1 cmHg=1333.22 Pa1\ \text{cmHg} = 1333.22\ \text{Pa}

Exactly, 1 cmHg = 1333.22387415 Pa, which is ten times the millimeter of mercury (1 mmHg ≈ 133.322 Pa). This equals 10 torr under the conventional definition.

Origin and History

The unit descends directly from Torricelli's mercury barometer of 1643, where atmospheric pressure was read as the height of a mercury column. Mercury's high density makes the column compact and easy to read. The conventional value fixes mercury's density (its value at 0 °C) and standard gravity so the unit is independent of temperature and location.

Law and Notable Facts

The centimeter of mercury is not an SI unit; the SI unit of pressure is the pascal. It relates to the standard atmosphere as 1 atm = 76 cmHg exactly (by the historical 760 mmHg definition). The millimeter of mercury (mmHg), essentially identical to the torr, remains standard in medicine for blood pressure.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 cmHg = 10 mmHg (10 torr) ≈ 1.33322 kPa.
  • One standard atmosphere equals exactly 76 cmHg.
  • A blood pressure of 120/80 mmHg corresponds to 12/8 cmHg.
  • A vacuum of 5 cmHg absolute is about 6.7 kPa, roughly 93% below atmospheric pressure.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many centimeters of mercury are in one kilopound per square inch?

One kilopound per square inch equals 5171.49 cmHg, because a ksi is 1,000 psi and each psi is roughly 5.17 cmHg.

How do I convert a ksi value to cmHg?

Multiply the ksi figure by 5171.493. For example, 3 ksi equals 15514.5 cmHg.

How do I convert centimeters of mercury back to ksi?

Multiply the cmHg value by 0.0001933678, the reciprocal of the forward factor. So 10,000 cmHg is about 1.934 ksi.

Why would a materials engineer need this conversion?

Metal strength is quoted in ksi, but some pressure gauges and vacuum instruments read in cmHg, so the conversion lets you compare an applied fluid pressure against a material's rated capacity in a single unit system.

Is centimeter of mercury an SI unit?

No. The cmHg is a non-SI unit tied to a mercury column at standard gravity; the SI pressure unit is the pascal, and 1 cmHg equals approximately 1333.22 pascals.

Complete kilopound per square inch conversion table

ksi
UnitResult
pascals (Pa)6894757 Pa
kilopascals (kPa)6894.757 kPa
megapascals (MPa)6.894757 MPa
hectopascals (hPa)68947.57 hPa
millibar (mbar)68947.57 mbar
bar (bar)68.94757 bar
torr (torr)51714.93 torr
meters of water @ 4°C (mH2O)703.0696 mH2O
millimeters of mercury (mmHg)51714.93 mmHg
standard atmospheres (atm)68.04596 atm
centimeters of water (cmH2O)70306.96 cmH2O
technical atmospheres (at)70.30696 at
centimeters of mercury (cmHg)5171.493 cmHg
pounds per square inch (psi)1000 psi
Inches of mercury (inHg)2036.021 inHg