tonnes per cubic meter (t/m3) to grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3) conversion

1 t/m3 = 1 g/cm3g/cm3t/m3
Formula
1 t/m3 = 1 g/cm3

Understanding tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter Conversion

A tonne per cubic meter (t/m³) is a density unit equal to one metric tonne of mass in one cubic meter of volume, the SI-practical measure common in bulk materials and civil engineering. A gram per cubic centimeter (g/cm³) is the CGS density unit favored in chemistry and materials science. The two are numerically identical because a tonne per cubic meter is exactly one gram per cubic centimeter, so this conversion mainly relabels the same physical density.

Conversion Formula

1 t/m3=1 g/cm31\ \text{t/m3} = 1\ \text{g/cm3}

To convert tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter, multiply by this factor:

g/cm3=t/m3×1\text{g/cm3} = \text{t/m3} \times 1

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter.

g/cm3=25×1=25 g/cm3\text{g/cm3} = 25 \times 1 = 25\ \text{g/cm3}

How to Convert tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter

These two density units are equivalent, so the conversion only relabels the value.

  1. Take the density: Note your value in tonnes per cubic meter (t/m³).
  2. Apply the 1:1 factor: Multiply by 1, because 1 t/m³ equals 1 g/cm³.
  3. Relabel the result: Report the same number as grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm³).
  4. Worked result: For 25 t/m³, 25 × 1 = 25 g/cm³.

tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter conversion table

tonnes per cubic meter (t/m3)grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3)
00
11
22
33
44
55
66
77
88
99
1010
1515
2020
2525
3030
4040
5050
6060
7070
8080
9090
100100
150150
200200
250250
300300
400400
500500
600600
700700
800800
900900
10001000
20002000
30003000
40004000
50005000
1000010000
2500025000
5000050000
100000100000
250000250000
500000500000
10000001000000

What is the Tonne per Cubic Meter?

The tonne per cubic meter is a metric unit of mass density, giving the number of metric tonnes of mass contained in one cubic meter of volume. It is common in civil engineering, mining, and bulk-materials handling, where masses are large.

Definition

One tonne per cubic meter equals one metric tonne (1000 kilograms) spread over one cubic meter. In SI base units:

1 t/m3=1000 kg/m31\ \text{t/m}^3 = 1000\ \text{kg/m}^3

This makes the tonne per cubic meter numerically equal to the kilogram per liter and to the gram per cubic centimeter, so pure water is very close to 1 t/m³.

Origin and History

The metric tonne (1000 kg) was adopted alongside the metric system to handle industrial-scale masses, and pairing it with the cubic meter—the coherent SI unit of volume—produced a convenient large-scale density unit. It became standard in continental European engineering practice during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Law and Notable Facts

The tonne is accepted for use with the SI, though "t/m³" is a derived combination rather than a coherent SI unit itself. A handy fact: because 1 t/m³ equals 1 kg/L, an engineer's "specific gravity" of a material relative to water reads directly as its density in t/m³.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

Fresh water is about 1.00 t/m³ and seawater about 1.025 t/m³. Ordinary structural concrete runs roughly 2.4 t/m³, while structural steel is about 7.85 t/m³. Dry loose sand is around 1.6 t/m³. To convert to pounds per cubic foot, multiply by 62.43.

What is the Gram per Cubic Centimeter?

The gram per cubic centimetre is a metric unit of density widely used in chemistry, materials science, and geology because most solids and liquids have convenient single- or double-digit values in these units.

Definition

One gram per cubic centimetre is one gram of mass in a volume of one cubic centimetre. Since a cubic centimetre is one millionth of a cubic metre and a gram is one thousandth of a kilogram, the unit equals exactly 1000 kilograms per cubic metre.

1 g/cm3=1000 kg/m31\ \text{g/cm}^3 = 1000\ \text{kg/m}^3

It is numerically identical to the gram per millilitre and to the tonne per cubic metre.

Origin and History

The unit arose from the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system introduced in the 19th century, in which it was the standard measure of density. It was historically anchored to water: the gram was originally defined so that one cubic centimetre of water at maximum density weighed almost exactly one gram, giving water a density near 1 g/cm³.

Law and Notable Facts

Though CGS has been superseded by SI, the gram per cubic centimetre remains the everyday unit for tabulating densities of materials. A substance with density less than 1 g/cm³ floats on water while a denser one sinks. Osmium and iridium, the densest naturally occurring elements, sit around 22.6 g/cm³.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • Water at 4 °C: about 1.000 g/cm³ (1000 kg/m³).
  • Aluminium: about 2.70 g/cm³; iron: about 7.87 g/cm³.
  • Gold: about 19.3 g/cm³ (19300 kg/m³).
  • 1 g/cm³ = 1000 kg/m³ = 1 g/mL = 1 kg/L.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many grams per cubic centimeter equal one tonne per cubic meter?

Exactly one. A density of 1 t/m³ is identical to 1 g/cm³, so the numeric value never changes.

Why are these two units numerically equal?

A tonne is 10⁶ grams and a cubic meter is 10⁶ cubic centimeters; the two factors of a million cancel, leaving a 1:1 ratio.

How do I convert tonnes per cubic meter to grams per cubic centimeter?

Keep the same number and change the label. For example, 7.85 t/m³ (steel) equals 7.85 g/cm³.

Where is this conversion used?

It appears whenever engineering bulk-density figures in t/m³ must be compared with chemistry or materials tables that list densities in g/cm³.

Does the conversion ever differ from 1:1?

No. Because the units are equivalent, the reverse factor is also exactly 1, so g/cm³ back to t/m³ is unchanged too.

Complete tonnes per cubic meter conversion table