US Therms (thm) to calories (cal) conversion

1 thm = 25210420 calcalthm
Formula
1 thm = 25210420 cal

Understanding US Therms to calories Conversion

The US therm (thm) is a natural-gas energy unit equal to 100,000 BTU, used by gas utilities to bill customers. The calorie (cal) here is the small or gram calorie, the energy needed to raise one gram of water by one degree Celsius, equal to about 4.184 joules. Converting US therms to calories translates a large heating-industry unit into the fundamental thermochemical unit used in physics and chemistry, producing a very large number.

Conversion Formula

1 thm=25210420 cal1\ \text{thm} = 25210420\ \text{cal}

To convert US Therms to calories, multiply by this factor:

cal=thm×25210420\text{cal} = \text{thm} \times 25210420

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 US Therms to calories.

cal=25×25210420=6.30261×108 cal\text{cal} = 25 \times 25210420 = 6.30261 \times 10⁸\ \text{cal}

How to Convert US Therms to calories

Convert a gas therm figure into gram calories in one step.

  1. Note your therm value: Record the energy amount in US therms.
  2. Multiply by the factor: Multiply by 25,210,420 calories per therm.
  3. Expect millions: Because a calorie is small, the result will be in the tens of millions.
  4. Worked result: 25 therms × 25,210,420 = 6.30261 × 10⁸ calories.

US Therms to calories conversion table

US Therms (thm)calories (cal)
00
125210420
250420840
375631260
4100841700
5126052100
6151262500
7176472900
8201683400
9226893800
10252104200
15378156300
20504208400
25630260500
30756312600
401008417000
501260521000
601512625000
701764729000
802016834000
902268938000
1002521042000
1503781563000
2005042084000
2506302605000
3007563126000
40010084170000
50012605210000
60015126250000
70017647290000
80020168340000
90022689380000
100025210420000
200050420840000
300075631260000
4000100841700000
5000126052100000
10000252104200000
25000630260500000
500001260521000000
1000002521042000000
2500006302605000000
50000012605210000000
100000025210420000000

What is the US Therm?

The US therm is a unit of heat energy used primarily in the natural gas industry to measure and bill the energy content of gas supplied to homes and businesses in the United States.

Definition

The US therm is defined as 100,000 British thermal units (BTU) based on the 59 °F (15 °C) BTU:

1 thm=1.05480×108 J1\ \text{thm} = 1.05480 \times 10⁸\ \text{J}

More precisely, the US therm equals exactly 105,480,400 joules (about 105.48 MJ). It should not be confused with the slightly larger UK therm, which is based on the International Table BTU and equals 105,505,585.257 J.

Origin and History

The therm entered use in the 20th century as gas utilities shifted from billing customers by volume to billing by delivered energy, since the heating value of natural gas varies with its composition. Combining "therm" (from the Greek thermē, heat) with a fixed BTU count gave a convenient billing unit roughly equal to the energy in 100 cubic feet of typical natural gas.

Law and Notable Facts

In the United States the therm is a legally recognized commercial unit for natural gas sales. Gas meters record volume in hundreds of cubic feet (ccf), which utilities multiply by a "therm factor" reflecting the gas's actual heat content to convert to therms for billing.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A typical US home uses roughly 500 to 1,000 therms of natural gas per year for heating, cooking, and hot water.
  • 1 therm equals about 29.3 kilowatt-hours of energy.
  • Burning 1 therm of natural gas releases approximately 105.5 MJ of heat, enough to run a 20 kW furnace at full output for about 88 minutes.

What is calories?

Calories are a unit of energy, historically defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius. While the "calorie" is still commonly used, the kilocalorie (kcal), also known as the "large calorie" or "food calorie," is more prevalent when discussing dietary energy. In the International System of Units (SI), the joule (J) is the standard unit of energy.

Types of Calories

  • Small calorie (cal): The amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1°C.
  • Large calorie (Cal) or Kilocalorie (kcal): The amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of water by 1°C. This is the calorie commonly referred to in nutrition.

The relationship between these units is:

1 Cal=1 kcal=1000 cal1 \text{ Cal} = 1 \text{ kcal} = 1000 \text{ cal}

Calorie to Joule Conversion

Since the joule is the SI unit for energy, it's useful to know the conversion factor:

1 cal4.184 J1 \text{ cal} \approx 4.184 \text{ J}

1 kcal4184 J1 \text{ kcal} \approx 4184 \text{ J}

Historical Context

While not directly related to a specific law, the development of calorimetry (the science of measuring heat) was crucial to understanding calories. Scientists like Nicolas Clément and later Wilbur Olin Atwater, a pioneer in nutrition science, contributed significantly to establishing calorie values for different foods. Atwater's work in the late 19th and early 20th centuries was instrumental in developing the calorie system used in nutrition today.

Real-World Examples and Calorie Values

  • Food:

    • One medium apple (approx. 182g): ~95 kcal
    • One slice of whole wheat bread: ~70 kcal
    • A can of soda (355ml): ~150 kcal
  • Energy Expenditure:

    • A 150-pound person running for 30 minutes at 6 mph burns approximately 340 kcal.
    • Sleeping for 8 hours burns roughly 50 kcal per hour, totaling around 400 kcal.
  • Other Quantities:

    • Gasoline: 1 gallon of gasoline contains approximately 31,000 kcal.

Measuring Calories in Food

Calories in food are typically determined using a bomb calorimeter. This device measures the heat released when a food sample is completely burned inside a closed chamber surrounded by water. The temperature increase of the water is then used to calculate the calorie content of the food. The caloric content in the three macronutrients are as follows:

  • Carbohydrates: 4 kcal/gram
  • Proteins: 4 kcal/gram
  • Fats: 9 kcal/gram

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories are in one US therm?

One US therm equals about 25,210,420 small (gram) calories, since a therm is a large heating unit and a calorie is a small one.

How do I convert US therms to calories?

Multiply the therm value by 25,210,420. The result comes out in the tens of millions of calories per therm.

Are these food Calories or gram calories?

These are small gram calories (cal). One food Calorie (kcal) is 1,000 of them, so a therm is about 25,210 kilocalories.

How many therms equal one calorie?

One gram calorie is about 3.966614 × 10⁻⁸ US therms, an extremely small fraction.

Where does this conversion matter?

It links natural-gas energy accounting to the thermochemical calorie used in laboratory and scientific calculations of heat.

Complete US Therms conversion table

thm
UnitResult
Watt-seconds (Ws)105480400 Ws
Watt-minutes (Wm)1758007 Wm
Watt-hours (Wh)29300.11 Wh
Milliwatt-hours (mWh)29300110 mWh
Kilowatt-hours (kWh)29.30011 kWh
Megawatt-hours (MWh)0.02930011 MWh
Gigawatt-hours (GWh)0.00002930011 GWh
Joules (J)105480400 J
Kilojoules (kJ)105480.4 kJ
Megajoules (MJ)105.4804 MJ
Gigajoules (GJ)0.1054804 GJ
British Thermal Units (IT) (BTU)99976.13 BTU
Electronvolts (eV)6.583569e+26 eV
Ergs (erg)1054804000000000 erg
Foot-pounds (ft-lbf)77798350 ft-lbf
Tonnes of TNT (t-tnt)0.02521042 t-tnt
calories (cal)25210420 cal
Kilocalories (kcal)25210.42 kcal