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The British thermal unit (BTU or Btu) is a unit of energy used in the United States. It is also still occasionally encountered in the UK, in the context of older heating and cooling systems. In most other areas, it has been replaced by the SI unit of energy, the joule (J).

A Btu is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound avoirdupois of water by one degree Fahrenheit. 143 Btu is required to melt a pound of ice. As is the case with the calorie, several different definitions of the Btu exist, which are based on different water temperatures and therefore vary by about 0.5%:

Name Value (J) Notes
39 °F ≈ 1059.67 Uses the calorie value of water at its maximum density (4 °C)
Mean ≈ 1055.87 Uses a calorie averaged over water temperatures 0 °C to 100 °C
IT ≡ 1055.05585262 The most widespread Btu, uses the International * Table (IT) calorie, which was defined by the Fifth International Conference on the Properties of Steam (London, July 1956) to be exactly 4.1868 J
ISO ≡ 1055.056 International standard ISO 31-4 on Quantities and units – Part 4: Heat, Appendix A. This value uses the IT calorie and is rounded to a realistic accuracy
59 °F ≡ 1054.804 Chiefly American. Uses the 15 °C calorie, itself defined as exactly 4.1855 J (Comité international 1950; PV, 1950, 22, 79-80)
60 °F ≈ 1054.68 Chiefly Canadian
63 °F ≈ 1054.6
Thermochemical ≡ 1054.35026444 Uses the "thermochemical calorie" of exactly 4.184 J

In the United States, the BTU is often used to describe the heat value of fuels, and the BTU per hour (often confusingly abbreviated to BTU) measures the heating and cooling power of a system (such as a barbecue grill).

Conversions


One BTU is approximately:

Other conversions:

  • In natural gas, by convention 1 MM Btu (1 million Btu, sometimes written "mm BTU") = 1.054615 GJ. Conversely, 1 gigajoule is equivalent to 26.8 m3 of natural gas at defined temperature and pressure.

Associated units


The BTU per hour (BTU/h) is the unit of power most commonly associated with the BTU.

  • 1 watt is approximately 3.4 BTU/h *
  • 1000 BTU/h is approximately 293 W
  • 1 horsepower is approximately 2540 BTU/h
  • 12,000 BTU/h is referred to as a ton in most North American air conditioning applications.
A unit called the quad (short for quadrillion) is defined as 1015 BTU, which is about 1.055×1018 joules, and the therm is defined in the United States and European Union as 100,000 BTU –but the U.S. uses the BTU59 °F whilst the EU uses the BTUIT.

The BTU should not be confused with the Board of Trade Unit (B.O.T.U.), which is a much larger quantity of energy.

See also


External links


Units of energy | Imperial units | Customary units in the United States

British thermal unit | BTU | British thermal unit | BTU | British thermal unit | BTU | British thermal unit | 英熱量 | British Thermal Unit | Btu | BTU

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "British thermal unit".

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