Standard Cubic Feet Per Minute/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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{{r|Reference conditions of gas temperature and pressure}} | {{r|Reference conditions of gas temperature and pressure}} | ||
{{r|U.S. customary units|United States customary units}} | {{r|U.S. customary units|United States customary units}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Concentration}} | |||
{{r|Parts-per notation}} |
Latest revision as of 16:00, 21 October 2024
- See also changes related to Standard Cubic Feet Per Minute, or pages that link to Standard Cubic Feet Per Minute or to this page or whose text contains "Standard Cubic Feet Per Minute".
Parent topics
- Engineering [r]: a branch of engineering that uses chemistry, biology, physics, and math to solve problems involving fuel, drugs, food, and many other products. [e]
Subtopics
- Chemical engineering [r]: a branch of engineering that uses chemistry, biology, physics, and math to solve problems involving fuel, drugs, food, and many other products [e]
- Combined gas law [r]: A combination of the three gas laws known as Charles's law, Boyle's law, and Gay-Lussac's law. [e]
- Ideal gas law [r]: Relates pressure, volume and temperature for hypothetical gases of atoms or molecules with negligible intermolecular forces. [e]
- International System of Units [r]: Metric unit system based on the metre, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, mole and candela. [e]
- Reference conditions of gas temperature and pressure [r]: The temperature and pressure conditions that define the density of a gas and serve to document a stated gas volume. [e]
- United States customary units [r]: The units of measurement that are currently used in the United States. [e]
- Concentration [r]: In science, engineering and in general common usage: the measure of how much of a given substance there is in a given mixture of substances. [e]
- Parts-per notation [r]: Notation used in science and engineering, to denote dimensionless proportionalities in measured quantities such as proportions at the parts-per-million (ppm), parts-per-billion (ppb), and parts-per-trillion (ppt) level. [e]