No. BTUs are heat (British Thermal Units) and cfm is a measure of air flow volume (cubic feet per minute)
12,000
Calories x 0.003968 = BTU
The answer depends on many things.... A btu is a british thermal unit, which is the measure of energy to raise one CC of water one degree Celcius. But you probably want to know about airflow in cfm (not water), and the amount of cooling (or heating) available in 1 cfm or airflow. In Houston, we tend to cool things more than heat. We also try to drive moisture out of the air (dehumidify), but I won't discuss that now. The general equation to answer your question is like this: Qsens = cfm * 1.08 * (Tin - Tout) <-- "delta T" You need to determine what your "delta T" is. For cooling a space to 75degF, your dT is usually 20degF with your supply air temperature (SA=55) and your return air temperature (RA=75). This has been idealized and simplified. For cooling, 1cfm will do about 21.6btu/h of cooling. For heating, (SA=90, RA=68, 1cfm => 23.76btu/h)
Coverting MMSCFD which is million standard cubic feet per day to CFM or cubic feet per minute requires knowing how many minutes are in a day. This can be determined by multiplying 60 by 24 and then dividing the MMSCFD by this product.
I'm not sure and will have to research this, but let me kick it off by writing Btus/hr = CFM X 1.08 X temperature rise. Hopefully, others will weigh in and contribute further to this answer. (Since I supervise Units and Unit Conversions, I would like to admonish people to use the units Btus/hr, not just Btus, when referring to power.)
have a AC unit that is rated 5,200 CFM's. What is the conversion to BTU's
12,000
To convert cmh to cfm ..... divide cmh by 1.7 to convert into cfm....
Tr = cfm/400
CFM is a rate of flow. KW is a rate of energy. You really cannot convert them.
To convert Cubic Feet to Btu's, multiply by 1,000 1 CF = 1,000 Btu's
divide by 60
1 BTU = 1,055 Joules
Calories x 0.003968 = BTU
400 cfm per a 1 ton. If you are talking about air condition 400 cfm per a 1 ton. If you are talking about air condition12000 BTU in 1 ton300 - 350 CFM in 1 ton depends on mfg.Cfm and Tonnage of Refrigerent is are different units, then how these two units can be compared?cfm of what? feathers? lead?
To convert CFH to BTU, you need to use the formula 1 CFH which is equivalent to 1000 BTUs.
1,000 cfm (feet3/min) is 0.4719474 m3/sec.