Grams of TNT to Therm (EC)
gTNT
thm-ec
Conversion History
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|---|---|---|
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Quick Reference Table (Grams of TNT to Therm (EC))
| Grams of TNT (gTNT) | Therm (EC) (thm-ec) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0.00001982833138714912 |
| 1 | 0.00003965666277429824 |
| 5 | 0.00019828331387149118 |
| 10 | 0.00039656662774298236 |
| 60 | 0.00237939976645789418 |
| 100 | 0.00396566627742982363 |
| 500 | 0.01982833138714911815 |
About Grams of TNT (gTNT)
The gram of TNT (gTNT) is a unit of explosive energy equal to exactly 4,184 joules — the energy released by detonating one gram of trinitrotoluene. By convention, this is a defined unit; real TNT yields vary by about ±2% depending on formulation. It is used to characterize small explosive charges, improvised explosive devices, and the energy of chemical reactions involving explosives. One gram of TNT releases roughly the same energy as one dietary kilocalorie (thermochemical).
A standard firecracker releases energy equivalent to about 0.5–1 g of TNT. A hand grenade contains the explosive equivalent of roughly 60–90 g of TNT.
About Therm (EC) (thm-ec)
The therm (EC) is an energy unit defined by the European Community as exactly 105,505,600 joules (approximately 100,000 BTU). It is used for natural gas billing and trading in European energy markets. Gas meters in the UK traditionally measured in cubic feet or therms before metrication moved billing to kWh. One therm (EC) equals 29.3 kWh and is roughly the energy content of about 100 cubic feet of natural gas.
A UK gas bill covering heating and hot water might show 500–800 therms of consumption per year for an average home. One therm heats roughly 300 liters of water from cold to hot.
Grams of TNT – Frequently Asked Questions
How much energy does one gram of TNT actually release?
By convention, exactly 4,184 joules — the same as one thermochemical kilocalorie. Real TNT detonation yields vary by about ±2% depending on purity and confinement, but the defined value provides a fixed reference point. This makes the gram of TNT a convenient bridge between chemistry (calories) and explosive engineering.
Why is TNT used as the standard reference for explosive energy?
TNT (trinitrotoluene) became the reference explosive because it is chemically stable, safe to handle, and was massively produced during both World Wars. Its consistent detonation properties made it a natural benchmark. Other explosives are rated by their "TNT equivalent" — for example, C-4 is about 1.34× TNT and ANFO is about 0.74× TNT.
How many grams of TNT equivalent does a firecracker contain?
A standard US consumer firecracker contains about 0.5–1 gram of TNT equivalent in flash powder. An M-80 (now illegal for consumer sale) contained roughly 3 g of TNT equivalent. Cherry bombs were about 1.5 g. Commercially sold fireworks are regulated by the CPSC to contain no more than 50 mg of flash powder per report charge.
What is the TNT equivalent of a hand grenade?
A US M67 fragmentation grenade contains about 180 g of Composition B explosive, which has a TNT equivalence of about 1.33×, giving roughly 240 grams of TNT equivalent. The lethal radius is about 5 meters, with a casualty-producing radius of 15 meters. The fragmentation — not the blast energy alone — is the primary wounding mechanism.
How does the gram of TNT relate to the calorie?
One gram of TNT releases exactly 1 thermochemical kilocalorie (1 kcal = 4,184 J) by definition. This means a dietary Calorie (nutritional kcal) contains the same energy as detonating one gram of TNT. A 2,000-Calorie daily diet is energetically equivalent to 2 kg of TNT — though your body releases that energy over 24 hours, not in microseconds.
Therm (EC) – Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between the EC therm and the US therm?
The EC therm is defined as exactly 105,505,600 joules; the US therm is 105,480,400 joules — a difference of 25,200 J (about 0.024%). The discrepancy arose from slightly different historical BTU definitions. For residential gas billing the difference is negligible, but in large-scale energy trading involving millions of therms, the distinction can affect settlement amounts.
Why did the UK switch from therms to kilowatt-hours for gas billing?
The UK Gas Act 1995 mandated a switch from therms to kWh as part of broader metrication. One therm (EC) equals 29.3071 kWh. The change aligned gas billing with electricity billing, making it easier for consumers to compare energy costs. Older UK customers and industry veterans still refer to therms colloquially, and wholesale gas markets continued using therms for years after the retail switch.
How many therms does a UK household use per year?
A typical UK home uses 500–800 therms (EC) per year for heating and hot water, equivalent to roughly 14,700–23,400 kWh. Well-insulated newer homes may use under 400 therms, while large Victorian houses with poor insulation can exceed 1,200 therms. Ofgem's energy price cap is set in pence per kWh, but converting back to therms gives about £2.50–£3.50 per therm at recent rates.
How does the EC therm relate to cubic meters of natural gas?
One cubic meter of UK pipeline-quality natural gas contains roughly 38.5–39.5 MJ, which is about 0.365–0.374 therms (EC). Gas meters measure volume in cubic meters, and the utility applies a calorific value correction to convert to kWh (or therms). The correction factor varies by region and season because gas composition changes depending on the source field.
Is the therm still used in European energy markets?
The therm (EC) was once the standard trading unit on the UK's NBP (National Balancing Point) gas market. In 2020, the ICE exchange switched NBP contracts from pence per therm to pence per kWh. Continental European hubs like TTF have always traded in euros per MWh. The therm is fading from professional use but remains in legacy contracts and older billing systems.