Megajoule to Grams of TNT

MJ

1 MJ

gTNT

239.0057361376673040153 gTNT

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Quick Reference Table (Megajoule to Grams of TNT)

Megajoule (MJ)Grams of TNT (gTNT)
1239.0057361376673040153
3.6860.42065009560229445507
34.28,173.99617590822179732314
10023,900.57361376673040152964
28868,833.65200764818355640535
1,000239,005.73613766730401529637

About Megajoule (MJ)

A megajoule (MJ) equals one million joules and is used in energy economics, vehicle fuel consumption comparisons, and industrial processes. Natural gas supply contracts and household gas meters often express energy in megajoules. The kinetic energy of a passenger car traveling at motorway speed is on the order of one megajoule. Electric vehicle battery capacities are sometimes expressed in megajoules to allow direct comparison with fossil fuel equivalents.

A 1-liter bottle of petrol contains about 34.2 MJ of chemical energy. A car traveling at 100 km/h has roughly 0.5 MJ of kinetic energy.

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.


Megajoule – Frequently Asked Questions

About 34.2 MJ per liter (roughly 131 MJ per US gallon). Diesel is slightly higher at ~38.6 MJ/L. This energy density is why fossil fuels remain hard to replace — a Tesla Model 3 battery weighing 480 kg stores about 216 MJ, while 6 liters of petrol (roughly 4.5 kg) store the same energy content.

Natural gas is sold by energy content rather than volume because the heating value per cubic meter varies with gas composition. In Australia, billing is in MJ; in the UK and US, it is in therms or kWh. One cubic meter of pipeline-quality natural gas holds about 38–39 MJ. Using megajoules lets suppliers and customers compare across different gas sources fairly.

A 1,500 kg car at 110 km/h (about 30.6 m/s) carries ½ × 1500 × 30.6² ≈ 0.70 MJ of kinetic energy. Double the speed and the energy quadruples to 2.8 MJ. This is why highway crashes are so much more destructive than city collisions — and why braking distance scales with the square of speed.

One kilowatt-hour equals exactly 3.6 megajoules (1,000 W × 3,600 s = 3,600,000 J). This conversion pops up constantly in energy-sector work: a power plant producing 1,000 MWh per day delivers 3,600,000 MJ. The 3.6 factor is worth memorising for anyone comparing electrical and thermal energy.

A typical US home uses about 30 kWh/day of electricity (108 MJ) plus another 100–200 MJ of natural gas for heating and hot water — so roughly 200–300 MJ total. A well-insulated European passive house might get by on 50–70 MJ/day. Solar panels on a rooftop generate about 15–25 MJ per panel per day depending on location.

Grams of TNT – Frequently Asked Questions

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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