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Volumetric Flux

m³/m²/daytocm/hr

Convert cubic metres per square metre per day (m³/m²/day) to centimetres per hour (volumetric flux) (cm/hr).

Factor1 m³/m²/day = 4.166667 cm/hr

Converter

m³/m²/day

Accepts numbers or expressions, e.g. 150 + 14.7

Result
100cm/hr

Rendered to 6 significant figures.

Formula

Formula
cm/hr = m³/m²/day × 4.166667

Multiply any value in cubic metres per square metre per day by 4.166667 to obtain the value in centimetres per hour (volumetric flux).

Worked example

Convert 24 m³/m²/day to cm/hr.

  1. 01Start with 24 m³/m²/day.
  2. 02Multiply by the conversion factor: 24 × 4.166667 = 100 cm/hr.
Result24 m³/m²/day = 100 cm/hr

Conversion table

m³/m²/daycm/hr
14.1667
28.3333
520.833
1041.667
2083.333
50208.33
100416.67
200833.33
5002083.3
10004166.7

Reference values rounded to 5 significant figures for display.

FAQ

What is the conversion factor from m³/m²/day to cm/hr?
1 m³/m²/day equals 4.166667 cm/hr. To convert, multiply the value in cubic metres per square metre per day by 4.166667.
How do I convert 1 m³/m²/day to cm/hr?
1 m³/m²/day = 4.16667 cm/hr. For any value, multiply by 4.166667.
How do I convert cm/hr back to m³/m²/day?
Divide by the same factor — or equivalently, multiply by 0.24. So 1 cm/hr = 0.24 m³/m²/day.
When would I need to convert cubic metre per square metre per day to centimetre per hour (volumetric flux)?
Volumetric-flux conversions between m³/m²/day and cm/hr are routine in membrane filtration (RO, UF, MF, NF permeate flux), hydraulic loading specification, water-treatment design, hydrometallurgy and packed-bed column loading, and environmental engineering. LMH (L/m²/h) and gfd (gal/ft²/day) dominate membrane datasheets; m³/m²/h and m³/m²/day cover SI engineering ladders; m/day and cm/s appear as superficial velocity in hydromet and packed-bed work. Volumetric flux is the same physical quantity as superficial velocity (m³/m²/s ≡ m/s) but is kept distinct from the velocity and flow categories because the engineering intent is volumetric throughput per unit area, not bulk motion or total throughput.
Is the conversion exact?
The factor shown is precise to at least 7 significant figures. For most process-engineering work this is far better than instrument accuracy. For metrology or trade applications, refer to the relevant national standard (NIST, BIPM, ISO 80000).

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