Millimole per Day to Mole per Second Conversion

Convert between Millimole per Day and Mole per Second quickly and accurately.

mmol/d
mol/s

How to Convert Millimole per Day to Mole per Second

Conversion Formula

1 mmol/d = 1E-8 mol/s
1 mol/s = 86400000 mmol/d

Example

Convert 15 mmol/d to mol/s:

15 mmol/d = 15 × 1E-8 mol/s = 2E-7 mol/s

Unit Information

Learn about the flow - molar units you're converting between

Millimole per Day

mmol/d

Definition

The millimole per day (mmol/d) is a unit of molar flow rate equal to 0.0000000115740741 mole per second. It represents very small molar flow rates, commonly used in analytical chemistry, environmental monitoring, and research applications where very small daily molar flow rates are measured.

History/Origin

Developed for analytical chemistry and environmental monitoring applications where very small daily molar flow rates provide better operational context for long-term processes, this unit became standard in analytical instruments and environmental analysis. It offers a practical measure for micro-scale environmental monitoring.

Current Use

Commonly used in analytical chemistry, environmental monitoring, research applications, and long-term micro-scale process analysis where very small daily molar flow rates are measured. It helps in environmental impact assessment and micro-scale long-term monitoring.

Multiplier

1E-8

Offset

0

Mole per Second

mol/s

Definition

The mole per second (mol/s) is the SI unit of molar flow rate, representing the number of moles of substance passing through a given area per unit time. It quantifies the rate of molar transfer in chemical processes, making it essential for reaction kinetics, process engineering, and chemical analysis applications.

History/Origin

Derived from the fundamental relationship between the mole (SI base unit for amount of substance) and time, this unit became standardized with the adoption of the International System of Units. It provides a consistent measure for molar flow rate across different chemical systems, enabling accurate process design and analysis.

Current Use

Widely used in chemical engineering, process engineering, reaction kinetics, and analytical chemistry for quantifying molar flow rates. It is essential for designing chemical reactors, analyzing reaction rates, and optimizing industrial processes involving molar transfer.

Multiplier

1

Offset

0

Millimole per Day to Mole per Second Conversion Table

Millimole per Day [mmol/d] Mole per Second [mol/s]
1 mmol/d 1E-8 mol/s
10 mmol/d 1E-7 mol/s
25 mmol/d 3E-7 mol/s
50 mmol/d 6E-7 mol/s
100 mmol/d 0.000001 mol/s
0 mmol/d 0E+0 mol/s
-10 mmol/d -1E-7 mol/s
-40 mmol/d -5E-7 mol/s