Terapoise to Pound per Foot per Hour Conversion

Convert between Terapoise and Pound per Foot per Hour quickly and accurately.

TP
lb/(ft·h)

How to Convert Terapoise to Pound per Foot per Hour

Conversion Formula

1 TP = 2E+14 lb/(ft·h)
1 lb/(ft·h) = 4E-15 TP

Example

Convert 15 TP to lb/(ft·h):

15 TP = 15 × 2E+14 lb/(ft·h) = 4E+15 lb/(ft·h)

Unit Information

Learn about the viscosity - dynamic units you're converting between

Terapoise

TP

Definition

The terapoise is a large unit of dynamic viscosity, representing 10^12 poise. It is used for measuring the viscosity of very viscous materials in specialized applications.

History/Origin

This unit was created by applying the tera- prefix to the poise, providing a scale for measuring very high viscosities in scientific and engineering contexts.

Current Use

Used in specialized applications where materials have very high viscosities, such as certain polymers, geological materials, and extremely thick fluids.

Multiplier

100000000000

Offset

0

Pound per Foot per Hour

lb/(ft·h)

Definition

The pound per foot per hour is an imperial unit of dynamic viscosity, representing the resistance of a fluid to flow when a force of one pound-force per square foot is applied over a time period of one hour.

History/Origin

This unit originates from the imperial system of measurements, where mass is measured in pounds, length in feet, and time in hours. It was commonly used in engineering applications in the United States and other countries using imperial units.

Current Use

Still used in some engineering contexts, particularly in the United States and other countries that use imperial units. It provides a practical measure for engineers working with force-based calculations in imperial units.

Multiplier

0

Offset

0

Terapoise to Pound per Foot per Hour Conversion Table

Terapoise [TP] Pound per Foot per Hour [lb/(ft·h)]
1 TP 2E+14 lb/(ft·h)
10 TP 2E+15 lb/(ft·h)
25 TP 6E+15 lb/(ft·h)
50 TP 1E+16 lb/(ft·h)
100 TP 2E+16 lb/(ft·h)
0 TP 0E+0 lb/(ft·h)
-10 TP -2E+15 lb/(ft·h)
-40 TP -1E+16 lb/(ft·h)