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About Thermal Expansion Conversion

The coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) measures how much a material expands or contracts with temperature changes—the fractional change in size per degree of temperature change. Most materials expand when heated and contract when cooled, a fundamental physical behavior that engineering must accommodate. Without proper expansion provisions, bridges would buckle in summer heat, pipelines would rupture, and precision instruments would lose accuracy as temperatures change throughout the day.

The SI単位 is per kelvin (K⁻¹ or 1/K), which numerically equals per degree 摂氏 since both temperature scales share the same interval size. Linear coefficients describe length change, while volumetric coefficients (approximately 3× the linear coefficient for isotropic materials) describe volume change. 理解する thermal expansion is essential for bridge and building design, railroad tracks, pipeline engineering, electronic packaging, glass-to-metal seals, and precision metrology where dimensional stability determines measurement accuracy.

Our converter handles linear, area, and volumetric thermal expansion coefficient units for materials engineering and design applications.

Common Thermal Expansion Conversions

変換元変換先乗数
1/K (1/°C)1/°F0.5556 (5/9)
1/°F1/K (1/°C)1.8 (9/5)
ppm/K1/K10⁻⁶
1/Kppm/K10⁶
ppm/°Fppm/K1.8
ppm/Kppm/°F0.5556
μm/m·Kppm/K1 (equivalent)
μin/in·°Fμm/m·K1.8

Thermal Expansion 単位リファレンス

Per kelvin (K⁻¹ or 1/K) – The SI単位 for thermal expansion coefficient, representing fractional length change per degree ケルビン. Numerically identical to per degree 摂氏 since both scales use the same interval size. Typical values range from about 1×10⁻⁶/K for low-expansion materials like Invar to 23×10⁻⁶/K for aluminum. Scientific literature and international engineering standards use this unit exclusively.

Per degree 華氏 (1/°F) – US customary unit for thermal expansion. Since 華氏 degrees are smaller than ケルビン (9°F = 5K), coefficients in 1/°F are numerically smaller than 1/K by the factor 5/9 (≈0.556). Used in US mechanical engineering and HVAC applications where temperatures are specified in 華氏.

ppm per kelvin (ppm/K) – Parts per million per kelvin, equivalent to μm/m·K (micrometers per meter per kelvin). This convenient notation avoids scientific notation since expansion coefficients are inherently small numbers. Steel at 12 ppm/K means a 1-meter bar expands 12 micrometers per degree. Widely used in materials specifications and electronics packaging.

μin/in·°F – Microinches per inch per degree 華氏, the US equivalent of ppm notation. Common in American precision engineering, aerospace specifications, and tooling industry documents. Converting to ppm/K requires multiplying by 1.8.