How to Convert Millibars to Torr
To convert a pressure measurement from millibars to torr, divide the pressure value by the conversion factor. Since one millibar is equal to 0.750062 torr, you can use this formula:
The pressure in torr is equal to the millibars divided by 1.333224.
Using the formula: torr = millibars ÷ 1.333224
torr = 5 mbar ÷ 1.333224 = 3.75031 Torr
Therefore, 5 millibars equals 3.75031 torr.
How Many Torr Are in a Millibar?
There are 0.750062 torr in one millibar.
What Is a Millibar?
The millibar (symbol: mbar) is a unit of pressure equal to one thousandth of a bar, or exactly 100 pascals. It is numerically identical to the hectopascal (1 mbar = 1 hPa). The millibar was the traditional unit for atmospheric pressure in meteorology before the adoption of the hectopascal. Many older weather instruments, barometers, and publications still use millibars, and the two units are interchangeable. Standard atmospheric pressure at sea level is 1,013.25 mbar. In weather forecasting, pressure changes of 1–3 mbar over a few hours can indicate significant weather changes. Rapidly falling pressure (10+ mbar in 24 hours) often signals approaching storms. In vacuum technology, the millibar is widely used to express low pressures. A rough vacuum is typically 1–1,000 mbar, a medium vacuum is 10−3–1 mbar, and a high vacuum is below 10−3 mbar. Ultra-high vacuum systems used in semiconductor manufacturing operate at pressures below 10−9 mbar. In laboratory science, the millibar is used for measuring pressures in experiments involving gases, vacuum systems, and atmospheric simulations.
One millibar is equal to:
- 100 pascals (Pa)
- 1 hectopascal (hPa)
- 0.001 bars (bar)
- 9.8692 × 10−4 atmospheres (atm)
- 0.0145038 pounds per square inch (psi)
- 0.750062 torr (Torr)
What Is a Torr?
The torr (symbol: Torr) is a unit of pressure named after the Italian physicist Evangelista Torricelli, who invented the barometer. One torr is defined as exactly 1/760 of a standard atmosphere, which equals approximately 133.322 pascals. The torr is essentially equivalent to the millimetre of mercury (mmHg) for most practical purposes, though they differ by less than 0.000015%. One torr equals exactly 101,325/760 Pa, while 1 mmHg is defined by the pressure of a 1 mm column of mercury at 0 °C. The torr is widely used in vacuum science and technology. Vacuum levels are often categorised using the torr: low vacuum (25–760 Torr), medium vacuum (10−3–25 Torr), high vacuum (10−9–10−3 Torr), and ultra-high vacuum (below 10−9 Torr). In medicine, blood pressure is measured in mmHg (essentially torr). Normal blood pressure is about 120/80 mmHg, meaning the systolic pressure is about 120 Torr and the diastolic pressure is about 80 Torr. In semiconductor manufacturing, process chamber pressures are specified in torr or millitorr. Sputtering processes typically operate at 1–100 mTorr, and chemical vapour deposition (CVD) at 0.1–10 Torr.
One torr is equal to:
- 133.322 pascals (Pa)
- 1.33322 hectopascals (hPa)
- 0.00133322 bars (bar)
- 1.33322 millibars (mbar)
- 0.00131579 atmospheres (atm)
- 0.019337 pounds per square inch (psi)
- 2.78450 pounds per square foot (psf)
Understanding Pressure Units
Pressure is the force applied perpendicular to a surface per unit area (P = F/A). It is a fundamental concept in physics, engineering, meteorology, medicine, and many other fields. Pressure is a scalar quantity, meaning it acts equally in all directions within a fluid at a given point.
The wide variety of pressure units reflects the diverse fields in which pressure is measured. The pascal (SI) is the international standard, but industry-specific units like psi, bar, atm, and torr remain firmly established in their respective domains.
Major Pressure Unit Families
- SI units: The pascal (Pa) is the SI unit of pressure. With prefixes: hectopascal (hPa = 100 Pa), kilopascal (kPa = 1,000 Pa), megapascal (MPa = 106 Pa), gigapascal (GPa = 109 Pa).
- Bar units: The bar (100,000 Pa) and millibar (100 Pa) are metric units widely used in industry and meteorology. The millibar equals the hectopascal exactly.
- Atmospheric units: The standard atmosphere (101,325 Pa) is a reference pressure used in chemistry and physics. The torr (1/760 atm) is used in vacuum science.
- Gravitational metric units: The kgf/cm² (technical atmosphere) and kgf/m² use gravitational force units on metric areas.
- Imperial / US customary units: Pounds per square inch (psi) and pounds per square foot (psf) are standard in US engineering and construction.
Pressure in Everyday Life
- Atmosphere: Standard atmospheric pressure at sea level is about 101.3 kPa (14.7 psi, 1013 hPa, 760 Torr). This is the weight of the air column above us.
- Tyres: Car tyre pressure is typically 30–35 psi (2.0–2.4 bar). Under-inflated tyres waste fuel and wear unevenly.
- Blood pressure: Measured in mmHg (≈ Torr). Normal is about 120/80 mmHg. High blood pressure (hypertension) is above 140/90 mmHg.
- Weather: Barometric pressure ranges from about 870–1085 hPa. Falling pressure indicates approaching storms; rising pressure indicates clearing skies.
- Water pressure: Pressure increases by about 1 atm per 10 m (33 ft) of water depth. At the bottom of the Mariana Trench (~11 km), pressure exceeds 1,000 atm.
Converting Between Pressure Units
All pressure units measure the same physical quantity, so converting between them requires multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. The factor is the ratio of how many pascals one unit of the source contains divided by how many pascals one unit of the target contains.
Key conversion constants: 1 atm = 101,325 Pa = 1.01325 bar = 14.696 psi = 760 Torr. Also, 1 bar = 100,000 Pa and 1 psi ≈ 6,894.76 Pa.
Tips for Pressure Conversions
- The hectopascal and millibar are exactly equal (1 hPa = 1 mbar = 100 Pa). They can be used interchangeably.
- The bar is very close to the atmosphere: 1 atm = 1.01325 bar. For rough estimates, 1 bar ≈ 1 atm.
- Quick psi ↔ bar conversion: 1 bar ≈ 14.5 psi. So divide psi by 14.5 to get bars, or multiply bars by 14.5 to get psi.
- For atm ↔ psi: 1 atm ≈ 14.7 psi. A common tyre pressure of 32 psi is about 2.2 atm (gauge) or 3.2 atm (absolute).
- The torr is nearly equal to 1 mmHg. For blood pressure and vacuum measurements, they’re practically interchangeable.
- Exactly 760 torr = 1 atm. This comes from the original barometer definition.
- For kgf/cm² ↔ bar: they’re very close. 1 kgf/cm² = 0.981 bar. For rough work, 1 kgf/cm² ≈ 1 bar.
- Remember that 1 psi = 144 psf (since 1 ft² = 144 in²). This is an exact relationship.
- Be aware of gauge vs. absolute pressure. Gauge pressure is measured relative to atmospheric pressure (0 psig = 1 atm absolute = 14.7 psia).
Millibars to Torr Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from millibars to torr.
| Millibars | Torr (Torr) |
|---|---|
| 1 mbar | 0.750062 |
| 2 mbar | 1.50012 |
| 3 mbar | 2.25019 |
| 4 mbar | 3.00025 |
| 5 mbar | 3.75031 |
| 6 mbar | 4.50037 |
| 7 mbar | 5.25043 |
| 8 mbar | 6.00049 |
| 9 mbar | 6.75056 |
| 10 mbar | 7.50062 |
| 11 mbar | 8.25068 |
| 12 mbar | 9.00074 |
| 13 mbar | 9.7508 |
| 14 mbar | 10.5009 |
| 15 mbar | 11.2509 |
| 16 mbar | 12.001 |
| 17 mbar | 12.751 |
| 18 mbar | 13.5011 |
| 19 mbar | 14.2512 |
| 20 mbar | 15.0012 |
| 21 mbar | 15.7513 |
| 22 mbar | 16.5014 |
| 23 mbar | 17.2514 |
| 24 mbar | 18.0015 |
| 25 mbar | 18.7515 |
| 26 mbar | 19.5016 |
| 27 mbar | 20.2517 |
| 28 mbar | 21.0017 |
| 29 mbar | 21.7518 |
| 30 mbar | 22.5019 |
| 31 mbar | 23.2519 |
| 32 mbar | 24.002 |
| 33 mbar | 24.752 |
| 34 mbar | 25.5021 |
| 35 mbar | 26.2522 |
| 36 mbar | 27.0022 |
| 37 mbar | 27.7523 |
| 38 mbar | 28.5023 |
| 39 mbar | 29.2524 |
| 40 mbar | 30.0025 |