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Convert Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute

Instantly convert Cubic meters per second (m³/s) to Liters per minute (L/min) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: m³/s to L/minmultiply by 60000

Reference Table

Cubic meters per second (m³/s)Liters per minute (L/min)
160000
5300000
10600000
251500000
503000000
1006000000

How to Convert Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute

Formula

To convert Cubic meters per second (m³/s) to Liters per minute (L/min): multiply by 60000

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Cubic meters per second (m³/s).
  2. Multiply by 60000 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Liters per minute (L/min).

Conversion Factor

1 m³/s = 60000 L/min

Reverse Factor

1 L/min = 0.0000166667 m³/s

Worked Example

Convert 25 Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute: 25 m³/s = 1500000 L/min

About Cubic meter per second (m³/s)

The SI unit of volumetric flow rate (ISO 80000-4 §4-30) — the volume of fluid passing a fixed cross-section per unit time. m³/s is the universal unit in fluid-dynamics research (Reynolds and Navier-Stokes work), large-pipeline engineering (offshore oil-export risers, district-energy distribution mains), river and flood hydrology (where it is conventionally called the "cumec" — for "cubic meter per second" — in technical writing), large-scale wastewater treatment, and industrial process flow simulation (Aspen HYSYS, CHEMCAD, OLGA). Reference scale: the Amazon River average discharge is ~209,000 m³/s, the Mississippi ~16,800 m³/s, a major dam spillway flood release ~5,000-15,000 m³/s. Most practical applications use smaller units (L/s, m³/hr, GPM) because m³/s values are typically very small for human-scale equipment — a household faucet is ~0.0002 m³/s. Converting to gallons per minute (US): multiply by 15,850. Converting to L/s: multiply by 1,000.

About Liter per minute (L/min)

A metric flow-rate unit equal to 1/60,000 m³/s. L/min is the most commonly-stated metric flow unit in everyday consumer and medical contexts: household appliances and showerheads (a low-flow showerhead is 8-12 L/min vs. the older 20+ L/min designs per the EU EcoLabel showerhead criteria), garden hoses (10-30 L/min depending on supply pressure and hose diameter), medical equipment per ISO 13485 (IV-infusion pumps at fractional L/min, mechanical-ventilator tidal-volume reporting derived from L/min minute volume), oxygen-therapy nasal cannula (1-5 L/min low-flow, up to 60 L/min on high-flow nasal cannula HFNC therapy per Fisher & Paykel Airvo standards), beer-line and beverage-dispense flow controllers, dental-suction equipment, and small-flow industrial dosing pumps for chemical injection. The American Society of Anesthesiologists and the WHO oxygen-supply guidelines both quote oxygen delivery in L/min. 1 L/min = 0.2642 US GPM = 0.06 m³/hr = 16.667 mL/s.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Cubic meter per second equals 60000 Liters per minute
  • 1 Liter per minute equals 0.0000166667 Cubic meters per second
  • Cubic meter per second is a unit of volumetric flow rate
  • Liter per minute is a unit of volumetric flow rate
  • This conversion is commonly used in plumbing, HVAC systems, and chemical process engineering
  • The Cubic meter per second belongs to the metric system

Common Cubic meter per second to Liter per minute Conversions

Cubic meters per second (m³/s)Liters per minute (L/min)
0.01600
0.16000
0.2515000
0.530000
160000
2120000
3180000
5300000
10600000
15900000
201200000
251500000
503000000
754500000
1006000000
25015000000
50030000000
100060000000
5000300000000
10000600000000

Understanding Cubic meters per second

The Cubic meter per second (symbol: m³/s) is a unit of volumetric flow rate. The SI unit of volumetric flow rate (ISO 80000-4 §4-30) — the volume of fluid passing a fixed cross-section per unit time. m³/s is the universal unit in fluid-dynamics research (Reynolds and Navier-Stokes work), large-pipeline engineering (offshore oil-export risers, district-energy distribution mains), river and flood hydrology (where it is conventionally called the "cumec" — for "cubic meter per second" — in technical writing), large-scale wastewater treatment, and industrial process flow simulation (Aspen HYSYS, CHEMCAD, OLGA). Reference scale: the Amazon River average discharge is ~209,000 m³/s, the Mississippi ~16,800 m³/s, a major dam spillway flood release ~5,000-15,000 m³/s. Most practical applications use smaller units (L/s, m³/hr, GPM) because m³/s values are typically very small for human-scale equipment — a household faucet is ~0.0002 m³/s. Converting to gallons per minute (US): multiply by 15,850. Converting to L/s: multiply by 1,000.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Cubic meters per second are commonly used in plumbing, HVAC systems, and chemical process engineering.

Understanding Liters per minute

The Liter per minute (symbol: L/min) is a unit of volumetric flow rate. A metric flow-rate unit equal to 1/60,000 m³/s. L/min is the most commonly-stated metric flow unit in everyday consumer and medical contexts: household appliances and showerheads (a low-flow showerhead is 8-12 L/min vs. the older 20+ L/min designs per the EU EcoLabel showerhead criteria), garden hoses (10-30 L/min depending on supply pressure and hose diameter), medical equipment per ISO 13485 (IV-infusion pumps at fractional L/min, mechanical-ventilator tidal-volume reporting derived from L/min minute volume), oxygen-therapy nasal cannula (1-5 L/min low-flow, up to 60 L/min on high-flow nasal cannula HFNC therapy per Fisher & Paykel Airvo standards), beer-line and beverage-dispense flow controllers, dental-suction equipment, and small-flow industrial dosing pumps for chemical injection. The American Society of Anesthesiologists and the WHO oxygen-supply guidelines both quote oxygen delivery in L/min. 1 L/min = 0.2642 US GPM = 0.06 m³/hr = 16.667 mL/s.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Liters per minute are commonly used in plumbing, HVAC systems, and chemical process engineering.

Why Convert Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute?

Converting between Cubic meters per second and Liters per minute is a frequent requirement for engineers, scientists, and students working with volumetric flow rate values. Different industries and regions favour different unit systems, so having a dependable conversion tool saves time and prevents errors in technical calculations. Whether you are verifying a specification sheet, cross-checking simulation results, or preparing a report for an international audience, accurate volumetric flow rate conversion is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute?

The SI unit of volumetric flow rate (ISO 80000-4 §4-30) — the volume of fluid passing a fixed cross-section per unit time. To convert Cubic meters per second to Liters per minute, multiply by 60000. For example, 25 m³/s equals 1500000 L/min.

How many Liters per minute are in 1 Cubic meter per second?

There are 60000 Liters per minute in 1 Cubic meter per second.

How many Cubic meters per second are in 1 Liter per minute?

There are 0.0000166667 Cubic meters per second in 1 Liter per minute.

What is the formula for Cubic meter per second to Liter per minute conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 60000. This means 1 m³/s = 60000 L/min.

Is a Cubic meter per second bigger than a Liter per minute?

No. One Cubic meter per second is smaller than one Liter per minute because 1 m³/s equals 60000 L/min, which is greater than 1.

When do you need to convert between Cubic meters per second and Liters per minute?

A metric flow-rate unit equal to 1/60,000 m³/s. Cubic meter per second and Liter per minute are both volumetric flow units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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