Ton
The word
ton or
tonne is derived from the
Old English tunne, likely of
Low Latin origin (as
tunna), with the spelling 'tonne' introduced during the Middle English period subject to Old French influence. Originally meaning cask or barrel, it later came to specifically denote a cask with a
capacity of 252 wine
gallons, holding approximately 2100
pounds of
water. Such a barrel (of any similar volume) is still called a
tun in British English, but this usage is dying out.
The modern spelling
tonne, almost always referring to the
metric tonne of 1000 kilograms (or the associated obsolete force unit) when used in non-American English, is a direct borrowing from the French language.
There are three similar units of
mass called the
ton:#
long ton (simply
ton in countries such as the
United Kingdom which formerly used the
Imperial system of weights and measures) is a
weight ton or
gross ton, and is 2,240 lb (exactly
1,016.0469088 kg). In the UK and most of the areas which used the Imperial system, the metric
tonne (1000 kg), which it is conveniently very similar to—less than 2% difference, is the only form of ton legal for trade.#* Increasingly, metric
tonnes are being used rather than long tons in measuring the displacement of ships.
See tonnage.#*The long ton is used for petroleum products such as
aviation fuel.#*
Deadweight ton (abbreviation 'dwt') for the capacity of a ship in the number of long tons (2,240 pounds). This measurement is also used in the U.S. tonnage of naval ships.#
short ton (usually called simply
ton in the
USA or sometimes called a
net ton) = 2000 lb (exactly
907.18474 kg).#*
Harbour ton used in
South Africa in the
20th century, equal to 2000 pounds or one short ton.#
metric ton, often referred as
tonne, is 1000
kg (also 10^3 kg,
1 E3 kg or 1
Mg).
Both the long ton and the short ton are composed of twenty
hundredweights, each having different values for the hundredweight (112 and 100 pounds respectively). Prior to the
15th century in
England, the ton was composed of 20 hundredweights, each of 108 lb, giving a ton of 2160 pounds.
Assay ton (abbreviation 'AT') is not a unit of measurement (nobody ever has
x assay tons of something), but rather a standard quantity used in
assaying ores of precious metals; it is 29 1/6 grams (short assay ton) or 32 2/3 grams (long assay ton), the amount which bears the same ratio to a milligram as a short/long ton bears to a
troy ounce. In other words, the number of milligrams of a particular metal found in a sample of this size gives the number of troy ounces contained in a short/long ton of ore.
In documents which predate 1960 the word
ton may be spelt
tonne, however in more recent documents the spelling
tonne refers exclusively to the metric
tonne.
In the context of
nuclear power plants,
tHM and
MTHM mean (metric) tonnes of
heavy metal, and MTU means metric tonnes of
uranium.
A
dry ton or
dry tonne has the same mass value, but the material has been dried to a relatively low, consistent moisture level.
There are also the units of force based on each of these three mass units, but none are acceptable for use with
SI. The metric tonne force (tonne force), like the kilogram force, is no exception. Only the metric ton or tonne as a unit of mass is acceptable for use with SI.
*1 short ton force = 2000
lbf = 8.896443230521
kilonewtons (kN)
*1 long ton force = 2240 lbf = 9.96401641818352 kN
*1 metric ton force = 1000
kgf = 9.80665 kN
Also see
tonnage.
The
freight ton or
measurement ton is a unit of volume used for describing
ship capacities (
tonnage) or cargo. One measurement ton is equal to:
* 40
cubic feet* 1.481(481)
cubic yards (the "481" digit sequence repeats infinitely)
* 1,132.67386368
litres
* 1.13267386368
cubic metres
The measurement ton is abbreviated as M/T, MT, or MTON, which can cause it to be confused with the
metric ton.
The
register ton is also a unit of volume used for the cargo capacity of a ship, defined as 100 cubic feet (roughly 2.83 cubic metres). It is often abbreviated
GRT for
gross registered ton. It is known as a
tonneau de mer in Belgium, but, in France, a
tonneau de mer is 1.44 cubic metres or about 1.88 cubic yards.
The
Panama Canal net ton, a unit of volume used for billing for ships going through the Panama Canal, is the same as the register ton. The fee for example in the
1990s was roughly a couple
USD for each unit.
The
water ton was formerly used in Great Britain and equal to 224
imperial gallons (the volume occupied by a mass of one long ton under the conditions which define the imperial gallon).
See
1 E-1 m³ and
orders of magnitude (volume) for a comparison with other volumes.
(Note that volume tons are units of convenience used in shipping and are not useful in science except that they are exactly defined.)
ton of TNT
*A
ton of TNT or
tonne of TNT is a unit of energy equal to 10
9 calories, also known as a gigacalorie, equal to about 4.184 gigajoules.
*A
kiloton of TNT or
kilotonne of TNT is a unit of energy equal to 10
12 calories, also known as a teracalorie, equal to about 4.184 terajoules.
*A
megaton of TNT or
megatonne of TNT is a unit of energy equal to 10
15 calories, also known (infrequently) as a petacalorie, equal to about 4.184 petajoules.
Note that these are thermal calories (not capitalized). The dietary Calorie (capitalized) is equal to one thousand thermal calories.
Early values for the explosive energy released by
trinitrotoluene (TNT) ranged from 900 to 1100 calories per gram. In order to standardise the use of the term
TNT as a unit of energy, an arbitrary value was assigned based on 1000 calories (4.184 kilo
joules) per gram. Thus there is no longer a direct connection to the chemical TNT itself. It is now merely a unit of energy that happens to be expressed using words normally associated with mass (e.g. kilogram, tonne, pound) (IAEA references: [
1], [
2]). The definition applies for both spellings:
ton of TNT and
tonne of TNT.
Measurements in tons of TNT have been used primarily to express
nuclear weapon yields, though they have also been used since in
seismology as well.
Sample terms:
| 'grams TNT' | Symbol | 'tons TNT' | Symbol! Energy | | gram of TNT | g | | | 4.184 × 103 J |
| kilogram of TNT | kg | | | 4.184 × 106 J |
| megagram of TNT | Mg | ton of TNT | t | 4.184 × 109 J |
| gigagram of TNT | Gg | kiloton of TNT | kt | 4.184 × 1012 J |
| teragram of TNT | Tg | megaton of TNT | Mt | 4.184 × 1015 J |
| petagram of TNT | Pg | gigaton of TNT | Gt | 4.184 × 1018 J |
ton of coal equivalent
*A
ton of coal equivalent or
tonne of coal equivalent (TCE), a conventional value of 7 Gcal (IT) = 29.3076 GJ.
ton of oil equivalent
*A
ton of oil equivalent or
tonne of oil equivalent (TOE), a conventional value of 10 Gcal (IT) = 41.868 GJ ≈ 10.0067 ton of TNT.
See also GTOE.
*In refrigeration and
air-conditioning, a
refrigeration ton can be:
**The power required to cool 1 short ton of water by 1
°F every 10 minutes = 12,000
BTU/h ≈ 3,516.85284
W**The power required to cool 1 long ton of water by 1 °F every 10 minutes = 13,440 BTU/h ≈ 3,938.87518
W**A corresponding unit of energy equal to that power for a period of a day, or 24h × 12,000 BTU/h = 288,000 BTU ≈ 303,856,086
J*
Ton is also used informally to mean a large amount of something (material or not).
* Units of speed: in
slang or informal usage, a ton can be
** 100
mph** 100
km/h* In money, a
ton is slang for 100 GBP (pounds sterling) —this is a term with a London, England origin.
* In
darts, a
ton (or
ton up) is a score of 100 or more points with three darts.
* In
cricket, a
ton is a score of 100
runs, typically referring to 100 runs by a single batsman.
* In motor vehicles, many
trucks are classified into groups loosely related to their off-road carrying capacity, as 1/4-ton (the first
Jeep was so classified), 1/2-ton, 3/4-ton, 2 1/2-ton (
deuce-and-a-half in U.S.
military slang), 5-ton, etc. Of course, the vehicles weigh much more than this, and according to military classification are allowed to carry double the cargo on roads.
** Conversely in some cases the weight refers to the maximum gross road weight including cargo, for example a British 3.5-tonne van is the largest vehicle that can be legally driven on an ordinary driver's license.
*
Conversion of units*
Medieval weights and measures*
Ancient weights and measures*
English unit*
Imperial unit*
U.S. customary unitThe
ton meant the upper levels of London society in the
Regency period.
Ton comes from the French word meaning tone, as used in the phrase
bon ton - good manners and fashionable style.