kg/m³ to kN/m³ and kN/m³ to kg/m³ Density Converter

Density Converter

kg/m³, kN/m³, t/m³, g/cm³, lb/ft³, oz/in³ — with material presets

Enter density

2400 kg/m³
=
23.536 kN/m³

All units — click to copy

Material preset

Quick reference table

Material kg/m³ kN/m³ t/m³ lb/ft³

FAQ

How do I convert kg/m³ to kN/m³?
Multiply the value in kg/m³ by gravitational acceleration (g = 9.80665 m/s²) and divide by 1000. For example, 2400 kg/m³ × 9.80665 / 1000 ≈ 23.536 kN/m³. A common rounded shortcut uses g ≈ 10, which gives 1000 kg/m³ ≈ 10 kN/m³.
What is the difference between density and unit weight?
Density (mass per volume, kg/m³ or g/cm³) measures how much matter fits in a given space. Unit weight (kN/m³ or lb/ft³) measures the gravitational force per volume. Unit weight equals density multiplied by g. Structural engineers usually work in kN/m³, while physicists and chemists prefer kg/m³ or g/cm³.
How is 1 g/cm³ related to 1000 kg/m³?
1 g/cm³ equals exactly 1000 kg/m³, because 1 cm³ = 1 mL and 1 g = 0.001 kg. Water at 4°C has a density of 1.000 g/cm³ = 1000 kg/m³ = 1 t/m³ = 9.807 kN/m³.
What is the unit weight of concrete?
Normal-weight concrete is usually taken as 2400 kg/m³ (23.5 kN/m³ or 150 lb/ft³). Reinforced concrete is slightly heavier — about 2500 kg/m³ (24.5 kN/m³). Lightweight structural concrete ranges from 1600 to 1900 kg/m³.
How do I convert lb/ft³ to kg/m³?
1 lb/ft³ equals about 16.0185 kg/m³. So a material listed at 150 lb/ft³ has a density of approximately 2403 kg/m³. The reverse factor: 1 kg/m³ ≈ 0.06243 lb/ft³.
Why does my converter use g = 9.80665 instead of 9.81?
9.80665 m/s² is the internationally adopted standard value of gravity (CGPM 1901). Using 9.81 introduces a small rounding error (<0.04%). For most engineering calculations both values are acceptable, but international standards documents and ISO references use 9.80665.
Copied!

About this density converter

This converter switches density and unit weight between seven units: kg/m³, t/m³, g/cm³, g/mL, kN/m³, lb/ft³, and oz/in³. Pick a from-unit and a to-unit, type any value, and read every other unit at the same time. The kg/m³ ↔ kN/m³ conversion uses the standard gravity g = 9.80665 m/s², so 1000 kg/m³ ≈ 9.807 kN/m³.

A built-in material database covers more than 50 entries — water, concretes, sand, gravel, soils, brick, asphalt, structural metals, woods, insulation, and several liquids — so you can pick a material and instantly see its density in every unit. The reference table at the bottom shows the most common construction materials in kg/m³, kN/m³, t/m³, and lb/ft³ for quick comparison.

Example: normal-weight concrete at 2400 kg/m³ corresponds to about 23.54 kN/m³, 2.4 t/m³, and 149.83 lb/ft³.