Converter group
Fluids Converters
Surface Tension Converter
Result
... Erg per square millimeter = ... Millinewton per meter
Find the units to convert
Erg per square millimeter to Millinewton per meter Converter
Use this page to convert erg per square millimeter values into millinewton per meter, with background details, formulas, a worked example, and a quick conversion table.
Conversion formula
1 erg/mm^2 = 100 mN/m
1 mN/m = 0.01 erg/mm^2
Example: 0.072 erg/mm^2 = 7.2 mN/m
Jump to another pair
Erg per square millimeter
One erg per square millimeter is equal to 0.1 newtons per meter.
History: This unit scales the CGS erg over a smaller area.
Current use: Used mainly for specialized or legacy surface energy conversions.
Also written as erg/mm^2.
Millinewton per meter
One millinewton per meter is equal to 0.001 newtons per meter.
History: Millinewtons per meter keep common liquid surface tension values readable.
Current use: Used for water, oils, surfactants, coatings, and laboratory tensiometer readings.
Also written as mN/m.
Erg per square millimeter to Millinewton per meter table
| Erg per square millimeter [erg/mm^2] | Millinewton per meter [mN/m] |
|---|---|
| 0.01 erg/mm^2 | 1 mN/m |
| 0.1 erg/mm^2 | 10 mN/m |
| 1 erg/mm^2 | 100 mN/m |
| 2 erg/mm^2 | 200 mN/m |
| 5 erg/mm^2 | 500 mN/m |
| 10 erg/mm^2 | 1,000 mN/m |
| 20 erg/mm^2 | 2,000 mN/m |
| 50 erg/mm^2 | 5,000 mN/m |
| 100 erg/mm^2 | 10,000 mN/m |
Frequently asked questions
How many Millinewton per meter (mN/m) are in one Erg per square millimeter (erg/mm^2)?
One Erg per square millimeter equals 100 Millinewton per meter.
How do you convert Erg per square millimeter to Millinewton per meter?
Multiply the Erg per square millimeter value by 100 to get the result in Millinewton per meter.
How do you convert Millinewton per meter back to Erg per square millimeter?
Multiply the Millinewton per meter value by 0.01 to get back to Erg per square millimeter.
What is 0.072 Erg per square millimeter in Millinewton per meter?
0.072 Erg per square millimeter equals 7.2 Millinewton per meter.
