What is ton of refrigeration?

A ton of refrigeration is a power unit measuring the heat removal capacity of cooling systems, equal to 12,000 BTU per hour. It is the standard capacity rating for commercial and industrial air conditioning units in the United States.

Real-world uses

The ton of refrigeration (TR) is used for rating commercial and industrial cooling systems, chillers, and large-scale HVAC equipment. A small commercial building might need a 20–100 TR chiller. Data centres measure cooling capacity in TR. One TR = 12,000 BTU/h = approximately 3.517 kW.

History

The ton of refrigeration originated in the 19th century ice trade, when mechanical refrigeration systems were judged by their ability to replace ice delivery. One ton was defined as the cooling equivalent of melting one ton of ice per day. As mechanical refrigeration displaced natural ice by the early 20th century, TR became a standard industrial cooling unit.

Common mistakes

Confusing refrigeration tons with metric tons of mass—they are completely unrelated. Also, the "ton" in TR originated from the cooling power needed to melt one short ton (2,000 lb) of ice in 24 hours, not from any mass being cooled.

What is gigawatt?

A gigawatt is a unit of power equal to one billion watts. It is used to express the total power output of national electricity grids, large power stations, and national energy policy targets.

Real-world uses

Gigawatts describe the generating capacity of entire national grids, large hydroelectric dams (Three Gorges Dam: ~22.5 GW), and the total installed solar or wind capacity of countries. Global electricity demand is often expressed in terawatts (1,000 GW). Energy policy discussions use GW to compare national ambitions.

History

Gigawatts entered common use in discussions of national and continental electricity systems during the 20th century. As installed generation capacity in large countries reached the gigawatt scale, this unit became standard for energy policy, grid planning, and international energy statistics.

Common mistakes

Confusing GW (power) with GWh (energy). A 22 GW dam running at full capacity for one hour generates 22 GWh of energy. Also, the pop-culture reference "1.21 gigawatts" from Back to the Future is frequently cited but would equal about 1,210 MW—a large power plant.

When is this conversion used?

Converting between ton of refrigeration and gigawatt is common when working across metric and imperial systems, such as international trade, travel between countries with different measurement standards, or following instructions from a different region.

Worked examples

1 ton of refrigeration = 0.00000352 gigawatt

1 gigawatt = 1.000000e+09 watt

How to convert ton of refrigeration to gigawatt

To convert ton of refrigeration to gigawatt, multiply the value by 0.00000352.

To convert gigawatt back to ton of refrigeration, multiply by 284,345.13626109.

Measurement standards

The watt is the SI derived unit of power, defined as one joule per second (kg·m²/s³). Horsepower remains in widespread informal use, particularly in the automotive industry, but has no single universal definition across regions.

Did you know?

The human body at rest produces about 80 watts of power — roughly enough to keep an incandescent light bulb glowing. During intense exercise, a trained cyclist can sustain over 400 watts, and elite sprinters briefly exceed 2,000 watts.

Quick reference: ton of refrigeration to gigawatt

ton of refrigerationgigawatt
0.13.516853e-07
0.50.00000176
10.00000352
20.00000703
50.00001758
100.00003517
250.00008792
500.00017584
1000.00035169
2500.00087921
5000.00175843
1,0000.00351685

Common values

ton of refrigerationgigawatt
LED light bulb0.00284345 ton of refrigeration1.000000e-08 gigawatt
Desktop computer0.08530354 ton of refrigeration3.000000e-07 gigawatt
Microwave oven0.28434514 ton of refrigeration0.000001 gigawatt
Small car engine21.32588522 ton of refrigeration0.000075 gigawatt
Wind turbine (large)853.03540878 ton of refrigeration0.003 gigawatt