What is torr?

A torr is a pressure unit equal to approximately 1/760 of an atmosphere. It is used in vacuum technology, low-pressure experimental physics, and blood pressure measurement in older clinical literature.

Real-world uses

Torr is used in vacuum technology, semiconductor manufacturing, and blood pressure measurement (mmHg ≈ torr). Vacuum chambers for electron beam welding operate at about 10⁻⁵ torr, and freeze-drying processes typically operate at 0.1–1 torr.

History

Named after Evangelista Torricelli, who invented the mercury barometer in 1644. The torr was defined to approximate the pressure exerted by 1 mm of mercury. It was formally standardized as 1/760 of a standard atmosphere.

Common mistakes

Assuming torr and mmHg are exactly the same—they are nearly identical but differ by about 0.000015%. For most purposes they are interchangeable, but ultra-precise vacuum work may require distinction.

What is hectopascal?

A hectopascal is a pressure unit equal to 100 pascals, numerically identical to the millibar. It is the standard unit for atmospheric pressure reports in modern meteorology and aviation weather data.

Real-world uses

Hectopascals are the modern meteorological standard for atmospheric pressure reporting, used by the World Meteorological Organization and most national weather services. Standard atmospheric pressure is 1013.25 hPa. Altimeter settings in aviation outside the US use hPa (QNH).

History

The hectopascal was promoted by the WMO beginning in 1982 as a replacement for the millibar, aligning meteorology with the SI system. Since 1 hPa equals exactly 1 mbar, the transition required no changes to numerical readings or instruments.

Common mistakes

Not realizing that 1 hPa = 1 mbar exactly. The switch from millibars to hectopascals changed only the name, not the numerical values. Also, some people confuse hPa with kPa; 1 kPa = 10 hPa.

When is this conversion used?

Converting between torr and hectopascal 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 torr = 1.33322368 hectopascal

1 hectopascal = 100 pascal

How to convert torr to hectopascal

To convert torr to hectopascal, multiply the value by 1.33322368.

To convert hectopascal back to torr, multiply by 0.75006168.

Measurement standards

The pascal (Pa) is the SI derived unit of pressure, defined as one newton per square metre. The World Meteorological Organization mandates the hectopascal (hPa) for atmospheric pressure reporting in aviation and weather services.

Did you know?

The pressure at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, nearly 11 km deep, exceeds 1,086 bar — over a thousand times atmospheric pressure. At this depth, water is compressed by about 5%, making it measurably denser than at the surface.

Quick reference: torr to hectopascal

torrhectopascal
0.10.13332237
0.50.66661184
11.33322368
22.66644737
56.66611842
1013.33223684
2533.33059211
5066.66118421
100133.32236842
250333.30592105
500666.61184211
1,0001,333.22368421

Common values

torrhectopascal
Car tyre1,650.13570195 torr2,200 hectopascal
Standard atmosphere760 torr1,013.25 hectopascal
Blood pressure (systolic)120.00986923 torr160 hectopascal
Deep-sea submersible825,067.85097429 torr1,100,000 hectopascal
Bicycle tyre4,650.38243276 torr6,200 hectopascal