Specific quantity

In the natural sciences, including physiology and engineering, the qualifier specific or massic typically indicates an intensive quantity obtained by dividing an extensive quantity of interest by mass.[1][2] For example, specific leaf area is leaf area divided by leaf mass. Derived SI units involve reciprocal kilogram (kg−1), e.g., square metre per kilogram (m2⋅kg−1); the expression "per unit mass" is also often used.

In some fields, like acoustics, "specific" can mean division by a quantity other than mass.[1]

Named and unnamed specific quantities are given for the terms below.

List

Mass-specific quantities

Per unit of mass (short form of mass-specific):

Examples of other uses

Per unit of other types.

  • Brake-specific fuel consumption, fuel consumption per unit of braking power
  • Thrust-specific fuel consumption, fuel consumption per unit of thrust
  • Specific acid catalysis, in which the reaction rate is proportional to the concentration of the protonated solvent molecules
  • Specific acoustic impedance, ratio of sound pressure to particle speed at a single frequency
  • Specific capacity of a water well, quantity of water produced per (length) unit of drawdown
  • Specific detectivity of a photodetector
  • Specific gas constant, per molar mass
  • Specific gravity, also called relative density, is a dimensionless quantity defined as the ratio of the density (mass divided by volume) of a substance to the density of a given reference material
  • Specific humidity, mass of water vapour per unit mass dry air
  • Specific impulse, impulse (momentum change) per unit of propellant (either per unit of propellant mass, or per unit of propellant by Earth-weight)
  • Specific modulus, elastic modulus per mass density
  • Specific speed, unitless figure of merit used to classify pump impellers (pump-specific) and turbines (turbine-specific). Ratio of performance against reference pump that needs one unit of speed to pump one unit volume per one unit hydraulic head pressure. For a turbine, it is performance measured against a reference turbine that develops one unit of power per one unit speed per one unit of hydraulic head.
  • Specific storage, specific yield, and specific capacity, quantify the capacity of an aquifer to release groundwater from storage per unit decline in hydraulic head pressure
  • Specific strength, material strength (pressure required at failure) per unit material density
  • Specific surface area, per unit of mass, volume, or cross-sectional area
  • Specific thrust, thrust per unit mass of air intake rate

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "ISO 80000-1: Quantities and units – Part 1: General". iso.org. Retrieved 2023-10-16.
  2. ^ Cohen, E. R.; et al. (2007). IUPAC Green Book (PDF) (3rd ed.). Cambridge: IUPAC and RSC Publishing. pp. 6 (20 of 250 in PDF file). ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.