SI Pressure Units: Pascal (Pa) and Its Prefixes
The SI unit for pressure is the pascal (Pa). SI pressure values often look “too small” in Pa, so engineers typically use kPa ಅಥವಾ MPa, while meteorology commonly uses hPa.
What exactly is 1 pascal?
From the SI derived-unit relationships, pascal is expressed in base units as:
- N = kg·m·s⁻² (newton)
- Pa = kg·m⁻¹·s⁻² (pascal)
From those two lines, you can directly derive the familiar engineering identity:
1 Pa = 1 N/m² (one newton of force acting on one square meter).
Why Pa is often replaced by kPa or MPa
1 Pa is small. That’s why SI prefixes matter:
Common SI multiples used in engineering
- 1 kPa = 10³ Pa
- 1 MPa = 10⁶ Pa
- 1 GPa = 10⁹ Pa
Meteorology special case: hPa
Meteorology commonly uses hectopascal:
- 1 hPa = 100 Pa
- 1 hPa = 1 mbar
Practical SI scaling examples
- Typical atmospheric pressure: ~101.325 kPa (sea-level reference)
- Pneumatics: 600 kPa is a common scale (≈ 6 bar)
- Hydraulics: 10–35 MPa is a common working range
Converting non-SI to SI (recommended for datasheets)
- bar → Pa: multiply by 100,000
- psi → Pa: multiply by 6,894.757
- mmHg → Pa: multiply by 133.3224
- atm → Pa: multiply by 101,325
Engineering clarity
For global buyers, a clean pattern is:
- Primary (SI): kPa / MPa
- Secondary (market): bar / psi in parentheses
- Always state reference if relevant: (abs) / (g) / (Δp)
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FAQ (SI Pressure Units)
Is Pa a base unit?
No, it’s an SI derived unit.
Why does weather use hPa instead of kPa?
Because atmospheric pressure sits near ~1000 hPa, and 1 hPa = 1 mbar historically.
Is 1 bar exactly 100 kPa?
Yes: 1 bar = 100 kPa = 10⁵ Pa.
Is mmHg an SI unit?
No. It’s still common in medical/manometer contexts and convertible to Pa.
What’s better for hydraulics: bar or MPa?
Both work, but MPa is SI-friendly and maps neatly to material/mechanical specs.
What’s the safest “universal” SI unit to publish?
Usually kPa (HVAC/IAQ) or MPa (industrial/hydraulics), depending on magnitude.







