Analyze temperature effects quickly with precise density models. Compare presets, custom values, and plotted trends. Export clean results for reports, study, and review tasks.
ρ(T) = ρref / [1 + β(T - Tref)]
ρ = PM / RT
The thermal model is practical for many liquids and solids over moderate ranges. The gas model is appropriate when gas behavior is close to ideal and pressure stays constant.
These examples are generated with the same equations used by the calculator. Water values remain approximations because real water behavior is not perfectly linear.
| Material | Model | Temperature (°C) | Density (kg/m³) | Density (g/cm³) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water | Thermal | 0 | 1,002.410123 | 1.002410 |
| Water | Thermal | 20 | 998.200000 | 0.998200 |
| Water | Thermal | 60 | 989.884966 | 0.989885 |
| Ethanol | Thermal | 20 | 789.000000 | 0.789000 |
| Air | Gas | 0 | 1.292498 | 0.001292 |
| Air | Gas | 50 | 1.092513 | 0.001093 |
It estimates density at a chosen temperature. You can work with liquids or solids using thermal expansion, or gases using the ideal gas relation at fixed pressure.
Most materials expand when heated. Mass stays the same, but volume increases, so density decreases. Cooling usually does the reverse and raises density.
No. Water behaves nonlinearly, especially near 4°C. This page uses a linear approximation, which is useful for quick estimates over limited temperature ranges.
Use it for gases when pressure is known and ideal behavior is acceptable. It works well for many engineering and classroom problems away from condensation and extreme pressures.
β is the volumetric expansion coefficient. It shows how strongly a material’s volume changes with temperature. Larger β values usually create larger density changes.
Density is usually known at a standard temperature, not every temperature. The calculator uses that reference point to estimate density at your target condition.
The CSV and PDF exports save the current calculated dataset shown in the graph table, along with a short summary of the active result.
Density is shown in kg/m³ and g/cm³. Gas inputs also support Pa, kPa, MPa, bar, and atm for convenient pressure entry.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.