Convert Pascal to Millimeter of Mercury (Pa → mmHg)
The pascal is the base SI pressure unit, used in scientific publications and modern engineering specifications.
Pascal to Millimeter of Mercury Conversion Table
10 common values| Pascal | Millimeter of Mercury |
|---|---|
| 1 Pa | 0.007501 mmHg |
| 5 Pa | 0.037503 mmHg |
| 10 Pa | 0.075006 mmHg |
| 25 Pa | 0.187515 mmHg |
| 50 Pa | 0.375031 mmHg |
| 100 Pa | 0.750062 mmHg |
| 200 Pa | 1.500123 mmHg |
| 500 Pa | 3.750308 mmHg |
| 1,000 Pa | 7.500616 mmHg |
| 5,000 Pa | 37.503079 mmHg |
How to Convert Pascal to Millimeter of Mercury Manually
Step by StepConverting pascals to millimeters of mercury is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in pascalsStart with the number of pascals (Pa) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.007501The conversion factor from Pa to mmHg is 0.007501. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in millimeters of mercuryThe result is your value in millimeters of mercury (mmHg).
Formula
Multiply the value in pascals by 0.007501. For the reverse direction, multiply by 133.32239.
mmHg = Pa × 0.007501Pa = mmHg × 133.32239Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 Pa = 1 N/m².
- 1 kPa = 1000 Pa; 1 MPa = 1,000,000 Pa; 1 bar = 100,000 Pa.
- Use kPa, MPa or bar for practical engineering work.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing Pa with psi — 1 psi = 6895 Pa.
- Using Pa for tyre pressures — 220,000 Pa unwieldy; use 2.2 bar.
- Mixing Pa absolute and Pa gauge without specification.
About Pascal and Millimeter of Mercury
What is the Pascal?
The pascal is the SI unit of pressure, equal to 1 newton per square meter (1 N/m²). Named after French mathematician and physicist Blaise Pascal (1623–1662), it became the SI standard in 1971. One pascal is a very small pressure: atmospheric pressure at sea level is about 101,325 Pa, the human breath exerts roughly 100 Pa above ambient, and tire pressure is in the hundreds of thousands of pascals. Because the pascal is small, the kilopascal (1 kPa = 1,000 Pa), megapascal (1 MPa = 10⁶ Pa), and gigapascal (1 GPa = 10⁹ Pa) are more commonly used in practice. Modern weather forecasts use hectopascals (1 hPa = 100 Pa = 1 millibar). The pascal relates to the bar (1 bar = 100,000 Pa), the psi (1 psi ≈ 6,895 Pa), the atmosphere (1 atm = 101,325 Pa), and mmHg (1 mmHg ≈ 133.3 Pa). Scientific and engineering publications use the pascal universally.
- Scientific and engineering calculations
- Ventilation and HVAC airflow pressures
- Acoustic pressure (sound) measurements
Atmospheric pressure: 101,325 Pa. Conversation level: 0.001 Pa sound pressure. Truck tyre: 900,000 Pa.
What is the Millimeter of Mercury?
The millimeter of mercury equals approximately 133.322 pascals and is the universal medical unit for blood pressure measurements worldwide. Normal blood pressure is around 120/80 mmHg (systolic/diastolic). The unit's origin is the manometer: a column of mercury rises 1 mm for every 133 Pa of pressure difference. Mercury barometers historically measured atmospheric pressure (760 mmHg = 1 atm at sea level). Beyond medicine, mmHg appears in vacuum-system specifications, certain laboratory contexts, and altimeter settings (in inHg in the US, in mmHg or hPa elsewhere). The mmHg relates to the torr (1 mmHg ≈ 1.0000003 torr — essentially identical), the pascal (1 mmHg ≈ 133.3 Pa), the atmosphere (760 mmHg = 1 atm), and inches of mercury (1 inHg = 25.4 mmHg). The unit's persistence in medicine reflects historical inertia and the precision of mercury manometers.
- Blood pressure measurement globally
- Vacuum-system specifications
- Historical scientific texts
Normal blood pressure: 120/80 mmHg. Atmospheric: 760 mmHg. Good vacuum: <1 mmHg.