Instant · Precise · Universal
47 units available
6 categories total
To liters: multiply by 10⁹. To cubic meters: multiply by 10⁶. To megalliters: multiply by 1,000.
1 GL = 10⁹ L = 10⁶ m³ = 1,000 ML. One teraliter = 1,000 GL.
For example, 1 Gigaliter (GL) = 1.000000e+18 Nanoliter (nL).
| Gigaliter (GL) | Nanoliter (nL) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 1.000000e+17 |
| 0.5 | 5.000000e+17 |
| 1 | 1.000000e+18 |
| 2 | 2.000000e+18 |
| 5 | 5.000000e+18 |
| 10 | 1.000000e+19 |
| 25 | 2.500000e+19 |
| 50 | 5.000000e+19 |
| 100 | 1.000000e+20 |
| 500 | 5.000000e+20 |
| 1000 | 1.000000e+21 |
The gigaliter is a unit of volume equal to one billion liters (10⁹ L), or one million cubic meters.
1 GL = 10⁹ L = 10⁶ m³ = 1,000 ML. One teraliter = 1,000 GL.
To liters: multiply by 10⁹. To cubic meters: multiply by 10⁶. To megalliters: multiply by 1,000.
Reporting dam capacities (e.g., Hoover Dam stores ~35 GL), regional water budgets, and flood volumes.
Sydney Harbour holds approximately 500 GL of water. Lake Mead (behind Hoover Dam) has a capacity of about 35,200 GL.
Underestimating the scale — 1 GL = one billion liters = one million cubic meters. It is an enormous volume.
Think 'giga = billion.' 1 GL would fill 400 Olympic pools. It's the unit for dams and large reservoirs.
The nanoliter is a unit of volume equal to 10⁻⁹ liters, or one billionth of a liter.
1 nL = 10⁻⁹ L = 10⁻⁶ mL = 1,000 pL = 10⁻³ µL. One microliter = 1,000 nL.
To microliters: divide by 1,000. To picoliters: multiply by 1,000. To liters: multiply by 10⁻⁹.
Micro-dosing drug compounds, DNA micro-array printing, micro-fluidic diagnostic chips, and nano-dispensing robots.
Some advanced liquid handlers can dispense volumes as small as 2.5 nL with high accuracy, enabling drug discovery at microscale.
Confusing nL with mL — there are one million nL in a single mL. Always double-check prefix meanings.
Nanoliter = one millionth of a mL. Think of it as a tiny drop invisible to the eye — about the volume of a cube 100 µm on each side.



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