Calorie

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A calorie (cal) is a unit of thermal energy, equivalent to about 4.185 J.

By definition, one calorie is the energy needed to increase the temperature of 1 g of water by 1 °C at 15 °C under normal atmospheric pressure (76 cmHg). In nutrition, it is used to quantify the energy of food and the defining quantity of water is 1 kilogram, making the "food calorie" 1000 times as large as the other calorie. Hence, 1 calorie (nutrition) = 1 kcal = 1000 cal, and it is also called the large calorie.

The calorie is not an SI unit where the joule is the only unit of energy. The kilocalorie is frequently used in chemistry because it is a convenient measure of molar free energy: for example, 1.4 kcal/mol engenders a change in equilibrium by a factor of 10.

Contents

Nutrition

Nutritionists measure the energy content of food today in both "calories" (large calories) or "kilojoules" (kJ), a usage widely known in the general population and (confusingly) often referred to as a "kilocalorie" as though small calories were being used. Sporadic attempts have been made, particularly in the United States, to write the kilogram calorie capitalized as Calorie and abbreviated as Cal, to alleviate the confusion with the chemical definition of the term "calorie" as a small calorie. This alternate notation has no legal standing, and is not endorsed by any standards body.

The amount of food energy in a particular food is measured by completely burning the food in a bomb calorimeter, a method known as direct calorimetry [1]. For example, dietary fat has about 9 kcal/g, while proteins and carbohydrates have about 4 kcal/g. Recommended daily energy intake values for average adults are 2500 kcal/d (10 MJ/d) for men and 2000 kcal/d (8 MJ/d) for women.

The "calorie" has become a common household term, because dietitians recommend in cases of obesity to reduce body weight by increasing exercise (energy expenditure) and reducing energy intake.

Versions

Three definitions of the calorie are today recognized internationally:

Name Symbol Conversion factor Remarks
15 °C calorie cal15 1 cal15 = 4.1855 J 1 cal15 is the amount of heat (energy) required to warm 1 g of air-free water from 14.5 °C to 15.5 °C at a constant pressure of 101.325 kPa (1 atm). The conversion factor was published by the CIPM in 1950 as the most accurate value that could be determined by experiment at the time. It has an uncertainly of 0.0005 J.
I.T. calorie calIT 1 calIT = 4.1868 J The International Table calorie was adopted by the Fifth International Conference on Properties of Steam (London, July 1956), with 1 McalIT = 1.163 kWh (exactly).
thermochemical calorie calth 1 calth = 4.184 J

Other historic definitions include

  • the 4 °C calorie, and
  • the mean 0 °C to 100 °C calorie.

Of all these, what is most commonly meant by calorie in contemporary English text is the 15 °C calorie. The nutritional kilocalorie or Calorie equals 1000 cal15.

Since these many definitions are a source of confusion and error, all calories are now deprecated. The International System of Units (SI) unit for heat (and for all other forms of energy) is the joule (J), while the (obsolete) CGS system used the erg.

Trivia

  • Unicode has a symbol for "cal": (㎈), but this is just a legacy code to accommodate old code pages in certain Asian languages, and it is not recommended for use in any language today.
  • The conventional value chosen to define a ton of TNT is equal to 1 billion thermochemical calories: 1 tTNT ≡ 1×109 calth. The actual energy liberated from the explosion is somewhat more; see the megaton entry.

See also

External links

References



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