Convert Cubic Millimeter (mm³) to Cup (US) (cup (US)) instantly.
Cubic Millimeter to Cup (US) conversion
1 Cubic Millimeter (mm³) = 0.0000042267535 Cup (US) (cup (US)). To convert Cubic Millimeter to Cup (US), multiply the value by 0.0000042267535.
| Cubic Millimeter (mm³) | Cup (US) (cup (US)) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.0000042267535 |
| 2 | 0.000008453507 |
| 5 | 0.000021133767 |
| 10 | 0.000042267535 |
| 25 | 0.00010566884 |
| 50 | 0.00021133767 |
| 100 | 0.00042267535 |
| 1000 | 0.0042267535 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Cup (US) are in one Cubic Millimeter?
One Cubic Millimeter (mm³) equals 0.0000042267535 Cup (US) (cup (US)).
How do I convert Cubic Millimeter to Cup (US)?
To convert Cubic Millimeter to Cup (US), multiply the value by 0.0000042267535.
What is 10 Cubic Millimeter in Cup (US)?
10 Cubic Millimeter = 0.000042267535 Cup (US).
About these units
Cubic Millimeter (mm³)
A cubic millimeter is the volume of a cube exactly 1 millimeter on each side, equal to 10⁻⁹ cubic meters or 0.001 milliliters. It is a very small volume, frequently used in medical imaging, microfluidics, materials science, and cell biology. In anatomy and radiology, tissue or tumor volumes are often quantified in cubic millimeters to express small but clinically significant structures. In engineering, mm³ can describe the displacement of precision components or the volume of micro-machined cavities. Microfluidic research—where entire laboratories are miniaturized onto chips—depends heavily on mm³ and smaller units, as channels and chambers hold extremely tiny volumes. Its precision scale makes it invaluable for applications requiring meticulous material control.
Cup (US) (cup (US))
A US cup equals 8 fluid ounces, or approximately 236.588 mL. It is indispensable in American cooking, baking, and beverage measurement. Although not an SI unit, the cup remains deeply entrenched in recipes, cookbooks, and kitchen culture. Its intuitive size makes it ideal for measuring flour, sugar, liquids, and many everyday ingredients. American cups differ from metric and UK cups, leading to variation across international recipes, but within the US culinary tradition, the cup is a central volumetric tool.