Convert Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) to Femtoliter (fL) instantly.
Teaspoon (UK) to Femtoliter conversion
1 Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) = 5919388000000 Femtoliter (fL). To convert Teaspoon (UK) to Femtoliter, multiply the value by 5919388000000.
| Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) | Femtoliter (fL) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 5919388000000 |
| 2 | 11838776000000 |
| 5 | 29596940000000 |
| 10 | 59193880000000 |
| 25 | 147984700000000 |
| 50 | 295969400000000 |
| 100 | 591938800000000 |
| 1000 | 5919388000000000 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Femtoliter are in one Teaspoon (UK)?
One Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK)) equals 5919388000000 Femtoliter (fL).
How do I convert Teaspoon (UK) to Femtoliter?
To convert Teaspoon (UK) to Femtoliter, multiply the value by 5919388000000.
What is 10 Teaspoon (UK) in Femtoliter?
10 Teaspoon (UK) = 59193880000000 Femtoliter.
About these units
Teaspoon (UK) (tsp (UK))
The UK teaspoon is defined as 5 milliliters, a value adopted in modern culinary and medical standards. Historically, however, its size varied considerably, often ranging from 4 to 6 mL depending on household spoons, region, or era. The modern 5 mL standardization brought consistency to recipes, pharmaceutical dosing instructions, and food labeling. Because teaspoons were once everyday household items rather than calibrated instruments, the move toward fixed metric equivalents significantly improved recipe reliability and medical accuracy. Despite the shift to SI units, the teaspoon endures as a culturally intuitive volume measure used in cooking and oral medication dosing, tying contemporary practice to long-standing domestic traditions.
Femtoliter (fL)
A femtoliter represents 10⁻¹⁵ liters and is commonly used in hematology, particularly in describing red blood cell size. A typical red blood cell has a volume of roughly 80–100 fL, making this unit ideal for medical diagnostics. Beyond medicine, femtoliters are used in microfluidics and nanoparticle research, where reaction chambers or droplets often hold only a few dozen femtoliters of liquid. The femtoliter exemplifies how modern science pushes measurement into realms dominated by statistical motion, molecular interactions, and quantum effects—scales that once seemed impossible to quantify.