How do you convert joules to kilowatt-hours (kWh)?
Use this formula:
That’s because 1 kWh = 3.6 million joules (3.6 × 10⁶ J).
Why is 1 kWh equal to 3,600,000 joules?
A watt is 1 joule per second. A kilowatt is 1,000 watts. One hour has 3,600 seconds.
So:
- 1 kWh = 1,000 J/s × 3,600 s = 3,600,000 J
What is the conversion factor from joules to kWh?
The conversion factor is:
- 1 J = 2.77777778 × 10⁻⁷ kWh
Many people find it easier to divide by 3,600,000 instead of using the factor.
What is the formula to convert kWh to joules?
Use the reverse conversion:
This is helpful for physics work and energy totals in joules.
How many kilowatt-hours are in 1 joule?
1 joule is a very small amount of energy:
- 1 J = 0.000000277777778 kWh
- 1 J = 2.77777778 × 10⁻⁷ kWh
How many joules are in 1 kilowatt-hour?
1 kilowatt-hour equals:
This is a common match-up between electricity use (kWh) and science units (J).
How do you convert joules to kWh by hand without a calculator?
You can do it in two short steps:
- Divide joules by 3.6 to get watt-hours (Wh) in millions.
- Divide by 1,000 to turn Wh into kWh.
Or use the direct method:
What’s an easy example of converting joules to kWh?
Example: Convert 7,200,000 J to kWh.
- kWh = 7,200,000 ÷ 3,600,000 = 2 kWh
How do you convert joules per second to kilowatt-hours?
Joules per second is watts (W). To get kWh, you need time.
- Convert J/s to kW: kW = (J/s) ÷ 1,000
- Multiply by hours: kWh = kW × hours
Example: 500 J/s for 2 hours
- kW = 500 ÷ 1,000 = 0.5 kW
- kWh = 0.5 × 2 = 1 kWh
Is kWh a unit of power or energy?
kWh is a unit of energy, not power.
- kW (kilowatt) measures power (rate of energy use).
- kWh (kilowatt-hour) measures energy used over time.
When should you use joules instead of kilowatt-hours?
Use joules (J) when working with physics formulas, motion, heat, and force. Use kilowatt-hours (kWh) for electrical energy use, billing, and appliance energy totals.
Why do joules and kilowatt-hours measure the same thing?
Both measure energy. They just fit different uses:
- Joules fit science and math work.
- kWh fits everyday electricity use and larger energy totals.
Does temperature or voltage change the joules to kWh conversion?
No. The conversion is fixed because both units measure energy. Temperature, voltage, and other values can change the energy you have, but they don’t change how joules convert to kWh.
How do you convert large joule values to kWh without rounding errors?
Use the exact relationship:
Keep extra decimal places until the final step. Then round once, based on your need (billing, lab work, or reports).