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Convert Watt-hours to Joules

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Science

Energy Converter
10 sig. figures
Formula1 Wh × 3600 = 3600 J

About Energy Conversions

Energy conversions bridge multiple scientific and practical domains. The joule (SI unit) connects to calories in nutrition (1 food calorie = 4,184 joules), kilowatt-hours in electricity billing, British thermal units in HVAC engineering, and electron volts in particle physics. Understanding these relationships is crucial: your daily food intake of about 2,000 calories equals roughly 8.4 megajoules, and a typical household using 900 kWh per month consumes about 3.24 gigajoules. Our converter supports all common energy units with exact conversion factors.

Quick Conversions

Watt-hoursJoules
1 Wh3600 J
2 Wh7200 J
5 Wh18000 J
10 Wh36000 J
25 Wh90000 J
50 Wh180000 J
100 Wh360000 J
250 Wh900000 J
500 Wh1800000 J
1000 Wh3600000 J
Unit NameSymbolPer 1 Watt-hour
British Thermal UnitBTU3.41214
Caloriecal860.421
Electron VolteV2.24694 × 10²²
JouleJ3600
Kilocaloriekcal0.860421
KilojoulekJ3.6
Kilowatt-hourkWh0.001
MegajouleMJ0.0036
Watt-hourWh1

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Watt-hours to Joules?

To convert Watt-hours to Joules, use the conversion where 1 Watt-hour (Wh) = 3600 Joules (J). For example, 1 Watt-hour = 3600 Joules.

What are common Watt-hour to Joule conversions?

Here are common conversions: 1 Watt-hours = 3600 Joules, 5 Watt-hours = 18000 Joules, 10 Watt-hours = 36000 Joules, 25 Watt-hours = 90000 Joules, 50 Watt-hours = 180000 Joules, 100 Watt-hours = 360000 Joules.

When would I need to convert Watt-hours to Joules?

Energy conversions are needed when comparing electricity bills across regions using different units, in engineering calculations involving mechanical and thermal energy, for understanding nutritional energy (calories vs joules), and in renewable energy system planning.

How precise are the conversions?

All conversions use exact factors verified against NIST and ISO standards with up to 10 significant figures of precision. Results are calculated using IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, which provides approximately 15-17 significant digits. For temperature and other non-linear conversions, exact formulas are used rather than approximations.