How to Convert Coulombs to Microcoulombs
To convert an electric charge measurement from coulombs to microcoulombs, multiply the charge value by the conversion factor. Since one coulomb is equal to 1,000,000 microcoulombs, you can use this formula:
The charge in microcoulombs is equal to the coulombs multiplied by 1,000,000.
Using the formula: microcoulombs = coulombs × 1,000,000
microcoulombs = 5 C × 1,000,000 = 5.0000E+6 μC
Therefore, 5 coulombs equals 5.0000E+6 microcoulombs.
How Many Microcoulombs Are in a Coulomb?
There are 1,000,000 microcoulombs in one coulomb.
What Is a Coulomb?
The coulomb (symbol: C) is the SI derived unit of electric charge. It is named after the French physicist Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, who formulated Coulomb's law describing the electrostatic force between charged particles. One coulomb is defined as the amount of electric charge transported by a constant current of one ampere in one second. In terms of fundamental constants, since the 2019 redefinition of SI base units, the coulomb is defined by taking the elementary charge e to be exactly 1.602176634 × 10−19 coulombs. A single coulomb represents a very large amount of charge in everyday terms. A typical lightning bolt transfers about 5 coulombs of charge, and the charge stored in a standard AA battery is roughly 5,000 coulombs (about 1.4 ampere-hours). A static electricity shock might involve only a few microcoulombs. The coulomb is related to other SI units as: 1 C = 1 A·s (ampere-second). It can also be expressed as: 1 C = 1 F·V (farad-volt) or 1 C = 1 J/V (joule per volt).
One coulomb is equal to:
- 1,000 millicoulombs (mC)
- 1,000,000 microcoulombs (μC)
- 1,000,000,000 nanocoulombs (nC)
- 1,000,000,000,000 picocoulombs (pC)
- 0.1 abcoulombs (abC)
- ≈ 2,997,920,000 statcoulombs (stC)
- ≈ 6.2415 × 1018 electron charges (e)
- ≈ 0.000278 ampere-hours (Ah)
- ≈ 0.2778 milliampere-hours (mAh)
What Is a Microcoulomb?
The microcoulomb (symbol: μC) is a unit of electric charge equal to one millionth (10−6) of a coulomb. The prefix "micro" denotes a factor of 10−6. Microcoulombs are commonly used in electrostatics, where the charges involved in everyday static electricity phenomena are typically in this range. For instance, the charge produced by rubbing a balloon on hair is on the order of a few microcoulombs. Static electricity shocks can involve charges of 1–10 μC. In medical applications, microcoulombs are used to measure the charge delivered by defibrillators, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) devices, and other electrotherapy equipment. The charge per pulse from these devices is often specified in microcoulombs. Microcoulombs are also relevant in piezoelectric sensor measurements, where mechanical stress on certain crystals produces small electric charges that are conveniently expressed in microcoulombs.
One microcoulomb is equal to:
- 0.000001 coulombs (C)
- 0.001 millicoulombs (mC)
- 1,000 nanocoulombs (nC)
- 1,000,000 picocoulombs (pC)
- 10−7 abcoulombs (abC)
- ≈ 2,997.92 statcoulombs (stC)
- ≈ 6.2415 × 1012 electron charges (e)
- ≈ 2.778 × 10−10 ampere-hours (Ah)
- ≈ 2.778 × 10−7 milliampere-hours (mAh)
Understanding Electric Charge
Electric charge is a fundamental physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed in an electromagnetic field. Charge comes in two types: positive and negative. Like charges repel each other, while opposite charges attract, as described by Coulomb's law.
The SI unit of electric charge is the coulomb (C), defined as the charge transported by a constant current of one ampere in one second. In the microscopic world, charge is quantized — it always appears in integer multiples of the elementary charge e ≈ 1.602 × 10−19 C, which is the magnitude of charge carried by a single electron or proton.
Electric charge is conserved in all physical processes: the total charge in an isolated system never changes. This conservation law is one of the most fundamental principles in physics and is closely related to the gauge symmetry of electromagnetism.
Measurement Systems
Three main unit systems are used for electric charge:
- SI (International System): Uses the coulomb and its metric prefixes (mC, μC, nC, pC). This is the modern standard used worldwide in science and engineering.
- CGS-ESU (Electrostatic): Uses the statcoulomb (or franklin), defined through Coulomb's law with the proportionality constant set to 1. Common in theoretical physics.
- CGS-EMU (Electromagnetic): Uses the abcoulomb, where 1 abC = 10 C. Historically used in electromagnetic theory.
Practical Charge Units
In addition to the fundamental units, two practical units are widely used:
- Ampere-hour (Ah): Equal to 3,600 C. Used for battery capacity ratings of large batteries (car batteries, industrial cells).
- Milliampere-hour (mAh): Equal to 3.6 C. The standard unit for consumer electronics battery capacity (smartphones, tablets, wireless devices).
- Electron charge (e): The fundamental quantum of charge, ≈ 1.602 × 10−19 C. Used in atomic and particle physics.
Electric Charge in Everyday Life
- A typical lightning bolt transfers about 5 coulombs of charge
- A static electricity shock involves about 1–10 microcoulombs
- A smartphone battery (3,000 mAh) stores about 10,800 coulombs
- A car battery (60 Ah) stores about 216,000 coulombs
- A single electron carries 1.602 × 10−19 coulombs
Tips for Electric Charge Conversions
- For SI prefix conversions (C, mC, μC, nC, pC), each step is a factor of 1,000. Moving from a larger prefix to a smaller one means multiplying by 1,000 for each step.
- To convert between coulombs and ampere-hours, remember: 1 Ah = 3,600 C. Divide coulombs by 3,600 to get ampere-hours.
- Battery capacity in mAh can be converted to coulombs by multiplying by 3.6. For example, a 5,000 mAh battery stores 18,000 coulombs.
- The electron charge (e) involves extremely large or small numbers. When converting to/from electron charges, scientific notation is essential.
- CGS units (statcoulombs, abcoulombs) are rarely used in modern practice. If you encounter them in older literature, remember: 1 abC = 10 C, and 1 C ≈ 3 × 109 stC.
- When working with battery specifications, note that capacity (mAh or Ah) alone doesn't determine energy storage — you also need to know the voltage. Energy (Wh) = Capacity (Ah) × Voltage (V).
Coulombs to Microcoulombs Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from coulombs to microcoulombs.
| Coulombs | Microcoulombs (μC) |
|---|---|
| 1 C | 1.0000E+6 |
| 2 C | 2.0000E+6 |
| 3 C | 3.0000E+6 |
| 4 C | 4.0000E+6 |
| 5 C | 5.0000E+6 |
| 6 C | 6.0000E+6 |
| 7 C | 7.0000E+6 |
| 8 C | 8.0000E+6 |
| 9 C | 9.0000E+6 |
| 10 C | 1.0000E+7 |
| 11 C | 1.1000E+7 |
| 12 C | 1.2000E+7 |
| 13 C | 1.3000E+7 |
| 14 C | 1.4000E+7 |
| 15 C | 1.5000E+7 |
| 16 C | 1.6000E+7 |
| 17 C | 1.7000E+7 |
| 18 C | 1.8000E+7 |
| 19 C | 1.9000E+7 |
| 20 C | 2.0000E+7 |
| 21 C | 2.1000E+7 |
| 22 C | 2.2000E+7 |
| 23 C | 2.3000E+7 |
| 24 C | 2.4000E+7 |
| 25 C | 2.5000E+7 |
| 26 C | 2.6000E+7 |
| 27 C | 2.7000E+7 |
| 28 C | 2.8000E+7 |
| 29 C | 2.9000E+7 |
| 30 C | 3.0000E+7 |
| 31 C | 3.1000E+7 |
| 32 C | 3.2000E+7 |
| 33 C | 3.3000E+7 |
| 34 C | 3.4000E+7 |
| 35 C | 3.5000E+7 |
| 36 C | 3.6000E+7 |
| 37 C | 3.7000E+7 |
| 38 C | 3.8000E+7 |
| 39 C | 3.9000E+7 |
| 40 C | 4.0000E+7 |