Electronvolts to Watt-Hours Converter

Convert electronvolts to watt-hours instantly with our free energy conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

eV
=
Wh
4.4505E-23
Watt-Hours (Wh)
1 eV = 4.4505E-23 Wh
🔄 Swap Units (Watt-Hours → Electronvolts)
1 eV
=
4.4505E-23 Wh
1 Electronvolt = 4.4505 × 10-23 Watt-Hours

How to Convert Electronvolts to Watt-Hours

To convert an energy measurement from electronvolts to watt-hours, divide the energy value by the conversion factor. Since one electronvolt is equal to 4.4505 × 10-23 watt-hours, you can use this formula:

watt-hours = electronvolts ÷ 2.2469 × 1022

The energy in watt-hours is equal to the electronvolts divided by 2.2469 × 1022.

Example: Convert 5 electronvolts to watt-hours.

Using the formula: watt-hours = electronvolts ÷ 2.2469 × 1022

watt-hours = 5 eV ÷ 2.2469 × 1022 = 2.2252E-22 Wh

Therefore, 5 electronvolts equals 2.2252E-22 watt-hours.

How Many Watt-Hours Are in a Electronvolt?

There are 4.4505 × 10-23 watt-hours in one electronvolt.

1 eV = 4.4505 × 10-23 Wh

What Is a Electronvolt?

The electronvolt (symbol: eV) is a unit of energy equal to approximately 1.602176634 × 10−19 joules. It is defined as the amount of kinetic energy gained by a single electron when it accelerates through an electric potential difference of one volt. Since the 2019 redefinition of SI units, the electronvolt has an exact value in joules: 1 eV = 1.602176634 × 10−19 J (exact). This follows from the exact definition of the elementary charge e = 1.602176634 × 10−19 coulombs. The electronvolt is the standard unit of energy in atomic physics, solid-state physics, and chemistry at the molecular level. Typical energies in eV include: ionization energy of hydrogen (13.6 eV), visible light photon energies (1.65–3.26 eV), chemical bond energies (1–10 eV per bond), and the band gap of silicon (1.12 eV). The electronvolt is also used as a unit of mass in particle physics through Einstein’s mass–energy equivalence (E = mc²). The electron mass is 0.511 MeV/c², the proton mass is 938.3 MeV/c², and the Higgs boson mass is about 125 GeV/c².

One electronvolt is equal to:

  • 1.602 × 10−19 joules (J)
  • 0.001 kiloelectronvolts (keV)
  • 10−6 megaelectronvolts (MeV)
  • 3.827 × 10−20 calories (cal)
  • 4.45 × 10−23 watt-hours (Wh)
  • 1.519 × 10−22 BTU

What Is a Watt-Hour?

The watt-hour (symbol: Wh) is a unit of energy equal to the energy delivered by one watt of power sustained for one hour. It equals exactly 3,600 joules (since 1 hour = 3,600 seconds). Watt-hours are commonly used for expressing the capacity of batteries in portable electronics and small energy systems. For example, a smartphone battery might have a capacity of 10–20 Wh, a laptop battery 50–100 Wh, and a portable power bank 20–80 Wh. In small-scale renewable energy systems, watt-hours are used to measure daily energy production. A small solar panel rated at 100 watts might produce 400–600 Wh of energy per day, depending on location and weather conditions. The watt-hour provides an intuitive connection between power (watts) and energy. If you know the power consumption of a device in watts and the time it runs in hours, their product gives the energy consumed in watt-hours. For example, a 60 W light bulb running for 5 hours consumes 300 Wh of energy.

One watt-hour is equal to:

  • 3,600 joules (J)
  • 3.6 kilojoules (kJ)
  • 860.421 calories (cal)
  • 0.860421 kilocalories (kcal)
  • 0.001 kilowatt-hours (kWh)
  • 3.412 BTU

Understanding Energy Units

Energy is a fundamental physical quantity that represents the capacity to do work or produce heat. It is conserved in all physical processes (the first law of thermodynamics) and can be converted from one form to another — mechanical, thermal, electrical, chemical, nuclear, and radiant energy are all interconvertible.

The wide variety of energy units reflects the historical development of different branches of science and engineering, each of which developed its own preferred units before the adoption of the International System of Units (SI).

Major Unit Families

  • SI / Metric units: The joule (J) is the SI unit of energy, with standard metric prefixes (kJ, MJ, GJ). The watt-second (Ws) is identical to the joule. Watt-hours (Wh), kilowatt-hours (kWh), and megawatt-hours (MWh) combine power (watts) with time.
  • Calorie-based units: The calorie (cal), kilocalorie (kcal), and megacalorie (Mcal) originated in thermochemistry. The kilocalorie is widely used in nutrition as the “food Calorie.”
  • British / Imperial units: The British thermal unit (BTU) and its multiples (MMBTU, therm, quad) are used primarily in the US for HVAC, natural gas, and national energy statistics.
  • Atomic-scale units: The electronvolt (eV) and its multiples (keV, MeV) are used in atomic, nuclear, and particle physics for the extremely small energies of individual particles.

Energy in Everyday Life

  • Nutrition: Food energy is measured in kilocalories (kcal) or kilojoules (kJ). A typical adult needs about 2,000–2,500 kcal (8,400–10,500 kJ) per day.
  • Electricity: Household electricity consumption is measured in kilowatt-hours (kWh). An average US home uses about 900–1,000 kWh per month.
  • Heating: Natural gas consumption is measured in therms or MMBTU. A US home might use 500–1,000 therms per year for heating.
  • Transportation: Gasoline contains about 120,000 BTU or 34 MJ per litre. One gallon of gasoline contains about 33.7 kWh of energy.

Converting Between Energy Units

All energy units measure the same physical quantity, so converting between them is simply a matter of multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. The factor is the ratio of how many joules one unit of the source contains divided by how many joules one unit of the target contains.

For very large or very small conversion factors, results are often expressed in scientific notation (e.g., 6.2415 × 1018 eV per joule). This is particularly common when converting between atomic-scale units (electronvolts) and everyday units (joules, BTU, calories).

Tips for Energy Conversions

  • The joule and watt-second are exactly the same unit (1 J = 1 Ws). The different names are used in different contexts.
  • For SI metric conversions (J, kJ, MJ, GJ), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. The same applies to cal/kcal/Mcal, Wh/kWh/MWh, and eV/keV/MeV.
  • The kilocalorie (kcal) used in nutrition is often written as “Calorie” with a capital C. When a food label says 200 Calories, it means 200 kcal = 200,000 cal.
  • One kilowatt-hour equals exactly 3,600,000 joules (1 kW × 3,600 seconds). This is useful for converting between electrical and metric energy units.
  • One BTU ≈ 1,055 joules ≈ 252 calories. These rough equivalences are useful for quick mental conversions.
  • One therm = 100,000 BTU exactly. One MMBTU = 1,000,000 BTU exactly. One quad = 1015 BTU exactly.
  • The electronvolt is an extremely small unit compared to everyday energy: 1 eV ≈ 1.6 × 10−19 J. It is used only for atomic-scale energies.
  • To calculate electricity cost, multiply kWh × price per kWh. To calculate gas heating cost, multiply therms × price per therm.

Electronvolts to Watt-Hours Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from electronvolts to watt-hours.

ElectronvoltsWatt-Hours (Wh)
1.0000E+22 eV0.445049
2.0000E+22 eV0.890098
3.0000E+22 eV1.33515
4.0000E+22 eV1.7802
5.0000E+22 eV2.22525
6.0000E+22 eV2.67029
7.0000E+22 eV3.11534
8.0000E+22 eV3.56039
9.0000E+22 eV4.00544
1.0000E+23 eV4.45049
2.0000E+23 eV8.90098
3.0000E+23 eV13.3515
4.0000E+23 eV17.802
5.0000E+23 eV22.2525
6.0000E+23 eV26.7029
7.0000E+23 eV31.1534
8.0000E+23 eV35.6039
9.0000E+23 eV40.0544
1.0000E+24 eV44.5049
2.0000E+24 eV89.0098
3.0000E+24 eV133.515
4.0000E+24 eV178.02
5.0000E+24 eV222.525
6.0000E+24 eV267.029
7.0000E+24 eV311.534
8.0000E+24 eV356.039
9.0000E+24 eV400.544
1.0000E+25 eV445.049

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