How to Convert Nanonewtons to Kilonewtons
To convert a force measurement from nanonewtons to kilonewtons, divide the force value by the conversion factor. Since one nanonewton is equal to 10-12 kilonewtons, you can use this formula:
The force in kilonewtons is equal to the nanonewtons divided by 1012.
Using the formula: kilonewtons = nanonewtons ÷ 1012
kilonewtons = 5 nN ÷ 1012 = 5.0000E-12 kN
Therefore, 5 nanonewtons equals 5.0000E-12 kilonewtons.
How Many Kilonewtons Are in a Nanonewton?
There are 10-12 kilonewtons in one nanonewton.
What Is a Nanonewton?
The nanonewton (symbol: nN) is a unit of force equal to one billionth (10−9) of a newton. The prefix “nano” denotes a factor of 10−9 in the International System of Units. Nanonewtons are used in nanotechnology, molecular biology, and biophysics to measure extremely small forces. Atomic force microscopes (AFM) typically measure forces in the range of 0.01–100 nN, allowing researchers to probe interactions between individual molecules and atoms. In molecular biology, the forces generated by single motor proteins (such as kinesin walking along a microtubule) are typically 5–7 nN. The force required to break a single covalent bond is approximately 1–10 nN, while hydrogen bonds break at roughly 0.01–0.1 nN. In nanotechnology, the adhesion forces between nanoparticles and surfaces, van der Waals forces between molecular assemblies, and the elastic forces of nanoscale structures are all measured in nanonewtons.
One nanonewton is equal to:
- 10−9 newtons (N)
- 0.001 micronewtons (μN)
- 10−6 millinewtons (mN)
- 1.0197 × 10−10 gram-force (gf)
- 10−4 dynes (dyn)
- 2.2481 × 10−10 pound-force (lbf)
What Is a Kilonewton?
The kilonewton (symbol: kN) is a unit of force equal to one thousand (103) newtons. The prefix “kilo” denotes a factor of 1,000 in the International System of Units. Kilonewtons are widely used in structural engineering, civil engineering, and automotive engineering to express forces of moderate magnitude. Structural loads on buildings and bridges, the tensile strength of cables and bolts, and the braking forces of vehicles are commonly specified in kilonewtons. In automotive engineering, tyre grip forces, suspension spring rates, and crash test impact forces are often measured in kN. A typical passenger car has a kerb weight that produces about 10–20 kN of gravitational force, and emergency braking can generate 8–15 kN of deceleration force. In rock climbing, the fall rating of climbing ropes is specified in kilonewtons — typically 8–12 kN maximum impact force. Carabiners are rated for strength in kN, with a typical gate-closed rating of 20–28 kN.
One kilonewton is equal to:
- 1,000 newtons (N)
- 106 millinewtons (mN)
- 0.001 meganewtons (MN)
- 101.972 kilogram-force (kgf)
- 224.809 pound-force (lbf)
- 108 dynes (dyn)
- 7,233.01 poundals (pdl)
Understanding Force Units
Force is a fundamental physical quantity that describes an interaction capable of changing the motion of an object. According to Newton’s second law, force equals mass times acceleration (F = ma). Force is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude and direction.
The wide variety of force units reflects the different measurement systems that developed historically across science and engineering. Today, the newton (SI) is the international standard, but gravitational units (kilogram-force, pound-force) and CGS/FPS units (dyne, poundal) remain in use in specific industries and regions.
Major Unit Families
- SI / Metric absolute units: The newton (N) is the SI unit of force, with standard metric prefixes (nN, μN, mN, kN, MN). These are “absolute” units defined in terms of mass, length, and time (1 N = 1 kg·m/s²).
- Gravitational metric units: The gram-force (gf) and kilogram-force (kgf) are defined using standard gravity. One kgf = 9.80665 N exactly. These units directly connect mass to weight.
- Imperial / US customary units: The pound-force (lbf) and ounce-force (ozf) are gravitational units used primarily in the United States. One lbf = 4.44822 N.
- CGS absolute unit: The dyne (dyn) is the CGS system’s force unit (1 dyn = 1 g·cm/s² = 10−5 N). It is used in some specialised fields.
- FPS absolute unit: The poundal (pdl) is the FPS system’s absolute force unit (1 pdl = 1 lb·ft/s² ≈ 0.1383 N). It is mostly of historical interest.
Force in Everyday Life
- Weight: The weight of a 1 kg object is about 9.81 N (1 kgf). A 70 kg person weighs about 687 N (154.3 lbf).
- Friction: Walking, driving, and braking all depend on friction forces. The braking force of a car can reach 10–20 kN.
- Tension: Ropes, cables, and tendons carry tension forces. Climbing ropes are rated for 8–12 kN of impact force.
- Thrust: Jet engines produce 50–500 kN of thrust, while rocket engines can produce several MN.
Converting Between Force Units
All force 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 newtons one unit of the source contains divided by how many newtons one unit of the target contains.
The key conversion constants are: 1 kgf = 9.80665 N (exact), 1 lbf = 4.4482216152605 N (exact), 1 dyn = 10−5 N (exact), and 1 pdl ≈ 0.138255 N.
Tips for Force Conversions
- For SI metric conversions (nN, μN, mN, N, kN, MN), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 kN = 1,000 N = 1,000,000 mN, etc.
- To convert between gravitational units (gf, kgf, lbf, ozf) and absolute units (N, dyn, pdl), you need the standard gravity constant g = 9.80665 m/s².
- One kilogram-force equals exactly 9.80665 newtons. This is exact by definition because gn = 9.80665 m/s² is a defined constant.
- One pound-force = exactly 4.4482216152605 newtons (= gn × 1 lb = 9.80665 × 0.45359237).
- There are exactly 16 ounce-force in 1 pound-force, and exactly 1,000 gram-force in 1 kilogram-force.
- The dyne is a very small force: 1 N = 100,000 dyn. The poundal is also small: 1 lbf ≈ 32.174 pdl.
- Quick mental conversion: 1 N ≈ 0.225 lbf, or 1 lbf ≈ 4.45 N. Also 1 kgf ≈ 2.205 lbf.
- Don’t confuse mass and force: “kilogram” is a unit of mass, while “kilogram-force” is a unit of force. A 1 kg object weighs 1 kgf (9.81 N) only at standard gravity.
Nanonewtons to Kilonewtons Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from nanonewtons to kilonewtons.
| Nanonewtons | Kilonewtons (kN) |
|---|---|
| 1.0000E+11 nN | 0.1 |
| 2.0000E+11 nN | 0.2 |
| 3.0000E+11 nN | 0.3 |
| 4.0000E+11 nN | 0.4 |
| 5.0000E+11 nN | 0.5 |
| 6.0000E+11 nN | 0.6 |
| 7.0000E+11 nN | 0.7 |
| 8.0000E+11 nN | 0.8 |
| 9.0000E+11 nN | 0.9 |
| 1.0000E+12 nN | 1 |
| 2.0000E+12 nN | 2 |
| 3.0000E+12 nN | 3 |
| 4.0000E+12 nN | 4 |
| 5.0000E+12 nN | 5 |
| 6.0000E+12 nN | 6 |
| 7.0000E+12 nN | 7 |
| 8.0000E+12 nN | 8 |
| 9.0000E+12 nN | 9 |
| 1.0000E+13 nN | 10 |
| 2.0000E+13 nN | 20 |
| 3.0000E+13 nN | 30 |
| 4.0000E+13 nN | 40 |
| 5.0000E+13 nN | 50 |
| 6.0000E+13 nN | 60 |
| 7.0000E+13 nN | 70 |
| 8.0000E+13 nN | 80 |
| 9.0000E+13 nN | 90 |
| 1.0000E+14 nN | 100 |