Convert Electronvolts to Kilowatt-Hours

1 eV = 4.4505e-26 kWh

1 eV = 4.4505e-26 kWh

electronvolts (eV) kilowatt-hours (kWh)
0.5 2.2252e-26
1 4.4505e-26
2 8.9010e-26
5 2.2252e-25
10 4.4505e-25
25 1.1126e-24
50 2.2252e-24
100 4.4505e-24
250 1.1126e-23
500 2.2252e-23
1000 4.4505e-23

To convert electronvolts to kilowatt-hours, multiply the value by the conversion factor:

1 eV = 4.4505e-26 kWh

For example: 10 eV = 4.4505e-25 kWh

The Conversion Formula

To convert electronvolts to kilowatt-hours, multiply the value by the conversion factor: 1 eV = 4.4505e-26 kWh. For a worked example, suppose you need to convert 25 eV to kilowatt-hours: 25 × 4.4505e-26 = 1.1126e-24 kWh. To convert in the opposite direction, divide by 4.4505e-26, or equivalently multiply by 2.2469e+25.

About electronvolts

The electronvolt (eV) is the tiny unit of energy used in particle physics. It is the energy gained by an electron accelerating through 1 volt. It is essential for describing photon energy, chemical bonds, and nuclear reactions. electronvolts are commonly used in Particle physics, Semiconductors, Nuclear energy, and Chemistry bonds, Microscopy.

A photon of visible light has an energy of about 2-3 eV.

About kilowatt-hours

The kilowatt-hour (kWh) is the unit of energy used to bill electricity. It is not a unit of power (kilowatts), but of energy: it is 1,000 watts of power sustained for one hour. One kWh equals exactly 3.6 million Joules. It was popularized by the electric utility industry as a unit easy for consumers to understand. kilowatt-hours are commonly used in Electric bills, Electric vehicle batteries, Solar panel output, and Home energy audits, Power plant generation.

Running a 1,000W microwave for one hour uses 1 kWh.

When Would You Convert electronvolts to kilowatt-hours?

Converting between electronvolts and kilowatt-hours is one of the most common energy conversions. You might need this conversion when working with international specifications, following instructions written for a different measurement system, or comparing values across different standards. Having the conversion factor (1 eV = 4.4505e-26 kWh) memorized or bookmarked can save time in professional and everyday contexts alike.