Elementary Charge to Kilocoulomb Conversion

Convert between Elementary Charge and Kilocoulomb quickly and accurately.

e
kC

How to Convert Elementary Charge to Kilocoulomb

Conversion Formula

1 e = 2E-22 kC
1 kC = 6E+21 e

Example

Convert 15 e to kC:

15 e = 15 × 2E-22 kC = 2E-21 kC

Unit Information

Learn about the charge units you're converting between

Elementary Charge

e

Definition

Elementary charge is the electric charge carried by a single proton or electron, approximately 1.60217733E-19 coulombs. It is the fundamental unit of electric charge.

History/Origin

Elementary charge was first measured by Robert Millikan in his oil drop experiment (1909). It represents the smallest unit of electric charge in nature.

Current Use

Fundamental in quantum physics, particle physics, semiconductor physics, and calculations involving individual charged particles or quantum systems.

Multiplier

2E-19

Offset

0

Kilocoulomb

kC

Definition

Kilocoulomb is a metric unit of electric charge equal to one thousand coulombs. It represents a substantial amount of electric charge commonly used in electrical engineering applications.

History/Origin

Kilocoulomb is derived from the SI prefix "kilo-" meaning one thousand, combined with the coulomb unit. It was introduced to provide convenient units for large charge measurements.

Current Use

Commonly used in electrical engineering for measuring large capacitor charges, battery capacity calculations, and industrial electrical systems.

Multiplier

1000

Offset

0

Elementary Charge to Kilocoulomb Conversion Table

Elementary Charge [e] Kilocoulomb [kC]
1 e 2E-22 kC
10 e 2E-21 kC
25 e 4E-21 kC
50 e 8E-21 kC
100 e 2E-20 kC
0 e 0E+0 kC
-10 e -2E-21 kC
-40 e -6E-21 kC