Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed in an electromagnetic field. It is measured in coulombs (C).
1 C = 3.6 kC/h
1 kC/h = 0.278 C
Example:
Convert 15 Coulomb to Kilocoulomb per Hour:
15 C = 54 kC/h
| Coulomb | Kilocoulomb per Hour |
|---|---|
| 0.01 C | 0.036 kC/h |
| 0.1 C | 0.36 kC/h |
| 1 C | 3.6 kC/h |
| 2 C | 7.2 kC/h |
| 3 C | 10.8 kC/h |
| 5 C | 18 kC/h |
| 10 C | 36 kC/h |
| 20 C | 72 kC/h |
| 30 C | 108 kC/h |
| 40 C | 144 kC/h |
| 50 C | 180 kC/h |
| 60 C | 216 kC/h |
| 70 C | 252 kC/h |
| 80 C | 288 kC/h |
| 90 C | 324 kC/h |
| 100 C | 360 kC/h |
| 250 C | 900 kC/h |
| 500 C | 1,800 kC/h |
| 750 C | 2,700 kC/h |
| 1000 C | 3,600 kC/h |
| 10000 C | 36,000 kC/h |
| 100000 C | 359,999.997 kC/h |