Convert Btu to Watt-hours (Wh)
1 Btu equals 0.293071 watt-hours.
Btu to Watt-hour Converter
How to Convert Btu to Watt-hour
1 Btu = 0.293071 watt-hours
Watt-hour = Btu × 0.293071
Example: 1 Btu × 0.293071 = 0.293071 Wh
Reverse Conversion
To convert watt-hours back to Btu:
- Remember, 1 watt-hour equals 3.41214 Btu.
- To convert 0.293071 Wh to Btu, multiply
0.293071 x 3.41214, resulting in1 Btu.
Btu to watt-hours Conversion Table
Reference table with common btu to watt-hours conversions. All values calculated with high precision.
Btu to Watt-hours Table
0.001 to 5
Btu to Watt-hours Table
10 to 1000000
Watt-hours to Btu Table
0.0001 to 12
Watt-hours to Btu Table
1 to 100000
Definition of Btu
- Definition
- British thermal unit (IT) — legacy heat unit based on heating water.
- Reference factor
- 1 Btu (IT) = 1055.056 J
- Sources
- EIA — Btu
Definition of Watt-hour
- Definition
- Energy equal to one watt of power sustained for one hour.
- Exact factor
- 1 Wh = 3600 J
- Sources
- NIST SP 811
About the Btu
Facts & Uses
- Core unit in U.S. HVAC, combustion, and fuel heat content tables; equipment capacity is typically rated in Btu/h (power) for load calculations and furnace/boiler sizing.
- Common billing/market units: therm (100,000 Btu), MMBtu (106 Btu), and MBH (103 Btu/h) in gas utilities, pipelines, and energy trading.
- Efficiency metrics convert directly: 1 kWh ≈ 3412 Btu; SEER and HSPF use Btu/Wh; AFUE/boiler efficiency often reported against Btu input.
- Reference conversion anchor for engineering: 1 Btu (IT) ≈ 1055.06 J ≈ 0.000293071 kWh; useful for energy balances and heat loss/gain estimates.
Curiosities
- Multiple historical definitions exist (e.g., IT Btu, mean Btu); modern U.S. practice typically standardizes on IT Btu.
- Ton of refrigeration is a power unit equal to 12,000 Btu/h (not energy) and underpins A/C sizing conventions.
- Notation can confuse: industry often uses MMBtu for million Btu (Roman numeral convention), while MBtu sometimes means thousand Btu.
- Building analytics in the U.S. may cite energy use intensity (EUI) as Btu/ft²·yr for benchmarking envelopes and systems.
Sources
About the Watt-hour
Facts & Uses
- Convenient battery energy unit for laptops, drones, UPS, and tools: 1 Wh = 3600 J (exact).
- Relates to amp-hours via voltage: Wh = V × Ah (use nominal/average V for accurate estimates).
- Used for device-level energy budgeting, IoT power profiling, and portable electronics specs.
- Scales naturally across mWh, Wh, and kWh for clear capacity comparisons and runtime planning.
Curiosities
- Airline rules commonly cap spare lithium batteries at around 100 Wh in carry-on (check current regulations).
- Users often confuse Ah (charge) with Wh (energy); Wh accounts for voltage, making it better for runtime comparisons.
- Energy meters and PMICs integrate instantaneous power over time to accumulate Wh/kWh with high accuracy.
- Quick mental math: 3.6 kJ per Wh, so 50 Wh ≈ 180 kJ — handy for physics and engineering estimates.
Sources
Frequently Asked Questions
How many watt-hours are in one Btu?
One Btu equals 0.293071 watt-hours. To convert, multiply the Btu value by 0.293071. For the reverse, divide the watt-hour value by 0.293071 (or multiply by 3.41214).
What is 1000 Btu in watt-hours?
1000 Btu = 293.07 watt-hours. This is one of the most commonly searched conversions for this pair.
How precise is the Btu-to-watt-hour conversion?
The factor 0.293071 is accurate to 6 significant figures, derived from international measurement standards. Our calculator uses full precision internally.
Looking for the reverse? Convert Watt-hour to Btu
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- Watts to Kilowatts — kW measures power; kWh measures energy (power × time)