Electron Volts to Joules (eV → J)

0.00000000000000000016022

1.0000 eV = 0.00000000000000000016022 J

Formula

1 eV = 1.602176634e-19 J
JoulesElectron Volts (Swap Units)

Conversion Table

eVJ
00
1.00000.00000000000000000016022
2.00000.00000000000000000032044
3.00000.00000000000000000048065
4.00000.00000000000000000064087
5.00000.00000000000000000080109
6.00000.00000000000000000096131
7.00000.0000000000000000011215
8.00000.0000000000000000012817
9.00000.0000000000000000014420
10.0000.0000000000000000016022
11.0000.0000000000000000017624
12.0000.0000000000000000019226
13.0000.0000000000000000020828
14.0000.0000000000000000022430
15.0000.0000000000000000024033
16.0000.0000000000000000025635
17.0000.0000000000000000027237
18.0000.0000000000000000028839
19.0000.0000000000000000030441
eVJ
20.0000.0000000000000000032044
21.0000.0000000000000000033646
22.0000.0000000000000000035248
23.0000.0000000000000000036850
24.0000.0000000000000000038452
25.0000.0000000000000000040054
26.0000.0000000000000000041657
27.0000.0000000000000000043259
28.0000.0000000000000000044861
29.0000.0000000000000000046463
30.0000.0000000000000000048065
31.0000.0000000000000000049667
32.0000.0000000000000000051270
33.0000.0000000000000000052872
34.0000.0000000000000000054474
35.0000.0000000000000000056076
36.0000.0000000000000000057678
37.0000.0000000000000000059281
38.0000.0000000000000000060883
39.0000.0000000000000000062485
eVJ
40.0000.0000000000000000064087
41.0000.0000000000000000065689
42.0000.0000000000000000067291
43.0000.0000000000000000068894
44.0000.0000000000000000070496
45.0000.0000000000000000072098
46.0000.0000000000000000073700
47.0000.0000000000000000075302
48.0000.0000000000000000076904
49.0000.0000000000000000078507
50.0000.0000000000000000080109
51.0000.0000000000000000081711
52.0000.0000000000000000083313
53.0000.0000000000000000084915
54.0000.0000000000000000086518
55.0000.0000000000000000088120
56.0000.0000000000000000089722
57.0000.0000000000000000091324
58.0000.0000000000000000092926
59.0000.0000000000000000094528
eVJ
60.0000.0000000000000000096131
61.0000.0000000000000000097733
62.0000.0000000000000000099335
63.0000.000000000000000010094
64.0000.000000000000000010254
65.0000.000000000000000010414
66.0000.000000000000000010574
67.0000.000000000000000010735
68.0000.000000000000000010895
69.0000.000000000000000011055
70.0000.000000000000000011215
71.0000.000000000000000011375
72.0000.000000000000000011536
73.0000.000000000000000011696
74.0000.000000000000000011856
75.0000.000000000000000012016
76.0000.000000000000000012177
77.0000.000000000000000012337
78.0000.000000000000000012497
79.0000.000000000000000012657

Electron Volts to Joules Conversion

Converting Electron Volts (eV) to Joules (J) is a common energy and power conversion. 1 eV equals 0 J. For example, 100 eV is equal to 0 J.

Quick Mental Math: Electron Volts to Joules

Divide electron-volts by 6.24 to convert to joules.

Why is converting Electron Volts to Joules tricky?

electron-volts to joules mixes food calories (kilocalories) with scientific calories.

Quick Reference Values

1 eV = 0 J. 5 eV = 0 J. 10 eV = 0 J. 25 eV = 0 J. 50 eV = 0 J. 100 eV = 0 J.

What is Electron Volts?

Electron Volts (eV) is a unit of energy and power. One electron volt is the energy acquired by an electron when accelerated through a potential difference of 1 volt.It is equal to 1.602 × 10−19 joules. Widely used in nuclear, atomic and particle physics

What is Joules?

Joules (J) is a unit of energy and power. The joule is the SI unit of energy defined as the work done when a force of one newton moves an object one meter in the direction of the force. It equals one kilogram meter squared per second squared (kg·m²/s²). This definition aligns with the International System of Units as standardized by the BIPM [bipm-si-brochure]. The joule is named after James Prescott Joule, a 19th-century physicist who studied energy conservation. It was officially adopted as a unit of energy by the CGPM in 1948 to unify energy measurement standards internationally [cgpm-resolutions]. Joules are used worldwide in physics, engineering, and electrical industries to quantify energy, work, and heat. Countries using the SI system, including those in Europe, Asia, and the Americas, rely on joules for scientific and industrial applications [nist-si-guide].

Common Misspellings

People often search for this conversion using these alternate spellings: joule, joul, jouls, juls. All of these refer to the Electron Volts to Joules conversion.

Common Conversions