Convert specific heat capacity units — J/(kg·K), BTU/(lb·°F), cal/(g·°C) and more.
| Unit | Name | Value |
|---|---|---|
| J/(kg·K) | Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) | 1000 |
| BTU/(lb·°F) | BTU/(Pound·°F) | 0.2388459 |
| cal/(g·°C) | Calorie/(Gram·°C) | 0.2388459 |
| kcal/(kg·°C) | Kilocalorie/(Kilogram·°C) | 0.2388459 |
Multiply the number of Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin)s by 1000 to get Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin)s. Formula: J/(kg·K) = kJ/(kg·K) × 1000. Example: 10 kJ/(kg·K) × 1000 = 10000 J/(kg·K). To reverse, divide Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin)s by 1000 to get Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin)s.
| Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) (kJ/(kg·K)) | Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) (J/(kg·K)) |
|---|---|
| 0.001 kJ/(kg·K) | 1 J/(kg·K) |
| 0.01 kJ/(kg·K) | 10 J/(kg·K) |
| 0.1 kJ/(kg·K) | 100 J/(kg·K) |
| 0.5 kJ/(kg·K) | 500 J/(kg·K) |
| 1 kJ/(kg·K) | 1000 J/(kg·K) |
| 2 kJ/(kg·K) | 2000 J/(kg·K) |
| 5 kJ/(kg·K) | 5000 J/(kg·K) |
| 10 kJ/(kg·K) | 10000 J/(kg·K) |
| 20 kJ/(kg·K) | 20000 J/(kg·K) |
| 50 kJ/(kg·K) | 50000 J/(kg·K) |
| 100 kJ/(kg·K) | 100000 J/(kg·K) |
| 250 kJ/(kg·K) | 250000 J/(kg·K) |
| 500 kJ/(kg·K) | 500000 J/(kg·K) |
| 1000 kJ/(kg·K) | 1000000 J/(kg·K) |
| 10000 kJ/(kg·K) | 10000000 J/(kg·K) |
To convert Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) to Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin), multiply by 1000. Example: 10 kJ/(kg·K) = 10000 J/(kg·K)
To convert Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) back to Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin), divide by 1000 (multiply by 0.001). Use the swap button above.
Start with 100 Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin)s = 100000 J/(kg·K) as your reference point. Scale up or down from there.
The Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) is a unit of Specific Heat measurement (symbol: kJ/(kg·K)). 1 kJ/(kg·K) = 1000 J/(kg·K). Used in scientific and practical Specific Heat measurement applications.
The Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) is a unit of Specific Heat measurement (symbol: J/(kg·K)). It is part of an internationally recognised measurement system used alongside the Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin).
Both the Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) and Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) developed through the standardisation of Specific Heat measurement. Converting between them is a common requirement in science, engineering, and everyday applications where different measurement systems are used.
Common use: Kilojoule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) to Joule/(Kilogram·Kelvin) conversion is needed when working with international standards, scientific publications, or reference materials that use different unit systems for Specific Heat measurement.