🌡️ W/(m·K) to kW/(m·K) — Watt/(Meter·Kelvin) to Kilowatt/(Meter·Kelvin) Converter

Convert thermal conductivity units — W/(m·K), BTU/(h·ft·°F), cal/(s·cm·°C) and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 W/(m·K) = 0.001 kW/(m·K)
UnitNameValue
kW/(m·K) Kilowatt/(Meter·Kelvin) 0.001
BTU/(h·ft·°F) BTU/(Hour·Foot·°F) 0.57779087
cal/(s·cm·°C) Calorie/(Second·cm·°C) 0.002388459
kcal/(h·m·°C) Kilocalorie/(Hour·m·°C) 0.85984523

Quick Answer

Formula: kW/(m·K) = W/(m·K) × 0.001

Multiply any W/(m·K) value by 0.001 to get kW/(m·K).

Reverse: W/(m·K) = kW/(m·K) × 1000

Copper reference: 401 W/(m·K) = 0.401 kW/(m·K)

Worked Examples

1 kW
1000 W/(m·K) × 0.001 = 1 kW/(m·K)
1,000 W/(m·K) = 1 kW/(m·K).
Copper
401 W/(m·K) × 0.001 = 0.401 kW/(m·K)
401 W/(m·K) = 0.401 kW/(m·K).
Diamond
2200 W/(m·K) × 0.001 = 2.2 kW/(m·K)
2,200 W/(m·K) = 2.2 kW/(m·K).
Steel
50 W/(m·K) × 0.001 = 0.05 kW/(m·K)
50 W/(m·K) = 0.05 kW/(m·K).

Thermal Conductivity of Common Materials

Factor: 1 W/(m·K) = 0.001 kW/(m·K)

W/(m·K) (W/(m·K))kW/(m·K) (kW/(m·K))Material
2200 W/(m·K)2.2 kW/(m·K)Diamond
429 W/(m·K)0.429 kW/(m·K)Silver
401 W/(m·K)0.401 kW/(m·K)Copper
318 W/(m·K)0.318 kW/(m·K)Gold
237 W/(m·K)0.237 kW/(m·K)Aluminum
52 W/(m·K)0.052 kW/(m·K)Cast iron
50 W/(m·K)0.05 kW/(m·K)Steel (carbon)
2.5 W/(m·K)0.0025 kW/(m·K)Marble
1.7 W/(m·K)0.0017 kW/(m·K)Concrete
1 W/(m·K)0.001 kW/(m·K)Glass
0.6 W/(m·K)0.0006 kW/(m·K)Water (20°C)
0.17 W/(m·K)0.00017 kW/(m·K)Wood (oak)
0.04 W/(m·K)4.000e-05 kW/(m·K)Fiberglass batt
0.026 W/(m·K)2.600e-05 kW/(m·K)Air (25°C)
0.015 W/(m·K)1.500e-05 kW/(m·K)Aerogel

Mental Math Tricks

÷ 1000 exactly

W/(m·K) ÷ 1,000 = kW/(m·K).

Key anchor

1,000 W/(m·K) = 1 kW/(m·K). Diamond = 2.2 kW/(m·K).

Reverse

kW/(m·K) × 1,000 = W/(m·K).

Who Uses This Conversion?

Building Physicist

Specifies insulation and wall assembly thermal conductivity in W/(m·K) for energy compliance calculations.

HVAC Engineer

Uses BTU/(h·ft·°F) for US building code compliance and W/(m·K) for metric heat transfer calculations.

Materials Engineer

Compares thermal conductivity of metals, polymers, and composites in W/(m·K) for thermal management design.

Electronics Cooling Engineer

Selects thermal interface materials and heatsinks using conductivity data in W/(m·K).

Chemical Process Engineer

Designs heat exchangers using shell and tube thermal conductivity specifications in W/(m·K).

Research Physicist

Measures and reports thermal conductivity of novel materials (graphene, CNTs, aerogels) in W/(m·K) or kW/(m·K).

Frequently Asked Questions

About W/(m·K) and kW/(m·K)

W/(m·K) (W/(m·K))

Watt per meter per kelvin (W/(m·K)) is the SI unit of thermal conductivity. It measures the rate of heat transfer through a material of 1 meter thickness per kelvin of temperature difference per unit area. It was formally defined with the SI system in 1960.

W/(m·K) is universally used in engineering and science for specifying material thermal properties. Key values: air = 0.026 W/(m·K); water = 0.6 W/(m·K); glass = 1.0 W/(m·K); concrete = 1.7 W/(m·K); steel = 50 W/(m·K); copper = 401 W/(m·K); diamond = 2,200 W/(m·K).

Interesting fact: Diamond has the highest thermal conductivity of any natural material at about 2,200 W/(m·K) — nearly 6× that of copper and 85,000× that of air. This is why diamond heatsinks are used in high-power laser diodes and some semiconductor devices.

kW/(m·K) (kW/(m·K))

Kilowatt per meter per kelvin (kW/(m·K)) equals 1,000 W/(m·K) and is used for highly thermally conductive materials. Diamond at 2.2 kW/(m·K) and silver at 0.429 kW/(m·K) are examples where kW/(m·K) provides convenient values.

kW/(m·K) is used in research papers and data tables for metallic and crystalline materials with very high conductivity. Carbon nanotubes can reach 3–6 kW/(m·K) along their axis — the highest known at room temperature.

Interesting fact: Graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms, has a thermal conductivity of about 4–5 kW/(m·K) in-plane — the highest of any known material. This makes it a promising material for next-generation thermal management in electronics.

About W/(m·K) to kW/(m·K) Conversion

Thermal conductivity measures how readily a material conducts heat. The SI unit W/(m·K) is universal in science; US building codes use BTU/(h·ft·°F); older European engineering uses kcal/(h·m·°C); CGS physics uses cal/(s·cm·K). Key anchors: air 0.026 W/(m·K), glass 1.0, steel 50, copper 401, diamond 2,200.

Exact factor: 1 W/(m·K) = 0.001 kW/(m·K). Reverse: 1 kW/(m·K) = 1000 W/(m·K).

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.