Electric Charge Converter

Convert between different electric charge units including coulombs, ampere-hours, and milliampere-hours.

Electric Charge Converter
ready
$ convert --from [unit] --to [unit] --value [number]
$
>
formulas.ts

// Common Electric Charge Converter Formulas

1const1 coulomb = 1 ampere × 1 second
2const1 ampere-hour = 3600 coulombs
3const1 elementary charge ≈ 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ C
references.json

// Common Electric Charge Converter References

{
"Single Electron":"1.6×10⁻¹⁹ C",
"AA Battery":"2-3 Ah",
"Phone Battery":"3000-5000 mAh",
"Lightning Bolt":"~15 C"
}
README.md

## What is Electric Charge Conversion?

Electric charge conversion helps compare different measurements of stored electrical charge. This is essential for battery capacity comparisons, understanding power storage, and electrical calculations. Our converter handles scientific and practical units.

units.ts

// Common Electric Charge Units Explained

export const Coulomb (C)

// The SI unit of electric charge. One coulomb is the charge transferred by 1 ampere in 1 second.

export const Ampere-hour (Ah)

// Common for large batteries. A 100 Ah car battery can supply 100 amps for 1 hour or 10 amps for 10 hours.

export const Milliampere-hour (mAh)

// Common for small batteries. Smartphone batteries typically range from 3,000-5,000 mAh.

i

When to Use This Converter

Our charge converter is essential for battery engineers designing power systems, consumers comparing battery capacities, electronics designers calculating power budgets, and anyone working with electrical storage.

FAQ.md

## Frequently Asked Questions

01 ### Q: How do I convert Ah to coulombs?

/**

Multiply Ah by 3600 (seconds per hour). For example, 1 Ah = 3600 coulombs.

*/

02 ### Q: Does higher mAh mean longer battery life?

/**

Generally yes, but actual battery life depends on device power consumption. A 4000 mAh battery lasts twice as long as 2000 mAh in the same device.

*/