Electronvolts (eV) to Watt-minutes (Wm) conversion

1 eV = 2.670294e-21 WmWmeV
Formula
1 eV = 2.670294e-21 Wm

Understanding Electronvolts to Watt-minutes Conversion

The electronvolt (eV) is the compact energy unit of atomic and nuclear physics, defined by an electron moving through one volt. A watt-minute (Wm) is one watt sustained for a minute, equal to 60 joules, and occasionally appears in engineering contexts where energy over short intervals is convenient. Converting eV to watt-minutes offers an intermediate-scale bridge between subatomic energies and second-to-minute power accounting.

Conversion Formula

1 eV=2.670294×1021 Wm1\ \text{eV} = 2.670294 \times 10⁻²¹\ \text{Wm}

To convert Electronvolts to Watt-minutes, multiply by this factor:

Wm=eV×2.670294×1021\text{Wm} = \text{eV} \times 2.670294 \times 10⁻²¹

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Electronvolts to Watt-minutes.

Wm=25×2.670294×1021=6.675735×1020 Wm\text{Wm} = 25 \times 2.670294 \times 10⁻²¹ = 6.675735 \times 10⁻²⁰\ \text{Wm}

How to Convert Electronvolts to Watt-minutes

Express an atomic-scale energy in watt-minutes with a single multiplication.

  1. Take the eV value: Begin with the energy, for instance 25 eV.
  2. Multiply by the factor: Use 2.670294×10212.670294 \times 10⁻²¹ Wm per electronvolt.
  3. Do the arithmetic: 25×2.670294×102125 \times 2.670294 \times 10⁻²¹.
  4. State the answer: 25 eV equals 6.675735×10206.675735 \times 10⁻²⁰ Wm.

Electronvolts to Watt-minutes conversion table

Electronvolts (eV)Watt-minutes (Wm)
00
12.670294e-21
25.340589e-21
38.010883e-21
41.068118e-20
51.335147e-20
61.602177e-20
71.869206e-20
82.136236e-20
92.403265e-20
102.670294e-20
154.005442e-20
205.340589e-20
256.675736e-20
308.010883e-20
401.068118e-19
501.335147e-19
601.602177e-19
701.869206e-19
802.136236e-19
902.403265e-19
1002.670294e-19
1504.005442e-19
2005.340589e-19
2506.675736e-19
3008.010883e-19
4001.068118e-18
5001.335147e-18
6001.602177e-18
7001.869206e-18
8002.136236e-18
9002.403265e-18
10002.670294e-18
20005.340589e-18
30008.010883e-18
40001.068118e-17
50001.335147e-17
100002.670294e-17
250006.675736e-17
500001.335147e-16
1000002.670294e-16
2500006.675736e-16
5000001.335147e-15
10000002.670294e-15

What is the Electronvolt?

The electronvolt is a small unit of energy used throughout atomic, nuclear, and particle physics to describe the energies of individual particles, photons, and chemical or nuclear reactions.

Definition

One electronvolt is the kinetic energy gained by a single electron accelerated through an electric potential difference of one volt:

1 eV=1.60218×1019 J1\ \text{eV} = 1.60218 \times 10⁻¹⁹\ \text{J}

Since the 2019 redefinition of SI units, this value is exact: 1 eV = 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ J, because the elementary charge is now a defined constant. Common multiples include the keV (10³ eV), MeV (10⁶ eV), GeV (10⁹ eV), and TeV (10¹² eV).

Origin and History

The unit arose in the early 20th century as physicists studied electrons and ions accelerated in vacuum tubes and early particle accelerators, where energy expressed in volts of accelerating potential was far more natural than joules. It became the standard energy scale as quantum and nuclear physics matured.

Law and Notable Facts

The electronvolt is accepted for use with the SI system though it is not itself an SI unit. Via mass-energy equivalence, particle masses are routinely quoted in eV/c²: the electron's rest mass is about 511 keV/c², and the proton's is about 938 MeV/c².

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • Visible-light photons carry roughly 1.6 to 3.3 eV each.
  • Chemical bond energies are typically a few eV per bond.
  • The Large Hadron Collider accelerates protons to about 6.5 TeV, or 6.5 × 10¹² eV, roughly 1.04 microjoules per proton.

What is the watt-minute?

Watt-minutes is a unit of energy. Below is a breakdown of what watt-minutes are, how they're formed, and some examples.

Understanding Watt-Minutes

Watt-minutes (W⋅min) is a unit of energy derived from the more standard unit, the watt-hour (W⋅h), and ultimately from the SI unit of energy, the joule (J). It represents the amount of energy consumed or produced when one watt of power is used for one minute.

Formation and Calculation

Watt-minutes are formed by multiplying power in watts by time in minutes.

  • Power (Watts): The rate at which energy is used or generated.
  • Time (Minutes): The duration for which the power is applied.

The formula to calculate energy in watt-minutes is:

E=PtE = P \cdot t

Where:

  • EE is the energy in watt-minutes (W⋅min)
  • PP is the power in watts (W)
  • tt is the time in minutes (min)

Conversion to Other Units

  • To convert watt-minutes to watt-hours, divide by 60: Wh=Wmin60Wh = \frac{W \cdot min}{60}

  • To convert watt-minutes to joules, multiply by 60: J=Wmin60J = W \cdot min \cdot 60

Practical Examples

  1. Small Electronic Devices: A small LED light bulb might consume 5 watts. If it's used for 20 minutes, the energy consumed is 5W20min=1005 W \cdot 20 min = 100 watt-minutes.
  2. Charging a Smartphone: If a phone charger delivers 10 watts of power and the phone charges for 30 minutes, it consumes 10W30min=30010 W \cdot 30 min = 300 watt-minutes.
  3. Microwave Oven: A microwave oven operating at 1000 watts for 2 minutes uses 1000W2min=20001000 W \cdot 2 min = 2000 watt-minutes.

Relation to James Watt

James Watt was a Scottish inventor and mechanical engineer whose improvements to the steam engine were fundamental to the Industrial Revolution. The watt, the unit of power, is named in his honor. While Watt didn't directly work with "watt-minutes" as a standalone unit, his work on power and energy laid the groundwork for understanding these concepts.

Usefulness and Relevance

Watt-minutes are a convenient unit when dealing with energy consumption or production over relatively short periods. They offer a more granular view compared to watt-hours, especially when analyzing the energy usage of devices or processes with durations shorter than an hour.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many watt-minutes are in one electronvolt?

One electronvolt equals 2.670294×10212.670294 \times 10⁻²¹ watt-minutes, an extremely small quantity.

How do I convert electronvolts to watt-minutes?

Multiply the eV value by 2.670294×10212.670294 \times 10⁻²¹. For example, 25 eV equals 6.675735×10206.675735 \times 10⁻²⁰ Wm.

How many electronvolts equal one watt-minute?

About 3.744905×10203.744905 \times 10²⁰ electronvolts add up to a single watt-minute.

When is the watt-minute a handy unit?

It suits energy delivered over short bursts, such as pulses or brief mechanical actions, where seconds-to-minutes framing is clearer than joules or watt-hours.

How many joules is a watt-minute?

Exactly 60 joules, because one watt for one minute (60 seconds) is 60 joules; this exact value defines the conversion.

Complete Electronvolts conversion table

eV
UnitResult
Watt-seconds (Ws)1.602177e-19 Ws
Watt-minutes (Wm)2.670294e-21 Wm
Watt-hours (Wh)4.450491e-23 Wh
Milliwatt-hours (mWh)4.450491e-20 mWh
Kilowatt-hours (kWh)4.450491e-26 kWh
Megawatt-hours (MWh)4.450491e-29 MWh
Gigawatt-hours (GWh)4.450491e-32 GWh
Joules (J)1.602177e-19 J
Kilojoules (kJ)1.602177e-22 kJ
Megajoules (MJ)1.602177e-25 MJ
Gigajoules (GJ)1.602177e-28 GJ
British Thermal Units (IT) (BTU)1.51857e-22 BTU
US Therms (thm)1.518933e-27 thm
Ergs (erg)1.602177e-12 erg
Foot-pounds (ft-lbf)1.181705e-19 ft-lbf
Tonnes of TNT (t-tnt)3.829294e-29 t-tnt
calories (cal)3.829294e-20 cal
Kilocalories (kcal)3.829294e-23 kcal