Milliampere-hours to Millicoulombs

1 Milliampere-hour equals 3,600 Millicoulombs using exact coulomb-based electric charge definitions.

Direct Answer

1 Milliampere-hour equals 3,600 Millicoulombs

This conversion uses exact coulomb-based electric charge definitions.

For 0.001 Milliampere-hours, the result equals 3.6 Millicoulombs.

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3,600 Millicoulombs (mC)

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Explanation

Formula: Millicoulombs = Milliampere-hours × 3,600. Why: ampere-hour units convert to charge through current over time, with 1 Ah = 3600 C exactly and 1 mAh = 3.6 C exactly, while coulomb-prefixed units scale by exact powers of ten.

Milliampere-hours (mAh): a battery-scale electric-charge unit equal to one thousandth of an ampere-hour, commonly used for small batteries and portable electronics.

Millicoulombs (mC): an SI-prefixed electric-charge unit equal to one thousandth of a coulomb.

This route is useful when translating battery-scale charge values into much smaller SI charge units for electronics, instrumentation, or engineering calculations.

This conversion is purely multiplicative with no offset because both units reduce exactly to coulombs under the same electric-charge model.

Method & Reference

  • Method basis: exact conversion formula shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied factor: 1 Milliampere-hour = 3,600 Millicoulombs.
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Milliampere-hours (mAh)Millicoulombs (mC)
0.001 3.6
0.01 36
0.1 360
1 3,600
10 36,000
100 360,000
1,000 3,600,000
5,000 18,000,000

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 milliampere-hour in millicoulombs?

1 Milliampere-hour equals 3,600 Millicoulombs on this page.

Does this Milliampere-hours to Millicoulombs page use 1 Ah = 3600 C?

Yes. Routes that involve ampere-hours convert through the exact current-time relationship 1 Ah = 3600 C, then apply any needed SI prefix scaling.

When would I convert milliampere-hours to millicoulombs?

This route is useful when translating battery-scale charge values into much smaller SI charge units for electronics, instrumentation, or engineering calculations.

How do I reverse Milliampere-hours to Millicoulombs?

Use the mirror Millicoulombs to Milliampere-hours route; it applies the inverse relationship with the same electric-charge assumptions.