Nanocoulombs to Milliampere-hours

1 Nanocoulomb equals 2.78e-10 Milliampere-hours using exact coulomb-based electric charge definitions.

Direct Answer

1 Nanocoulomb equals 2.78e-10 Milliampere-hours

This conversion uses exact coulomb-based electric charge definitions.

For 0.001 Nanocoulombs, the result equals 2.78e-13 Milliampere-hours.

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2.78e-10 Milliampere-hours (mAh)

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Explanation

Formula: Milliampere-hours = Nanocoulombs × 2.78e-10. 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.

Nanocoulombs (nC): an SI-prefixed electric-charge unit equal to one billionth of a coulomb.

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.

This route is useful when converting very small SI charge quantities into battery-capacity style units while keeping the same underlying electric charge.

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 Nanocoulomb = 2.78e-10 Milliampere-hours.
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Nanocoulombs (nC)Milliampere-hours (mAh)
0.001 2.78e-13
0.01 2.78e-12
0.1 2.78e-11
1 2.78e-10
10 2.78e-9
100 2.78e-8
1,000 2.78e-7
5,000 0.000001

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 nanocoulomb in milliampere-hours?

1 Nanocoulomb equals 2.78e-10 Milliampere-hours on this page.

Does this Nanocoulombs to Milliampere-hours 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 nanocoulombs to milliampere-hours?

This route is useful when converting very small SI charge quantities into battery-capacity style units while keeping the same underlying electric charge.

How do I reverse Nanocoulombs to Milliampere-hours?

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