BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit to Joules per kilogram-kelvin
1 BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit = 4,186.8 Joules per kilogram-kelvin · fixed factor via physics reference unit model · no offset
Direct Answer
1 BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit equals 4,186.8 Joules per kilogram-kelvin
This conversion uses a fixed factor based on physics reference unit model.
For 0.1 BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit, the result equals 418.68 Joules per kilogram-kelvin.
Converter Calculator
4,186.8 Joules per kilogram-kelvin (J/(kg·K))
SwitchExplanation
Formula: Joules per kilogram-kelvin = BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit × 4,186.8. Why: the route normalizes to joules per kilogram-kelvin, then applies the fixed BTU energy definition, the pound mass definition, and the Fahrenheit-to-kelvin interval scaling.
BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit (BTU/(lb·°F)): an imperial engineering heat-capacity unit used in HVAC, combustion, and US thermal property references.
Joules per kilogram-kelvin (J/(kg·K)): the standard SI-style specific heat capacity unit expressing how many joules are needed to raise one kilogram by one kelvin.
This route is useful when comparing SI thermal property data with US engineering or HVAC references that report specific heat in BTU per pound per degree Fahrenheit.
This conversion is purely multiplicative because both units reduce through one joules-per-kilogram-kelvin basis, and temperature intervals are handled as fixed scale relationships with no offset term.
Common Conversion Values
| BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit (BTU/(lb·°F)) | Joules per kilogram-kelvin (J/(kg·K)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 418.68 |
| 0.5 | 2,093.4 |
| 1 | 4,186.8 |
| 2 | 8,373.6 |
| 4 | 16,747.2 |
| 10 | 41,868 |
| 100 | 418,680 |
| 1,000 | 4,186,800 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What result does this BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit to Joules per kilogram-kelvin page give for an input of 1?
For an input of 1 BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit, this page gives 4,186.8 Joules per kilogram-kelvin.
Does this BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit to Joules per kilogram-kelvin page use the fixed BTU, pound, and Fahrenheit-interval relationships?
Yes. BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit routes use fixed energy, mass, and temperature-interval relationships through one joules-per-kilogram-kelvin normalization path, so US and SI thermal-property values stay aligned across the page.
When would I convert btu per pound-degree fahrenheit to joules per kilogram-kelvin?
This route is useful when comparing SI thermal property data with US engineering or HVAC references that report specific heat in BTU per pound per degree Fahrenheit.
How do I reverse BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit to Joules per kilogram-kelvin?
Use the mirror Joules per kilogram-kelvin to BTU per pound-degree Fahrenheit route; it applies the inverse relationship with the same specific-heat-capacity assumptions.