Microampere to Watt per volt

μA

1 μA

W/V

0.000001 W/V

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Quick Reference Table (Microampere to Watt per volt)

Microampere (μA)Watt per volt (W/V)
10.000001
100.00001
500.00005
1000.0001
5000.0005
1,0000.001

About Microampere (μA)

The microampere (μA) equals one millionth of an ampere (10⁻⁶ A) and is the standard unit for quiescent and standby currents in battery-powered electronics. Operational amplifier input bias currents, photodiode outputs under dim light, and EEG scalp electrode signals all fall in the microampere range. Many modern microcontrollers in low-power run mode consume under 100 μA, enabling coin-cell operation for months. Analytical instruments such as pH meters and reference electrodes operate at microampere levels to avoid disturbing the solution being measured. Implantable cardiac pacemakers deliver stimulation pulses of several hundred microamperes.

A cardiac pacemaker delivers stimulation pulses of roughly 100–500 μA. A modern ARM microcontroller in active low-power mode draws around 50–200 μA.

About Watt per volt (W/V)

The watt per volt (W/V) equals one ampere, derived from the power relationship P = IV rearranged as I = P/V. A device consuming 60 W at 120 V draws 0.5 W/V = 0.5 A. The W/V form is most useful when calculating branch currents from known power ratings and supply voltages — for appliance load calculations, transformer secondary currents, or power budget analysis on a circuit board. Numerically identical to the ampere, it provides an alternative view emphasising the power-per-volt character of current and is common in power electronics and electrical installation design.

A 100 W light bulb on a 230 V supply draws approximately 0.43 W/V. A 60 W laptop adapter at 20 V delivers 3 W/V to the device.


Microampere – Frequently Asked Questions

A CR2032 coin cell has about 225 mAh capacity. At 10 μA continuous draw, it lasts roughly 225,000 / 10 = 22,500 hours — about 2.5 years. At 1 μA, theoretical life exceeds 25 years, though self-discharge limits practical life to about 10 years.

Not from shock — the perception threshold is about 500 μA (0.5 mA) for DC and 1,000 μA for AC at 60 Hz. However, microampere currents applied directly to the heart (e.g., through a catheter) can cause ventricular fibrillation at as little as 50–100 μA, which is why medical device safety standards are so strict.

A glass pH electrode has an internal resistance of 10–1,000 megaohms. Drawing more than a few microamperes would cause voltage drops across this resistance, shifting the reading. Modern pH meters use high-input-impedance amplifiers that draw under 1 μA to avoid disturbing the electrochemical potential being measured.

Quiescent current (Iq) is what an IC draws when powered on but doing nothing — no signal processing, no load driving. For battery-powered designs, low Iq is critical. A voltage regulator with 1 μA Iq wastes far less standby power than one with 100 μA, directly extending battery life in always-on devices.

Pacemakers use constant-current output stages that regulate pulse amplitude to within ±5 μA. The pulse is typically 100–500 μA for 0.4–1.5 ms, just enough to depolarise heart tissue and trigger a contraction. Modern devices automatically adjust the current to the minimum needed, conserving the battery for its 8–12 year design life.

Watt per volt – Frequently Asked Questions

When sizing circuits, electricians know the appliance power (watts from the nameplate) and the supply voltage (120 V or 230 V). Dividing watts by volts gives the current in amps — which is what determines wire gauge and breaker size. "1,800 W ÷ 120 V = 15 A, so I need a 20 A circuit" is daily electrician math.

No — product labels list watts, volts, and amps separately. The W/V expression lives in textbooks and engineering calculations. But every time you read "1,500 W, 120 V" on a space heater and mentally divide to get 12.5 A, you are computing watts per volt without calling it that.

Only approximately. For AC, real power (watts) = V × I × power factor. So I = W / (V × PF). A motor rated at 1,000 W with a power factor of 0.85 on 230 V actually draws 1,000 / (230 × 0.85) = 5.1 A, not the 4.35 A that simple W/V would suggest. Always account for power factor in AC circuits.

USB PD negotiates voltage levels (5 V, 9 V, 15 V, 20 V) and maximum power (up to 240 W). Dividing the negotiated power by voltage gives the cable current: 100 W at 20 V = 5 A, requiring a 5 A rated cable. At 5 V the same 100 W would need 20 A — which is why PD uses higher voltages.

From P = IV and V = IR, you get I = P/V = V/R = P^(1/2)/R^(1/2). The W/V form is just one of many equivalent expressions for current. Which one you use depends on what you know: power and voltage gives W/V, voltage and resistance gives V/R (Ohm's law directly).

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