Milliampere to Coulomb per second
mA
C/s
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (Milliampere to Coulomb per second)
| Milliampere (mA) | Coulomb per second (C/s) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.001 |
| 5 | 0.005 |
| 20 | 0.02 |
| 100 | 0.1 |
| 500 | 0.5 |
| 1,000 | 1 |
| 2,000 | 2 |
About Milliampere (mA)
The milliampere (mA) equals one thousandth of an ampere (10⁻³ A) and is the practical unit for most consumer electronics and lighting circuits. USB 2.0 ports supply up to 500 mA; USB-C Power Delivery can reach 5,000 mA (5 A). A standard 5 mm indicator LED operates at 10–20 mA; mid-power LED drivers supply 100–350 mA. Human perception of electric shock begins near 1 mA; currents above 10 mA cause involuntary muscle contraction, and above 100 mA can be lethal. Wireless sensors, earphones, and small motors typically draw single-digit to low-hundreds of milliamperes.
A USB 2.0 port provides up to 500 mA for charging. A standard 5 mm indicator LED operates at around 20 mA.
About Coulomb per second (C/s)
The coulomb per second (C/s) is a derived SI expression for electric current that makes the physical definition explicit: one ampere is exactly one coulomb of charge passing a point per second. The relationship I = Q/t links current (A), charge (C), and time (s). While C/s and A are numerically identical and dimensionally equivalent, the C/s form appears in physics textbooks and dimensional analyses where the derivation from charge and time is instructive rather than treating the ampere as primitive. In calculations tracking charge accumulation — capacitor discharge, electroplating, or battery coulomb-counting — expressing current in C/s clarifies the unit chain.
A capacitor delivering 1 C of charge over 1 second discharges at exactly 1 C/s = 1 A. A 500 mA USB charger transfers 0.5 C of charge each second.
Milliampere – Frequently Asked Questions
How many milliamps is dangerous to a human?
The danger thresholds for 50/60 Hz AC are roughly: 1 mA (tingling), 10–20 mA (muscle lock — you cannot let go), 75–100 mA (ventricular fibrillation), and 200+ mA (cardiac arrest and burns). DC is somewhat less dangerous at the same current. Duration matters enormously — 100 mA for 1 second is more lethal than 100 mA for 10 ms.
Why is my phone charger rated in milliamps when it charges at 2 amps?
Battery capacity is rated in milliampere-hours (mAh), not milliamps. A 4,000 mAh battery holds 4,000 mA for one hour (or 2,000 mA for two hours). The charger delivers 2 A (2,000 mA) of current, and it takes about 2 hours to fill that 4,000 mAh battery from empty.
What is the milliamp draw of common household items?
A wireless earbud draws 5–15 mA during playback. A TV remote uses about 10 mA when pressing a button. An LED nightlight consumes 20–50 mA. A smoke detector in standby draws 10–30 μA (0.01–0.03 mA) — so low it runs on a 9V battery for years.
Why do LED specifications always mention 20 mA?
Standard 5 mm indicator LEDs were designed around a 20 mA operating point — bright enough to see clearly, low enough to avoid overheating the tiny die. All datasheet specs (luminous intensity, color, forward voltage) are measured at this "test current." High-power LEDs use 350 mA or 700 mA as their reference instead.
How does milliamp-hour (mAh) relate to milliamp (mA)?
Milliamp-hours measure charge capacity; milliamps measure current flow rate. A 2,000 mAh battery can deliver 2,000 mA for 1 hour, or 200 mA for 10 hours, or 20 mA for 100 hours — current times time equals capacity. Dividing mAh by mA gives approximate runtime in hours.
Coulomb per second – Frequently Asked Questions
Why bother writing coulombs per second when it is just amperes?
In dimensional analysis and physics derivations, C/s makes the relationship between charge and current explicit. When you are computing how much silver an electroplating bath deposits (Faraday's law), writing current as C/s reminds you that charge = current × time, which directly gives the mass deposited.
How many electrons is one coulomb?
One coulomb is approximately 6.242 × 10¹⁸ electrons — about 6.2 quintillion. At 1 C/s (1 A), that many electrons pass a point in your wire every single second. A USB cable charging your phone at 2 A carries 12.5 quintillion electrons per second. The numbers are staggering but the charges are tiny.
Is coulombs per second used in any real-world instrument or specification?
Not directly — every instrument reads in amperes or milliamperes. But coulomb-counting battery fuel gauges internally track charge in coulombs by integrating current over time: ∫I dt. The C/s framing appears in battery management system firmware and electrochemistry literature where charge balance matters.
How does Faraday's law of electrolysis use coulombs to predict metal deposition?
Faraday discovered that the mass of metal deposited at an electrode is directly proportional to the total charge passed (in coulombs). For silver, 107.87 grams deposit per 96,485 C (one Faraday). So a 10 A electroplating bath running for 1 hour passes 36,000 C and deposits about 40 g of silver. Thinking in C/s makes the calculation: current × time × atomic weight / (valence × 96,485).
How does coulomb counting work in battery management systems?
A shunt resistor or Hall sensor continuously measures current flowing in and out of the battery. The BMS integrates this current over time (summing C/s × Δt) to track net charge. Drift and measurement errors accumulate, so smart BMS designs periodically recalibrate against voltage-based state-of-charge estimates.