Joule to British Thermal Units

J

1 J

BTU

0.00094781712033128435 BTU

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Quick Reference Table (Joule to British Thermal Units)

Joule (J)British Thermal Units (BTU)
10.00094781712033128435
100.00947817120331284346
1000.09478171203312843459
1,0000.94781712033128434588
4,1843.96566683146609370318
3,600,0003,412.1416331926236451835

About Joule (J)

The joule (J) is the SI unit of energy, defined as the work done when a force of one newton displaces an object one meter in the direction of the force. It is also the energy dissipated as heat when one ampere flows through one ohm of resistance for one second. The joule underpins all other energy units in science: calories, watt-hours, and electron volts are all defined relative to it. At human scale, one joule is a small quantity — lifting a 100 g apple by one meter requires about one joule.

Lifting a medium apple (100 g) by 1 meter requires about 1 J. A typical sneeze releases roughly 1 J of kinetic energy.

Etymology: Named after English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818–1889), who experimentally established the mechanical equivalent of heat, demonstrating that work and heat are interconvertible forms of the same quantity.

About British Thermal Units (BTU)

The British thermal unit (BTU) is the amount of heat required to raise one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit at its maximum density (~39°F). One BTU equals approximately 1,055 joules. It remains the dominant unit for heating and cooling equipment in the United States — air conditioners, furnaces, heat pumps, and water heaters are all rated in BTU or BTU/hour. Natural gas prices in the US are quoted in dollars per million BTU (MMBtu).

A standard residential air conditioner is rated at 10,000–24,000 BTU/hour. Burning one kitchen match releases roughly 1 BTU of heat.

Etymology: Developed in the 19th century alongside the rise of steam engineering in Britain and the US, standardized as the energy needed to raise one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit. The "British" name stuck even as the UK adopted SI units.


Joule – Frequently Asked Questions

Joule was the first to prove experimentally that heat and mechanical work are the same thing — he measured the temperature rise of water churned by a falling weight. That 1845 brewery-funded experiment settled a centuries-old debate and earned the SI energy unit his name in 1889, well before units were named after Einstein or Feynman.

Exactly 3,600,000 joules. A kilowatt-hour is simply 1,000 watts sustained for 3,600 seconds. Utilities chose kWh because quoting home energy use in megajoules (e.g., "your fridge used 129.6 MJ this month") would confuse most customers.

Lifting a medium apple one meter off the ground takes roughly 1 J. Clicking a computer mouse uses about 1.5 mJ (0.0015 J), a heartbeat expends ~1 J, and a single typed keystroke on a mechanical keyboard is around 10–40 mJ. A joule is a surprisingly tiny amount of energy at human scale.

A joule measures total energy; a watt measures the rate of energy flow (power). One watt equals one joule per second. A 60 W lightbulb consumes 60 joules every second — leave it on for an hour and it uses 216,000 J (0.06 kWh). Think of joules as liters of water and watts as the flow rate of the tap.

One thermochemical calorie equals exactly 4.184 joules. The "calorie" on food labels is actually a kilocalorie (4,184 J). So a 2,000-Calorie daily diet supplies about 8.4 million joules — enough energy to lift a small car roughly 850 meters straight up, if your body were 100% efficient (it is not).

British Thermal Units – Frequently Asked Questions

US HVAC manufacturers adopted BTU/hour because heating and cooling equipment historically measured heat removal or addition, not electrical input. A 12,000 BTU/h window unit removes 12,000 BTU of heat per hour from a room — that figure directly tells you the cooling capacity. Watts measure electrical power consumed, which is less due to the efficiency (EER) of the unit. The convention stuck because the entire US supply chain uses it.

A rough rule of thumb is 20 BTU per square foot of living space in a temperate climate. A 300 sq ft bedroom needs about 6,000 BTU/h; a 1,500 sq ft open-plan living area needs roughly 30,000 BTU/h. Actual requirements vary with insulation, ceiling height, climate zone, and window area. Poorly insulated older homes may need 30–40 BTU per square foot.

BTU is a unit of energy (heat); BTU/h is a unit of power (rate of heat flow). When an air conditioner is labelled "12,000 BTU," the industry shorthand actually means 12,000 BTU per hour. Technically one BTU equals about 1,055 joules of energy, while 1 BTU/h equals about 0.293 watts. The distinction matters for energy calculations but is routinely blurred in product marketing.

US natural gas is priced in dollars per million BTU (MMBtu) at the wholesale level and dollars per therm (100,000 BTU) on residential bills. One cubic foot of pipeline gas contains roughly 1,020 BTU. The Henry Hub benchmark price of $2.50/MMBtu means each therm costs about $0.25 wholesale — residential prices are higher after delivery and utility markups.

The UK metricated energy units in the 1970s–1990s, switching gas billing from therms (100,000 BTU) to kilowatt-hours and scientific work to joules. The "British" in BTU reflects 19th-century British steam engineering origins, not current usage. Today the BTU is almost exclusively an American unit, used for HVAC, gas pricing, and appliance ratings across the US.

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