Kilocalorie (nutritional) to Kilocalorie (th)

kcal

1 kcal

kcal (th)

1.00066921606118546845 kcal (th)

Conversion History

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1 kcal (Kilocalorie (nutritional)) → 1.00066921606118546845 kcal (th) (Kilocalorie (th))

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Quick Reference Table (Kilocalorie (nutritional) to Kilocalorie (th))

Kilocalorie (nutritional) (kcal)Kilocalorie (th) (kcal (th))
8080.0535372848948374761
200200.13384321223709369025
500500.33460803059273422562
1,0001,000.66921606118546845124
1,6001,601.07074569789674952199
2,0002,001.33843212237093690249
2,5002,501.67304015296367112811

About Kilocalorie (nutritional) (kcal)

The nutritional kilocalorie (kcal) is equal to 4,186.8 joules (the International Table definition) and is the practical energy unit for human nutrition and dietetics. In everyday speech, this is what most people mean by "calorie" — the unit shown on food packaging in the EU, UK, and many other countries. Daily energy intake recommendations, exercise energy expenditure, and basal metabolic rate are all expressed in kcal. The difference between kcal th (4,184 J) and kcal nutritional (4,186.8 J) is 0.067% — irrelevant for dietary purposes.

A slice of bread contains about 80 kcal. The average adult needs 1,600–2,500 kcal/day depending on sex, age, and activity level.

About Kilocalorie (th) (kcal (th))

A thermochemical kilocalorie (kcal th) equals 4,184 joules — one thousand thermochemical calories. It is used in physical chemistry and biochemistry for expressing heats of reaction, bond dissociation energies, and metabolic energy yields. Biochemistry textbooks routinely express the energy yield of ATP hydrolysis (~7.3 kcal/mol) and glucose oxidation (~686 kcal/mol) in this unit. It differs from the nutritional kilocalorie by 0.07% — negligible in practice but important in precise thermochemical work.

Complete oxidation of one mole of glucose yields approximately 686 kcal (th). The heat of combustion of ethanol is about 327 kcal (th) per mole.


Kilocalorie (nutritional) – Frequently Asked Questions

Most weight-loss guidelines recommend a deficit of 500 kcal/day below your maintenance level, which typically means 1,200–1,800 kcal/day for most adults. A 500 kcal/day deficit yields roughly 0.45 kg (1 lb) of fat loss per week, since one kilogram of body fat stores about 7,700 kcal. Going below 1,200 kcal/day is generally not recommended without medical supervision.

Almond cell walls are rigid and resist digestion — about 20% of the fat in whole almonds passes through the gut unabsorbed. A USDA study found that almonds provide ~129 kcal per 28 g serving, not the 170 kcal on the label. Walnuts and pistachios show similar discrepancies of 5–20%. Food labels use standard Atwater factors that assume full digestibility, which overestimates usable energy for structurally intact whole foods like nuts, seeds, and legumes.

The Atwater system assigns 9 kcal per gram of fat, 4 kcal per gram of protein, and 4 kcal per gram of carbohydrate. Alcohol provides 7 kcal/g. These rounded values have been the basis of food labeling since the 1890s. Actual digestibility varies — fiber-rich carbohydrates yield fewer usable kcal because the body cannot fully break them down.

A marathon (42.195 km) burns approximately 2,200–3,200 kcal depending on body weight, pace, and efficiency. A 70 kg runner typically burns about 2,600 kcal; an 85 kg runner about 3,100 kcal. That is roughly equivalent to 35 bananas or 13 slices of pizza. Elite runners complete the distance in about 2 hours, so their metabolic rate during the race exceeds 1,300 kcal/hour.

The International Table calorie (4.1868 J) was adopted by the Fifth International Conference on Properties of Steam in 1956 and became the standard for engineering and nutrition. The thermochemical calorie (4.184 J) was standardized earlier for chemistry. Nutritionists chose the IT value because food energy intersects more with engineering standards (steam tables, heating) than pure chemistry. The 0.07% difference is negligible for dietary purposes.

Kilocalorie (th) – Frequently Asked Questions

Most foundational biochemical data — ATP hydrolysis (~7.3 kcal/mol), glucose oxidation (~686 kcal/mol), amino acid combustion values — were measured and published in kcal th before SI adoption. Rewriting decades of literature, lecture notes, and exam banks to kJ would introduce conversion errors and confusion. The field maintains kcal th by convention while acknowledging SI equivalents.

The standard free energy change (ΔG°) for ATP → ADP + Pi is approximately −7.3 kcal th/mol (−30.5 kJ/mol). Under actual cellular conditions, the value is closer to −12 to −14 kcal/mol because reactant and product concentrations differ from standard state. This energy drives muscle contraction, nerve impulses, protein synthesis, and virtually every energy-requiring process in living cells.

The classic Atwater factors (4 kcal/g carb, 4 kcal/g protein, 9 kcal/g fat) are averages from 19th-century bomb calorimetry, adjusted for digestibility. They can be off by 5–25% for specific foods. Almonds deliver ~20% fewer usable calories than labels claim because cell walls trap some fat from digestion. High-fiber foods also overcount. The FDA allows ±20% tolerance on label accuracy, so a "200 kcal" bar could legally contain 160–240 kcal.

Complete aerobic oxidation of one mole of glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆) releases approximately 686 kcal th (2,870 kJ). The human body captures about 38–40% of this in ATP; the rest dissipates as body heat. This is why exercise makes you warm — over half the food energy your muscles consume is released as thermal energy rather than mechanical work.

Fat molecules are highly reduced — their carbon atoms are bonded mostly to hydrogen, with very little oxygen. Oxidising them releases maximum energy because every C-H bond is converted to C=O and O-H bonds. Carbohydrates are already partially oxidised (they contain oxygen in their structure), so less additional oxidation is possible. Gram for gram, fat stores 2.25× more energy, which is why evolution favored fat as the body's long-term energy reserve — it packs the most kcal per gram of tissue weight.

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