Kirchhoff's Law

Volt (V)

Volt definition

Volt is the electrical unit of voltage or potential difference (symbol: V).
One Volt is defined as energy consumption of one joule per electric charge of one coulomb.
1V = 1J/C
One volt is equal to current of 1 amp times resistance of 1 ohm:
1V = 1A · 1Ω

Alessandro Volta

The Volt unit is named after Alessandro Volta, an Italian physicist who invented an electric battery.

Volt subunits and conversion table

name symbol conversion example
microvolt μV 1μV = 10-6V V = 30μV
millivolt mV 1mV = 10-3V V = 5mV
volt V
-
V = 10V
kilovolt kV 1kV = 103V V = 2kV
megavolt MV 1MV = 106V V = 5MV

Volts to watts conversion

The power in watts (W) is equal to the voltage in volts (V) times the current in amps (A):
watts (W) = volts (V) × amps (A)

Volts to joules conversion

The energy in joules (J) is equal to the voltage in volts (V) times the electric charge in coulombs (C):
joules (J) = volts (V) × coulombs (C)

Volts to amps conversion

The current in amps (A) is equal to the voltage in volts (V) divided by the resistance in ohms (Ω):
amps (A) = volts (V) / ohms(Ω)
The current in amps (A) is equal to the power in watts (W) divided by the voltage in volts (V):
amps (A) = watts (W) / volts (V)

Volts to electron-volts conversion

The energy in electronvolts (eV) is equal to the potential difference or voltage in volts (V) times the electric charge in electron charges (e):
electronvolts (eV) = volts (V) × electron-charge (e)
                             = volts (V) × 1.602176e-19 coulombs (C)


See also

  • Voltage
  • Watt
  • Ampere (amp)
  • Ohm
  • How to convert volts to watts
  • Volts to watts calculator
  • Electric power
  • Electrical current
  • Electronics units
  • Power conversion
  • Energy conversion