Electronvolt (eV)
The electronvolt is used in atomic, nuclear, and quantum physics for very small energies.
History: the electronvolt arose in particle physics as the energy of an electron crossing one volt of potential difference.
Quickly convert electronvolts to BTU without lookup tables or manual math.
This page is focused on converting electronvolts to BTU. Type a number into the first field and the result appears immediately in the second field.
Example: 1 eV = 0 BTU. Conversion formula: result = value × 1.602176634E-19 / 1055.05585262.
Use this converter for everyday calculations, study notes, engineering checks, and quick value verification without installing a separate app.
The electronvolt is used in atomic, nuclear, and quantum physics for very small energies.
History: the electronvolt arose in particle physics as the energy of an electron crossing one volt of potential difference.
BTU is used in heat engineering, air conditioning, heating, and English-language engineering tables.
History: BTU began in British heat engineering as the heat required to warm a pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit.
Enter a value in the Electronvolt field. The converter applies the formula "result = value × 1.602176634E-19 / 1055.05585262" and immediately shows the result in BTU.
1 eV = 0 BTU.
Yes. Use the swap button or choose the reverse pair from the full conversion list.