How To Convert Joule to Electronvolt
Formula for 1 Joule: 1 J = 6.241509074460763 × 1018 eV
Example: Convert 0.25 J to eV.
0.25 × 6.241509074460763 × 1018 = 1.5603772686151907 × 1018 eV
To do it by hand, you multiply the energy in joules by a fixed number.
If your joule value is very small or very large, write it in scientific notation first.
Then multiply the front numbers, and add the powers of 10.
Quick Answer
1 Joule = 6.241509074460763 × 1018 Electronvolt
- 0.1 J = 6.241509074460763 × 1017 eV
- 2 J = 1.2483018148921526 × 1019 eV
- 10 J = 6.241509074460763 × 1019 eV
Conversion Formula
Electronvolt (eV) = Joule (J) ÷ 1.602176634 × 10^-19 Electronvolt (eV) = Joule (J) × 6.241509074460763 × 10^18
The key idea is that 1 electronvolt is exactly 1.602176634 × 10-19 joule, based on the fixed SI value of the elementary charge. Because that value is exact, converting between J and eV is stable and repeatable.
In simple words, eV is a much smaller energy unit than J, so 1 J becomes a very large number of eV.
- Write your value in joules (J).
- Multiply it by 6.241509074460763 × 1018.
- Keep the unit as eV (electronvolt).
Joule
A Joule is the SI unit of energy, used for heat, work, and electricity. Its symbol is J.
It is named after James Prescott Joule, a scientist who studied energy and heat in the 1800s. The joule became a standard unit as modern physics and the SI system were developed.
- Electric energy on power bills and in batteries (in J or kJ)
- Food energy in science classes (often kJ)
- Mechanical work, like lifting or pushing objects
- Heat and thermal experiments in labs
- Engineering calculations for motors and machines
Electronvolt
An Electronvolt is a small unit of energy used in atomic and particle physics. Its symbol is eV.
It comes from the energy an electron gains when it moves through an electric potential of 1 volt. The unit became common as scientists started measuring energies of electrons, atoms, and radiation.
- Photon energy in light, X rays, and gamma rays
- Particle energies in accelerators (keV, MeV, GeV)
- Energy levels inside atoms and molecules
- Semiconductor band gaps in electronics
- Nuclear and radiation measurements in science and medicine
Is this Conversion of Joule To Electronvolt Accurate?
Yes. This conversion is based on the SI definition of the electronvolt, which uses the exact value of the elementary charge (1.602176634 × 10-19 coulomb). Because the joule and volt are SI units, the J to eV relationship is fixed and consistent across textbooks, labs, and research work.
Our converter uses this exact definition and the matching reciprocal factor (6.241509074460763 × 1018 eV per J) for reliable results. For how we choose and verify constants, see our accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Joule is common in engineering, while electronvolt is common in physics. Here are realistic conversions that help you switch between these worlds.
- Single electron at 5 eV: If a measurement shows 8.01088317 × 10-19 J for an electron, that equals (8.01088317 × 10-19) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 5 eV.
- 1 keV X ray scale: A detector reading of 1.602176634 × 10-16 J corresponds to (1.602176634 × 10-16) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 1000 eV (1 keV).
- CT like photon energy: An energy packet of 9.613059804 × 10-15 J converts to (9.613059804 × 10-15) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 60000 eV (60 keV).
- Chemical bond scale: A bond energy of 4.005441585 × 10-19 J equals (4.005441585 × 10-19) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 2.5 eV.
- Hydrogen atom ionization scale: If an energy jump is 2.17896022224 × 10-18 J, then it is (2.17896022224 × 10-18) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 13.6 eV.
- Micro energy in lab sensors: A tiny energy of 1 × 10-12 J equals (1 × 10-12) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 6.241509074460763 × 106 eV (about 6.24 MeV).
- Small mechanical energy: A motion energy of 1 × 10-6 J equals (1 × 10-6) × (6.241509074460763 × 1018) = 6.241509074460763 × 1012 eV (about 6.24 TeV).
Quick Tips
- Use this shortcut: eV = J × 6.241509074460763 × 1018.
- Remember why the number is huge, 1 eV is extremely small compared to 1 J.
- If your joules are written as 10-n, your eV result will usually be 1018-n times the front number.
- For quick estimates, you can use 6.24 × 1018 eV per J, then refine with the full factor if needed.
- When comparing particle energies, convert joules to eV, then rewrite as keV, MeV, or GeV.
- Keep track of powers of 10, most mistakes happen there.