Convert Kilocalorie to Electronvolt (kcaleV)

The kilocalorie (called Calorie on US food labels) measures dietary energy in nutrition worldwide.

2.611 × 10^22
1 kcal2.611 × 10^22 eVNIST · BIPM accuracy

Kilocalorie to Electronvolt Conversion Table

10 common values
KilocalorieElectronvolt
1 kcal2.611 × 10^22 eV
10 kcal2.611 × 10^23 eV
100 kcal2.611 × 10^24 eV
500 kcal1.306 × 10^25 eV
1,000 kcal2.611 × 10^25 eV
5,000 kcal1.306 × 10^26 eV
10,000 kcal2.611 × 10^26 eV
50,000 kcal1.306 × 10^27 eV
100,000 kcal2.611 × 10^27 eV
500,000 kcal1.306 × 10^28 eV

How to Convert Kilocalorie to Electronvolt Manually

Step by Step

Converting kilocalories to electronvolts is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.

  1. 1
    Take your value in kilocalories
    Start with the number of kilocalories (kcal) you want to convert.
  2. 2
    Multiply by 2.611 × 10^22
    The conversion factor from kcal to eV is 2.611 × 10^22. Multiply your value by this number.
  3. 3
    Read the result in electronvolts
    The result is your value in electronvolts (eV).
Practical Examples
1 kcal
equals
2.611 × 10^22 eV
5 kcal
equals
1.306 × 10^23 eV
10 kcal
equals
2.611 × 10^23 eV
25 kcal
equals
6.529 × 10^23 eV
100 kcal
equals
2.611 × 10^24 eV

Formula

Multiply the value in kilocalories by 2.611 × 10^22. For the reverse direction, multiply by 3.829 × 10^-23.

ForwardeV = kcal × 2.611 × 10^22
Reversekcal = eV × 3.829 × 10^-23
Example: 10 kcal × 2.611 × 10^22 = 2.611 × 10^23 eV

Tips

Use these in everyday conversions
  • 1 kcal = 4.184 kJ.
  • US "Calorie" (with capital C) = 1 kcal.
  • Apps and smartwatches track active energy in kcal.

Common Mistakes

Avoid these
  • Reading food "Calories" as gram calories — factor of 1000 off.
  • Treating all calorie values as comparable — macros (fat, protein, carb) differ in energy density.
  • Counting kcal without portion size leads to underestimates.

About Kilocalorie and Electronvolt

What is the Kilocalorie?

The kilocalorie equals 1,000 small calories or exactly 4.184 kilojoules and is the universal unit for measuring dietary energy in food. Confusingly, on US food labels and in popular usage, 'Calorie' (capital C) means kilocalorie — so a 200-Calorie cookie is actually 200,000 small calories, or 200 kcal. This convention dates to American chemist Wilbur Atwater's 19th-century nutrition research. Recommended daily intake is roughly 2,000 kcal for women and 2,500 kcal for men. The kilocalorie remains the everyday food-energy unit in the United States, while European labels show both kJ and kcal. Athletes track caloric burn during exercise in kcal: running burns about 100 kcal per mile. The kcal relates to the kilojoule (4.184 kJ = 1 kcal), the joule (1 kcal = 4,184 J), and the BTU (1 BTU ≈ 0.252 kcal). Marathon runners burn roughly 2,600 kcal during a 42-km race.

  • Nutrition labels worldwide
  • Diet and weight-management tracking
  • Dietetics and clinical nutrition
Real-world examples

Adult daily intake: ~2000 kcal. Banana: 90 kcal. Big Mac: 550 kcal. 30 min running: ~300 kcal burned.

What is the Electronvolt?

The electronvolt equals approximately 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ joules (a tiny amount of energy) and is the standard unit in atomic physics, particle physics, and semiconductor electronics. Defined as the energy gained by an electron accelerated through a potential difference of 1 volt, the eV is the natural scale for atomic and molecular energies. The energy required to ionize a hydrogen atom is 13.6 eV, the band gap of silicon (relevant for transistors and solar cells) is 1.12 eV, and visible light photons carry 1.6–3.3 eV per photon. Particle physicists routinely use MeV (million eV), GeV (billion eV), and TeV (trillion eV): the Large Hadron Collider accelerates protons to 6.5 TeV. The eV relates to the joule (1 eV ≈ 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ J), the kilojoule per mole (96.485 kJ/mol per eV), and atomic mass units via E = mc². It is the universal energy unit in physics literature.

  • Particle physics (TeV, GeV, MeV)
  • Atomic and molecular physics
  • Semiconductor band gaps
Real-world examples

Silicon band gap: 1.12 eV. Hydrogen ionization: 13.6 eV. LHC proton: 7 TeV. Photon wavelength 500 nm = 2.5 eV.

Learn About Both Units

Reference

What is the Kilocalorie?

Read the unit page →
Reference

What is the Electronvolt?

Read the unit page →

Kilocalorie to Electronvolt FAQ

5 questions
How many electronvolts in a kilocalorie?
One kilocalorie equals 2.611 × 10^22 electronvolts.
How do I convert kilocalories to electronvolts?
Multiply the kilocalorie value by 2.611 × 10^22 to get the equivalent in electronvolts.
What is 100 kilocalories in electronvolts?
100 kilocalories equals 2.611 × 10^24 electronvolts.
Is a kilocalorie bigger than a electronvolt?
Yes. 1 kilocalorie equals 2.611 × 10^22 electronvolts, so one kilocalorie is larger.
How to convert kilocalories to electronvolts without a calculator?
Multiply by 2.611 × 10^22 for a quick estimate; use a calculator for precise results.

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