To convert amp hours (Ah) to kilowatt hours (kWh), multiply the battery’s Ah rating by its voltage (V), then divide by 1,000: kWh = (Ah × V) / 1,000. For instance, a 100Ah 12V battery stores 1.2kWh (100 × 12 / 1,000). Voltage is critical—ignoring it leads to miscalculations, as energy capacity depends on both current and voltage.
How to Convert Ah to kWh: Formula and Calculator
Why is voltage essential for Ah-to-kWh conversions?
Amp hours alone reflect charge capacity, not energy. Voltage determines the work potential of electrons, so combining Ah and V calculates total watt-hours (Wh). Without voltage, you can’t quantify actual energy storage.
Think of Ah as the volume of water in a tank and voltage as the pressure—the energy (kWh) depends on both. Technically, a 200Ah 24V battery holds 4.8kWh (200 × 24 / 1,000), while a 200Ah 12V system only stores 2.4kWh. Pro Tip: Always verify the battery’s nominal voltage—using charge-state voltage (e.g., 13.8V for a “12V” battery) inflates kWh inaccurately. Transitioning to real-world applications, solar setups rely on this math to size battery banks. For example, a 5kW solar system needing 10kWh storage requires ~833Ah at 12V or 417Ah at 24V. Tables below compare kWh outputs for common configurations:
Ah | Voltage | kWh |
---|---|---|
100 | 12V | 1.2 |
200 | 24V | 4.8 |
300 | 48V | 14.4 |
How do lithium vs. lead-acid batteries affect kWh calculations?
Lithium batteries maintain stable voltage during discharge, while lead-acid voltage sags. This impacts usable kWh, as energy delivery depends on voltage consistency.
A 100Ah lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery at 12.8V delivers ~1.28kWh over 90% discharge. In contrast, a lead-acid battery with the same Ah rating might drop from 12.7V to 10.8V, yielding only ~1.1kWh usable energy. Practically speaking, lithium’s flat discharge curve ensures consistent kWh output, whereas lead-acid loses efficiency as voltage declines. For example, an RV using lithium batteries gains 15–20% more usable energy per charge cycle. Tables show capacity differences:
Chemistry | Ah | Usable kWh |
---|---|---|
LiFePO4 | 100 | 1.28 |
Lead-Acid | 100 | 0.9–1.1 |
What errors occur when converting Ah to kWh?
Common errors include omitting voltage, using incorrect voltage values, or ignoring battery chemistry effects. These mistakes skew kWh estimates by up to 50%.
If you assume a 48V golf cart battery is 12V, a 100Ah pack mistakenly becomes 1.2kWh instead of 4.8kWh—a 400% error! Beyond calculation blunders, temperature also matters. Lithium batteries lose ~3% capacity per 10°C below freezing, reducing practical kWh. For instance, a 10kWh LiFePO4 pack at -10°C effectively becomes 9.1kWh. Transitioning to solutions, always use manufacturer-stated voltage and Ah ratings taken at 20–25°C. Ever wondered why your solar calculator oversizes the battery bank? Blame voltage assumptions. A 24V system requires half the Ah of a 12V system for the same kWh, cutting costs and space.
Redway Battery Expert Insight
FAQs
No—voltage defines electrical potential. Ah × V calculates watt-hours, which convert to kWh. Guessing voltage risks massive errors.
Why do 48V systems have higher kWh per Ah?
kWh = Ah × V / 1,000. Higher voltage directly increases energy output. For example, 100Ah at 48V is 4.8kWh versus 1.2kWh at 12V.