Table of Contents
kW to Amp Calculator - Convert Kilowatts to Current
15kW motor at 400V, PF=0.85 = $(15 \times 1000) / (1.732 \times 400 \times 0.85) = 25.5 amps
Introduction
Converting kilowatts (kW) to amperes (A) is one of the most essential calculations in electrical engineering. Whether you're an electrician sizing a motor circuit, an engineer designing a distribution panel, or a facility manager planning an equipment upgrade, understanding kW to amp conversion ensures your electrical system operates safely and efficiently.
When sizing electrical infrastructure—selecting wire gauges, circuit breakers, and protective devices—the critical question is always: how much current will the load draw? Equipment specifications often list power in kilowatts, but the electrical infrastructure must be designed for current in amperes.
Why This Conversion Matters
Motor nameplates show power ratings in kW or horsepower, but you need current values to select the right cable, size the circuit breaker, and coordinate protection. A 15 kW motor at 400V draws very different current than the same motor at 480V.
The power factor determines whether that current is 25A or 30A. Every conductor, every breaker, every contactor in the motor circuit depends on accurate kW-to-amp conversion. Get it wrong, and you face nuisance tripping, overheated cables, or fire hazards from undersized conductors.
The Fundamental Challenge
The relationship between kilowatts and amperes involves voltage and power factor, both of which can vary significantly. A 22 kW load draws 32A at 400V with 0.9 power factor, but 44A at 230V with 0.85 power factor.
Three-phase calculations require the factor to account for phase relationships. Motor starting currents can reach 5-8 times the running current. This demands properly coordinated protection. This guide addresses these variables systematically to ensure safe, code-compliant installations.
What You'll Learn
This guide provides complete kW-to-amp conversion methodology for all electrical systems. You'll master the formulas for DC, AC single-phase, and AC three-phase systems per IEC 60034-1 motor standards and NEC Article 430 motor circuit requirements.
Practical examples demonstrate conductor sizing, circuit breaker selection, and safety factor application. Reference tables provide standard motor currents, typical power factors, and code-required multipliers for different installation scenarios.
Quick Answer: How to Convert kW to Amps
Convert power (kilowatts) to current (amps) by dividing power by voltage. For AC systems, also divide by power factor.
Conversion Formulas
| System Type | Formula | Application |
|---|---|---|
| DC | Batteries, solar, DC motors | |
| AC Single-Phase | Residential loads | |
| AC Three-Phase | Industrial motors |
Where:
- = Current (A)
- = Electrical power (kW)
- = Voltage (V)
- = Wattage factor
Worked Example
Reference Table
| Parameter | Typical Range | Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Power Factor (Motors) | 0.85-0.90 | Typical |
| Power Factor (Resistive Loads) | 1.0 | Unity |
| Conductor Sizing Factor | 125% of FLA | NEC 430.22 |
| Circuit Breaker Sizing (Motors) | 1.25-2.5 × FLA | NEC 430.52 |
| Three-Phase Factor (√3) | 1.732 | Mathematical constant |
Key Standards
IEC 60034-1: Specifies motor current ratings. NEC 430.22: Requires conductor capacity ≥ 125% of full-load current. NEC 430.52: Circuit breaker sizing for motors requires 1.25-2.5 × full-load amperage depending on starting method.
kW vs Amps: Understanding the Core Difference
Kilowatts and amperes measure fundamentally different aspects of electrical systems. Kilowatts measure the rate of energy consumption—how much work the electrical system performs per second. Amperes measure the flow of electrons through a conductor—the actual electrical current.
Think of it like water flowing through a pipe. Kilowatts represent the useful work being done (like turning a pump). Amperes represent the volume of water flowing through the pipe. You need both measurements to design the system properly.
For DC systems, the relationship is straightforward: power equals voltage times current. For AC systems, the relationship becomes more complex because current and voltage don't always peak at the same time. This phase difference, expressed as power factor, affects how much current flows for a given power output.
Industrial motors typically operate with power factors between 0.85 and 0.90. This means a motor uses more current than the simple power-voltage relationship would suggest. A 15 kW motor doesn't draw 15,000 watts divided by voltage—it draws that amount divided by voltage AND power factor. Understanding this distinction prevents undersizing conductors and protection devices.
Understanding kW and Amperes
Kilowatt (kW)
A kilowatt is a unit of load equal to 1000 watts. Understanding the relationship between watts and kilowatts is fundamental for electrical calculations.
Key Points:
- 1 kW = 1000 W
- Represents real energy consumption
- Common for motors and large loads
- Used in energy billing and energy consumption analysis
Current (A)
Amperage is the flow of electric charge, measured in amperes (A).
Key Points:
- Measured in amperes (A)
- Determines conductor size
- Affects protection device rating
- Causes potential drop
Voltage (V)
Electrical potential is the electrical potential difference. Understanding Ohm's Law helps explain the relationship between V value, electrical flow, and resistance in electrical circuits.
Key Points:
- Standard voltages: 120V, 230V, 400V, 480V
- Affects amp magnitude
- Higher electric tension = lower electric current for same electrical power
- Determines arrangement efficiency
- See our volt level drop calculator guide for mechanism design considerations
The Formulas
DC Current Formula
For direct I value (DC) systems:
Or simplified:
Where:
- I(A) = Amperage in amperes
- P(kW) = Wattage in kilowatts
- V(V) = Electrical potential in volts
AC Single-Phase Current Formula
For alternating electrical flow single-phase systems:
Where:
- PF = Load factor (0 to 1) - Learn more about capacity factor correction to improve installation efficiency
AC Three-Phase Current Formula (Line-to-Line)
For three-phase systems with line-to-line V value:
Where:
- = Line-to-line electric tension
- (three-phase factor)
AC Three-Phase Current Formula (Line-to-Neutral)
For three-phase systems with line-to-neutral volt level:
Where:
- = Line-to-neutral potential
Step-by-Step Calculations
Example 1: DC Current from kW
Problem: A DC electric motor consumes 5 kW at 240 V. Compute the amp.
Solution:
-
Identify equipment type: DC
-
Given values:
- Electrical power (P) = 5 kW
- Electrical potential (V) = 240 V
-
Apply DC formula:
-
Result: The electric current is approximately 20.8 A.
Example 2: AC Single-Phase Current from kW
Problem: A single-phase machine consumes 3.5 kW at 230 V with 0.88 wattage factor. Find the I value.
Solution:
-
Identify infrastructure type: AC Single-Phase
-
Given values:
- Load (P) = 3.5 kW
- V value (V) = 230 V
- Capacity Factor (PF) = 0.88
-
Apply AC single-phase formula:
-
Result: The amperage is approximately 17.3 A.
Example 3: AC Three-Phase Current from kW
Problem: A three-phase drive unit consumes 15 kW at 400 V line-to-line with 0.85 energy factor. Evaluate the electrical flow.
Solution:
-
Identify setup type: AC Three-Phase
-
Given values:
- Electrical power (P) = 15 kW
- Electric tension () = 400 V
- Wattage Factor (PF) = 0.85
-
Apply three-phase formula:
Substituting values:
-
Result: The amp is approximately 25.5 A.
Practical Examples
Example 4: Industrial Motor
Scenario: A 22 kW three-phase load unit operates at 400 V with 0.89 capacity factor. What electric current does it draw?
Given:
- Energy = 22 kW
- Volt level (LL) = 400 V
- Electrical power Factor = 0.89
Determination:
Result: The motor unit draws approximately 35.7 A.
Circuit Protection: Use a 40 A circuit breaker (next standard size up). For detailed fault I value analysis, see our short circuit evaluation guide.
Conductor Selection: Based on continuous load requirements and ambient temperature derating factors, select appropriate cable size using our cable sizing guide.
Example 5: Heating Element
Scenario: A 7.5 kW warming element operates at 230 V single-phase with unity wattage factor. Measure the amperage.
Given:
- Load = 7.5 kW
- Potential = 230 V
- Capacity Factor = 1.0 (resistive)
Assessment:
Result: The heat system element draws approximately 32.6 A. For resistive loads like thermal system elements, energy factor is unity (1.0), simplifying electrical flow calculations.
Conductor Size: Use 6 mm2 copper electrical line (rated for 41 A). For detailed conductor ampacity tables and installation methods, refer to our wiring sizing guide.
Example 6: EV Charger
Scenario: An electric vehicle charger rated at 11 kW operates at 230 V single-phase. Assess the amp requirement.
Given:
- Electrical power = 11 kW
- Electrical potential = 230 V
- Wattage Factor = 1.0 (resistive)
Solution:
Result: The charger requires approximately 47.8 A.
Installation: Use a dedicated 50 A circuit with appropriate protection.
System Types
DC Systems
Characteristics:
- Constant V value and electric current
- No load factor (PF = 1.0)
- Simple computation using Ohm's Law principles
- Common in renewable energy
Formula:
Applications:
- Solar systems and solar collector integration
- Battery storage and battery life calculations
- DC fast charging for electric vehicles
- Industrial DC drives and variable speed applications
AC Single-Phase Systems
Characteristics:
- Alternating I value
- Capacity factor dependent
- Residential and light commercial
- 120V or 230V standard
Formula:
Applications:
- Residential loads
- Small motors (<3 kW)
- Furnace system elements
- Office equipment
AC Three-Phase Systems
Characteristics:
- Three alternating currents (120^ phase separation)
- More efficient for large loads - see kVA to amp calculations
- Industrial and commercial applications
- 380V, 400V, or 480V standard voltages
Formula:
Applications:
- Industrial motors (>3 kW) - see electric motor sizing considerations
- Large HVAC systems including cooling loads
- Manufacturing equipment and horsepower conversions
- Distribution systems and transformer sizing
Motor Current Ratings
Typical Motor Currents
| Machine Energy | Electric tension | Amperage () |
|---|---|---|
| 0.75 kW | 230V 1 | 4.5 A |
| 1.5 kW | 230V 1 | 9.1 A |
| 2.2 kW | 230V 1 | 13.4 A |
| 4 kW | 400V 3 | 6.8 A |
| 7.5 kW | 400V 3 | 12.7 A |
| 11 kW | 400V 3 | 18.6 A |
| 15 kW | 400V 3 | 25.4 A |
| 22 kW | 400V 3 | 37.2 A |
| 30 kW | 400V 3 | 50.7 A |
Note: Actual currents may vary based on drive unit performance and actual electrical power factor.
Starting Current
Important: Wattage unit starting electrical flow can be 5-8 times the full load amp! This inrush electric current must be considered when sizing circuit breakers and ensuring adequate short-circuit protection.
| Motor unit Type | Starting I value |
|---|---|
| Direct-On-Line | Rated |
| Star-Delta | Rated |
| Soft Starter | Rated |
| VFD | Rated |
Safety
Safety Critical: All electrical arrangement designs must be reviewed by licensed professionals and approved by local authorities before installation.
Factors
For Conductor Sizing:
- Continuous loads: Amperage 1.25
- Electric motor loads: Electrical flow 1.25
- Non-continuous: Amp 1.0
For Circuit Breaker Sizing:
- Motors: 1.15 to 2.5× Full Load Electric current (see short circuit protection)
- General loads: 1.25× Continuous Load
- Always verify against volt level drop limits for long wire runs
Our calculations follow industry best practices and have been validated against real-world scenarios.
Real-World Application: Motor Circuit Design
Consider a typical industrial scenario: installing a new 22 kW pump motor in a manufacturing facility. The motor operates at 400V three-phase with a power factor of 0.87 and efficiency of 0.91. Here's how the kW-to-amp conversion guides every design decision.
First, calculate the full-load current. Using the three-phase formula with power factor and efficiency: the motor draws approximately 40.5 amperes during normal operation. This baseline current determines all downstream component selections.
For conductor sizing, multiply the full-load current by 1.25 per NEC 430.22. This gives 50.6 amperes minimum conductor capacity. Select 10 mm² copper cable rated for 57 amperes, which provides adequate margin for temperature derating and future load growth.
Circuit breaker selection requires considering starting current. For direct-on-line starting, the motor may draw 6-8 times full-load current momentarily. A 100-ampere motor-rated circuit breaker (Type D curve) handles the inrush without nuisance tripping while providing short-circuit protection.
The contactor must handle both running current and starting duty. Select a contactor rated for AC-3 duty at the motor's full-load current with appropriate making and breaking capacity for the expected duty cycle.
This systematic approach—starting with accurate kW-to-amp conversion and applying appropriate safety factors—ensures reliable motor operation and code compliance.
Conclusion
Converting kilowatts to amperes is essential for motor circuit design, circuit breaker sizing, conductor selection, load analysis, and electrical safety.
Understanding the formulas for DC, single-phase, and three-phase systems ensures proper electrical system design and safe operation. The conversion requires different formulas based on system type: DC uses simple division, AC single-phase includes power factor, and AC three-phase includes both power factor and the factor.
Always apply appropriate safety factors per electrical codes when sizing conductors and circuit breakers.
Export as PDF — Generate professional reports for documentation, client presentations, or permit submissions.
Equipment Sizing Comparison
| Equipment Type | Typical Energy Range | Electrical potential | Amp Range | Sizing Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Residential HVAC | 3-5 kW | 208-240V | 12-25 A | Single-phase, seasonal load |
| Commercial Chillers | 50-500 kW | 480V | 60-600 A | Three-phase, continuous |
| Industrial Motors | 10-200 kW | 380-480V | 15-300 A | High starting electric current, VFD |
| EV Chargers (Level 2) | 7-19 kW | 208-240V | 30-80 A | Dedicated circuit required |
| Data Center UPS | 100-1000 kW | 480V | 120-1200 A | Redundancy, electrical power quality |
Key Selection Factors:
- Load Type: Resistive (PF=1.0), Inductive (PF=0.7-0.9), or Capacitive
- Operating Pattern: Continuous vs intermittent duty
- Starting Requirements: Direct-on-line vs soft-start vs VFD
- Ambient Conditions: Degree derating factors per NEC 310.15(B)
- Future Expansion: Size for 125% of continuous load minimum
Voltage Impact Comparison
Understanding how V value selection affects I value draw for the same wattage load:
| Load Load | Arrangement Type | Electric tension | Calculated Amperage | Conductor Size | Volt level Drop (100m) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 kW | Single-Phase | 120V | 125.0 A | 50 mm² | 7.5% ✘ |
| 15 kW | Single-Phase | 230V | 65.2 A | 16 mm² | 3.9% ⚠️ |
| 15 kW | Three-Phase | 208V | 41.6 A | 10 mm² | 2.0% ✔ |
| 15 kW | Three-Phase | 400V | 21.7 A | 4 mm² | 1.0% ✔ |
| 15 kW | Three-Phase | 480V | 18.1 A | 2.5 mm² | 0.7% ✔ |
Key Insights (assumes PF=1.0 for comparison):
- Electrical flow reduction: 480V draws 85% less amp than 120V for same capacity
- Conductor savings: 4mm² vs 50mm² lead (92% material reduction)
- Potential drop: Higher electrical potential systems easily meet 3% code limit
- Installation cost: Three-phase 400V is most economical for 15+ kW loads
- For detailed V value drop analysis, use our electric tension drop calculator
Power Factor Impact Analysis
How energy factor affects electric current draw for a 15 kW three-phase electrical power unit at 400V:
| Wattage Factor | I value Draw | % Increase vs | Conductor Size | Energy Consumption** | Utility Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.00 (Ideal) | 21.7 A | Baseline | 4 mm² | 100% | No penalty |
| 0.95 (Excellent) | 22.8 A | +5% | 4 mm² | 105% | Minimal |
| 0.90 (Good) | 24.1 A | +11% | 4 mm² | 111% | Low |
| 0.85 (Fair) | 25.5 A | +18% | 6 mm² | 118% | Moderate |
| 0.80 (Poor) | 27.1 A | +25% | 6 mm² | 125% | High |
| 0.70 (Bad) | 31.0 A | +43% | 10 mm² | 143% | Very High |
** Relative to ideal PF=1.0 for same mechanical load output
Technical Impact Analysis:
- PF = 0.85 → 0.95: Correction typically economical for industrial installations
- PF < 0.80: Utility penalty tariffs commonly apply for poor capacity factor
- Conductor sizing: lower PF requires larger cables (25.5A → 6 mm2 vs 21.7A → 4 mm2)
- Mechanism losses: I²R losses increase with the square of amperage (43% higher losses at PF=0.70)
- See our energy factor correction guide for detailed correction strategies
Circuit Breaker Selection Flowchart
START: Need circuit breaker for kW load
↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 1: Evaluate Full-Load Electrical flow │
│ I = (kW \times 1000) / (\sqrt{}3 \times V \times PF) │
│ (Use appropriate formula for installation) │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 2: Determine Load Type │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
├─── Is it a Motor unit? ────┐
│ YES
│ ↓
│ ┌────────▼──────────────────────┐
│ │ Apply Electric motor Starting Factor: │
│ │ • DOL: I \times 2.5 │
│ │ • Star-Delta: I \times 1.5 │
│ │ • VFD: I \times 1.25 │
│ └────────┬──────────────────────┘
│ │
NO │
↓ ↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Continuous Load (>3 hrs)? │
│ YES: Multiply I \times 1.25 │
│ NO: Use calculated amp │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 3: Select Breaker Type │
│ • Motors: Type D or machine-rated │
│ • Resistive: Type B or C │
│ • Mixed loads: Type C │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 4: Choose Standard Size │
│ Standard sizes (A): │
│ 6, 10, 16, 20, 25, 32, 40, 50, 63, │
│ 80, 100, 125, 160, 200, 250, 315 │
│ → Select NEXT SIZE UP │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌───▼────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Step 5: Verify Requirements │
│ ✔ Breaking capacity \geq fault electric current │
│ ✔ Coordination with upstream devices │
│ ✔ Ambient heat level rating │
│ ✔ Compliance with NEC 430.52 or IEC │
└───┬────────────────────────────────────┘
↓
DONE ✔
Example Application:
15 kW drive unit, 400V, PF=0.85, DOL starting
- Measure: A
- Wattage unit with DOL → A
- Type D motor unit-rated breaker required
- Select standard size: 63 A breaker
- Verify: 63A > 25.5A ✔ , Short-circuit rating adequate ✔
For detailed short-circuit analysis, refer to our short circuit assessment guide.
How Do You Troubleshoot Guide?
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Solution | Prevention |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breaker trips immediately | Solution error (undersized) | Recalculate per NEC, upsize by 25% | Always use 125% for continuous loads |
| Potential drop exceeds 3% | Wire too small for distance | Use electrical potential drop calculator, upsize conductors | Assess VD before installation with proper wire sizing |
| Electric motor won't start | Circuit sized for running only | Must accommodate 600-800% starting I value | Size for locked rotor amps (LRA) |
| Nuisance tripping | Inrush amperage or harmonics | Install time-delay or magnetic-only breaker | Consider soft-start for large motors |
| Overheating conductors | Ambient temp not considered | Apply NEC 310.15(B) derating factors | Check actual installation conditions |
Diagnostic Steps:
- Verify actual load with clamp meter (don't trust nameplate alone)
- Check electric tension under load (should be within nominal)
- Measure load factor if reactive load suspected
- Review NEC Article 220 for proper demand factors
Common Mistakes & Misconceptions
Mistake 1: Ignoring power coefficient for AC Loads
Why it's wrong: Using without capacity factor gives incorrect electrical flow for inductive/capacitive loads.
Correct approach: For AC loads, always use for three-phase or for single-phase. Understanding energy factor correction is essential for accurate amp calculations.
Real example: A 10 kW machine at 0.85 PF draws 27.5 A at 480V 3-phase, not the 12 A you'd determine ignoring PF. Learn more about the relationship between apparent wattage (VA) and real load (watts).
Mistake 2: Sizing Breaker to Calculated Current
Why it's wrong: NEC requires 125% of continuous load minimum.
Correct approach:
- Compute electric current:
- Size breaker:
- For motors: Use 250% of full load amps per NEC 430.52
Real example: 30 A calculated → minimum 40 A breaker required.
Mistake 3: Using Nameplate Voltage Instead of Actual
Why it's wrong: Actual volt level may be 208V, not 240V nominal in many commercial buildings.
Correct approach: Measure actual potential or use utility electrical potential spec (typically 208Y/120V or 480Y/277V).
Real example: Equipment rated 240V may see only 208V = 13% lower V value = 15% higher I value than calculated.
Advanced Design Considerations
Load Analysis Best Practices
- Diversity Factors: Not all loads operate simultaneously—apply NEC demand factors per Article 220
- Future Growth: Design for 25% expansion capacity minimum
- Load Monitoring: Install amperage monitoring for data-driven capacity planning
- Harmonics: Non-linear loads (VFDs, LED drivers) may require derating
Installation Environment
- Ambient Temp: Derate conductors per NEC 310.15(B) above 30°C (86°F)
- Altitude: Above 3,300 ft, derate equipment per manufacturer specs
- Enclosure Type: NEMA 1 (indoor) vs NEMA 3R (outdoor) affects heat dissipation
- Vibration: Industrial environments may require vibration-rated components
Code Compliance Checklist
- NEC Article 220 demand factors applied correctly
- Conductor ampacity meets NEC Table 310.15(B)(16)
- Electric tension drop total per NEC 210.19(A)
- OCPD sized per NEC 240.4 (125% continuous load minimum)
- Equipment suitable for available fault electrical flow
- Grounding and bonding per NEC Article 250
Cost Optimization Strategies
- First Cost vs Lifecycle: Higher yield may justify premium equipment
- Conductor Sizing: Oversizing reduces losses, may pay back in 3-5 years
- Modular Design: Easier future expansion, higher upfront cost
- Energy Monitoring: Submetering enables cost allocation and optimization
Key Takeaways
- Convert kW to amps using formulas: DC: ; AC Single-Phase: ; AC Three-Phase:
- Power factor is critical for AC systems—typical values: motors 0.85-0.90, resistive loads 1.0; ignoring power factor leads to significant calculation errors
- Three-phase systems use √3 (1.732) factor for line-to-line voltage calculations, reducing current compared to single-phase for the same power
- Always apply safety factors: conductors require 125% of full-load current for motors (NEC 430.22), circuit breakers require 1.25-2.5 × FLA depending on starting method
- Higher voltage systems reduce current draw—400V three-phase draws 65% less current than 230V single-phase for the same power, enabling smaller conductors
- Motor starting current can be 5-8 times full-load current for direct-on-line starting, requiring appropriate circuit breaker sizing to handle inrush current
Further Learning
- Amp to kW Guide - Reverse conversion from current to power
- Cable Sizing Guide - Size conductors based on calculated current
- Circuit Breaker Sizing - Understanding protection device selection
- Voltage Drop Guide - Verify voltage drop meets code requirements
- Power Factor Guide - Understanding power factor and correction
- kW to Amp Calculator - Interactive calculator for conversions
References & Standards
This guide follows established engineering principles and standards. For detailed requirements, always consult the current adopted edition in your jurisdiction.
Primary Standards
IEC 60034-1 Rotating electrical machines - Part 1: Rating and performance. Specifies motor current ratings and calculation methods.
NEC Article 430 Motors, Motor Circuits, and Controllers. Requires conductors sized at 125% of full-load current and specifies circuit breaker sizing factors.
IEC 60364-5-52 Low-voltage electrical installations - Part 5-52: Selection and erection of electrical equipment - Wiring systems. Provides conductor sizing tables based on current.
Supporting Standards & Guidelines
IEEE Std 141 Recommended Practice for Electric Power Distribution for Industrial Plants. Provides guidance on load calculations and safety factors.
IEC 60050 - International Electrotechnical Vocabulary International standards for electrical terminology and definitions.
NEMA Publications National Electrical Manufacturers Association standards for electrical equipment.
Further Reading
- Electrical Installation Guide - Schneider Electric - Comprehensive guide to electrical installation best practices
Note: Standards and codes are regularly updated. Always verify you're using the current adopted edition applicable to your project's location. Consult with local authorities having jurisdiction (AHJ) for specific requirements.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general technical information based on international electrical standards. Always verify calculations with applicable local electrical codes (NEC, IEC, BS 7671, etc.) and consult licensed electrical engineers or electricians for actual installations. Electrical work should only be performed by qualified professionals. Component ratings and specifications may vary by manufacturer.