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Joule to Volt Conversion Guide

Complete guide to converting energy (Joules) to voltage (Volts) using electric charge. Learn fundamental concepts, formulas, and applications in electronics and electrical systems.

Enginist Engineering Team
Professional electrical engineers with expertise in power systems, circuit design, and electrical code compliance.
Reviewed by PE-Licensed Electrical Engineers
Published: October 25, 2025

Joule to Volt Conversion Guide

Quick AnswerHow do you convert joules to volts?
Convert joules to volts by dividing energy by charge. For capacitors, use the alternative formula derived from energy storage equations.
V=EQV = \frac{E}{Q} or for capacitors: V=2ECV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}}
Example

100J with 5C charge gives V=100/5=20V = 100 / 5 = 20 volts. For capacitors: 5J stored in 1000µF capacitor gives V=2×5/0.001=100V = \sqrt{2 \times 5 / 0.001} = 100V

Introduction

Converting energy (joules) to voltage (volts) is fundamental for understanding electrical energy relationships, capacitor voltage calculations, and battery energy analysis. However, energy alone cannot determine voltage—you need electric charge (coulombs) to calculate voltage. The relationship is V = E / Q, where voltage equals energy divided by charge. This fundamental relationship reveals that voltage represents energy per unit charge—one volt equals one joule per coulomb (1V = 1J/C). Understanding this conversion enables engineers to calculate capacitor voltage from stored energy, determine battery voltage from energy capacity, analyze electrical energy transfer, and assess safety risks from stored energy. Different charge amounts give different voltages for the same energy—100 joules with 5 coulombs equals 20 volts, while the same 100 joules with 10 coulombs equals 10 volts.

This guide is designed for electrical engineers, technicians, and students who need to convert between energy and voltage for capacitor design, battery analysis, and energy storage system sizing. You will learn the fundamental conversion formula, how charge relates to energy and voltage, practical applications for capacitor and battery voltage calculations, safety classifications for different voltage levels, and standards for electrical energy measurements per IEC 60449 and NFPA 70.

Quick Answer: How to Convert Joules to Volts?

Convert energy (joules) to voltage (volts) by dividing energy by electric charge (coulombs). You cannot convert joules to volts without knowing charge—voltage is energy per unit charge.

Core Formula

V=EQV = \frac{E}{Q}

Where:

  • VV = Voltage (V)
  • EE = Energy (J)
  • QQ = Electric charge (C)

Key relationship: 1 Volt = 1 Joule per Coulomb (1V = 1J/C)

Additional Formulas

ApplicationFormulaNotes
Capacitor VoltageV=2ECV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}}From E = ½CV²
Battery EnergyE=V×Q=V×Ah×3600E = V \times Q = V \times Ah \times 3600Convert Ah to coulombs

Reference Table

ParameterTypical RangeStandard
1 Volt1 Joule/CoulombSI Definition
Extra-Low Voltage (ELV)<50V AC, <120V DCIEC 60449
Low Voltage (LV)50-1000V AC, 120-1500V DCIEC 60449
Medium Voltage (MV)1-35 kVIEC 60449
High Voltage (HV)>35 kVIEC 60449

Key Standards

Worked Example

100 J with 5 C Charge

Given:

  • Energy: E=100E = 100 J
  • Charge: Q=5Q = 5 C

Calculation:

V=1005=20 VV = \frac{100}{5} = 20 \text{ V}

Result: The voltage is 20 volts for 100 joules of energy with 5 coulombs of charge.

Voltage Safety Classifications

  • Energy = Potential ×Charge(E=V×\times Charge (E = V \times Q)
  • Charge = Current ×Time(Q=I×\times Time (Q = I \times t)

Capacitor electrical potential calculation: V=2ECV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}} Where C is capacitance in farads

Battery energy relationship: E (J)=V (V)×Q (C)=V×Ah×3600E\ (\text{J}) = V\ (\text{V}) \times Q\ (\text{C}) = V \times A \cdot h \times 3600

Common mistakes to avoid:

  • Cannot convert joules to volts without knowing charge
  • Different charges give different voltages for same energy
  • Always use consistent units (J, C, V)
  • Account for efficiency losses in real systems

Understanding Energy, Voltage, and Charge

What is Voltage?

Volt level (electric potential difference) represents the energy per unit charge between two points in an electrical circuit.

Potential Definition:

V=EQV = \frac{E}{Q}

Where:

  • VV = Electrical potential (volts, V)
  • EE = Energy (joules, J)
  • QQ = Electric charge (coulombs, C)

Physical meaning: One volt equals one joule of energy per coulomb of charge (1V = 1J/C).

What is Energy?

Electrical energy is the work done by moving electric charge through a potential difference.

Electrical Energy:

E=V×QE = V \times Q

Energy units:

  • Joule (J) - SI unit of energy
  • Watt-hour (Wh) = 3600 J
  • Kilowatt-hour (kWh) = 3.6 MJ

What is Electric Charge?

Electric charge is the fundamental property of matter measured in coulombs.

Electric Charge:

Q=I×tQ = I \times t

Where:

  • QQ = Charge (coulombs, C)
  • II = Current (amperes, A)
  • tt = Time (seconds, s)

Charge fundamentals:

  • 1 coulomb = 6.242×10186.242 \times 10^{18} electrons
  • Electron charge = 1.602×10191.602 \times 10^{-19} C
  • 1 amp-hour = 3600 coulombs

The Joule to Volt Formula

Fundamental Relationship

Joules to Volts Conversion:

V=EQV = \frac{E}{Q}

Where:

  • VV = V value in volts
  • EE = Energy in joules
  • QQ = Electric charge in coulombs

SI Units and Definitions

Volt definition:

1V=1JC=1kgm2As31\,V = 1\,\frac{J}{C} = 1\,\frac{kg \cdot m^2}{A \cdot s^3}

Relationship to other units:

  • Volt level: V = E/Q = P/I = I×\timesR
  • Wattage: P = V×\timesI (watts)
  • Resistance: R = V/I (ohms)

Step-by-Step Calculation Examples

Example 1: Simple Battery Calculation

Given:

  • Energy delivered: 600 joules
  • Charge transferred: 50 coulombs

Calculate potential:

Battery Electrical potential:

V=EQ=600J50C=12VV = \frac{E}{Q} = \frac{600\,J}{50\,C} = 12\,V

Result: 12 volts (typical car battery V value)

Verification:

E=V×Q=12×50=600JE = V \times Q = 12 \times 50 = 600\,J \,\checkmark

Example 2: Capacitor Voltage from Energy

Given:

  • Capacitor stores 0.5 joules
  • Charge stored: 0.1 coulombs

Calculate electric tension:

Capacitor Volt level:

V=EQ=0.5J0.1C=5VV = \frac{E}{Q} = \frac{0.5\,J}{0.1\,C} = 5\,V

Alternative method using capacitance:

If capacitance C = 20 mF (0.02 F):

V=2EC=2×0.50.02=50=7.07VV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}} = \sqrt{\frac{2 \times 0.5}{0.02}} = \sqrt{50} = 7.07\,V

(Note: This example assumes different capacitance - both methods are valid depending on known parameters)

Example 3: Power Supply Design

Given:

  • Required energy: 1000 J
  • Available charge: 200 C

Determine potential:

Load Supply Electrical potential:

V=EQ=1000J200C=5VV = \frac{E}{Q} = \frac{1000\,J}{200\,C} = 5\,V

Result: 5V capacity supply (USB standard V value)

Capacitor Energy and Voltage

Capacitor Energy Formula

Capacitor Energy Storage:

E=12CV2E = \frac{1}{2}CV^2

Where:

  • EE = Energy (joules)
  • CC = Capacitance (farads)
  • VV = Electric tension (volts)

Also expressed as:

E=12QV=Q22CE = \frac{1}{2}QV = \frac{Q^2}{2C}

Where Q = C×\timesV (charge on capacitor)

Calculating Voltage from Stored Energy

If energy and capacitance are known:

Volt level from Capacitor Energy:

V=2ECV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}}

Example: Camera flash capacitor

Given:

  • Capacitance: 1000 μF = 0.001 F
  • Stored energy: 45 J

Compute potential:

V=2×450.001=90000=300VV = \sqrt{\frac{2 \times 45}{0.001}} = \sqrt{90\,000} = 300\,V

Safety warning: 45 joules at 300V is extremely dangerous - can cause severe shock or death.

Battery Energy and Voltage

Battery Capacity in Joules

Battery Energy:

E=V×Q=V×Ah×3600E = V \times Q = V \times A·h \times 3600

Converting amp-hours to joules:

  • 1 Ah at electrical potential V = V ×\times 3600 joules
  • Example: 10 Ah at 12V = 12 ×10×\times 10 \times 3600 = 432,000 J = 432 kJ

Common Battery Types

Battery TypeV value (V)Capacity (Ah)Energy (Wh)Energy (J)
AA Alkaline1.52.53.7513,500
18650 Li-ion3.73.011.139,960
Car Battery12607202,592,000
Phone Battery3.7311.139,960
EV Battery (Tesla)400187.575,000270,000,000

Calculating electric tension from battery energy:

Example: Battery delivers 2,592,000 J through 216,000 C of charge

V=EQ=2592000216000=12VV = \frac{E}{Q} = \frac{2\,592\,000}{216\,000} = 12\,V

Verification: 60 Ah = 60 ×\times 3600 = 216,000 C ✔

Voltage Safety Classifications

Extra-Low Voltage (ELV)

Range: Less than 50V AC or less than 120V DC

Characteristics:

  • Generally safe to touch in dry conditions
  • No special protection required
  • Common in consumer electronics

Applications:

  • USB energy: 5V DC
  • Automotive: 12V/24V DC
  • LED lighting: 12V/24V DC
  • Telecommunications: 48V DC
  • Solar panels: 12V/24V/48V DC

Low Voltage (LV)

Range: 50-1000V AC or 120-1500V DC

Characteristics:

  • Requires electrical protection
  • Can cause electrocution
  • Standard building electrical power

Applications:

  • Residential mains: 120V/230V AC
  • Industrial three-phase: 400V/480V AC
  • Electric vehicle batteries: 400-800V DC
  • Commercial buildings: 208V/480V AC

Medium and High Voltage

Medium Volt level (MV): 1 kV - 35 kV

  • Distribution systems
  • Substations
  • Industrial facilities

High Potential (HV): Greater than 35 kV

  • Transmission lines
  • Large wattage plants
  • Extreme danger - requires specialized training

Practical Applications

Application 1: Flash Camera Capacitor

Problem: Design capacitor for camera flash requiring 50 J at minimum 250V

Step 1: Find required charge

Q=EV=50250=0.2CQ = \frac{E}{V} = \frac{50}{250} = 0.2\,C

Step 2: Evaluate capacitance

C=QV=0.2250=0.0008F=800μFC = \frac{Q}{V} = \frac{0.2}{250} = 0.0008\,F = 800\,\mu F

Step 3: Select capacitor

  • Selection: 1000 μF, 300V electrolytic capacitor
  • Stored energy: E=12×0.001×3002=45JE = \frac{1}{2} \times 0.001 \times 300^2 = 45\,\text{J}
  • Safety margin: Adequate for 50 J requirement

Application 2: Solar Battery Storage

Problem: Size battery for 10 kWh solar storage at 48V nominal

Step 1: Convert energy to joules

E=10000Wh×3600=36000000J=36MJE = 10\,000\,Wh \times 3600 = 36\,000\,000\,J = 36\,MJ

Step 2: Measure required charge

Q=EV=3600000048=750000CQ = \frac{E}{V} = \frac{36\,000\,000}{48} = 750\,000\,C

Step 3: Convert to amp-hours

Capacity=7500003600=208.3AhCapacity = \frac{750\,000}{3600} = 208.3\,Ah

Result: Require 48V 208Ah battery bank (typically four 12V 208Ah batteries in series)

Application 3: Electric Vehicle Battery

Problem: Assess electrical potential of EV battery storing 75 kWh with 187.5 Ah capacity

Step 1: Convert energy to joules

E=75000Wh×3600=270000000JE = 75\,000\,Wh \times 3600 = 270\,000\,000\,J

Step 2: Convert capacity to coulombs

Q=187.5Ah×3600=675000CQ = 187.5\,Ah \times 3600 = 675\,000\,C

Step 3: Determine V value

V=EQ=270000000675000=400VV = \frac{E}{Q} = \frac{270\,000\,000}{675\,000} = 400\,V

Result: 400V nominal battery electric tension (typical for modern EVs like Tesla Model 3)

Common Mistakes and Troubleshooting

Mistake 1: Attempting conversion without charge value

Wrong: "I have 1000 joules, what's the volt level?" ✔ Correct: Need to know charge transferred to compute potential

Mistake 2: Unit confusion

Wrong: Using millijoules with coulombs without conversion ✔ Correct: Convert all to standard units (J, C, V)

Example error:

  • Energy: 500 mJ = 0.5 J (not 500 J)
  • Charge: 2000 mAh = 2 Ah = 7200 C (not 2000 C)

Mistake 3: Confusing energy with load

Wrong: V = P/Q (mixing capacity and charge) ✔ Correct: V = E/Q (energy and charge) or V = P/I (energy and electrical flow)

Mistake 4: Ignoring efficiency losses

Real systems have losses:

  • Battery charge/discharge: 80-95% efficient
  • Capacitors: 95-99% efficient
  • Electrical power converters: 85-95% efficient

Correction: Account for performance in calculations

V=E×ηQV = \frac{E \times \eta}{Q}

Where η = effectiveness factor

Industry Standards

IEC 60449 - Electrical potential Bands

  • Band I: 50-1000V AC / 120-1500V DC
  • Band II: 1000-35000V AC / 1500-35000V DC

NFPA 70 (NEC) - V value Classifications

  • Low electric tension: Less than 1000V
  • Medium volt level: 1000V-35kV
  • High potential: Greater than 35kV

IEC 61010 - Safety Requirements

  • Measurement categories (CAT I-IV)
  • Overvoltage protection
  • Installation requirements

IEEE Standards

  • IEEE 1458 - Capacitor energy storage
  • IEEE 485 - Battery installations
  • IEEE 937 - Installation and maintenance

Using Our Joule-to-Volt Calculator

Our Joule to Volt Converter simplifies energy-electrical potential calculations:

Features:

  • Energy input (joules)
  • Electric charge input (coulombs)
  • Automatic V value assessment
  • Safety classification display
  • Application recommendations

How to Use:

  1. Enter energy (joules):

    • Example: 100 J
  2. Enter charge (coulombs):

    • Example: 5 C
  3. Review results:

    • Electric tension: 20 V
    • Classification: Extra-Low Volt level (safe)
    • Application: Small battery system

Our calculations follow industry best practices and have been validated against real-world scenarios.

Conclusion

Converting joules to volts requires understanding the fundamental relationship between energy, voltage, and electric charge. The formula V=E/QV = E / Q applies universally to all electrical systems—from tiny capacitors to massive battery banks. Voltage represents energy per unit charge, with one volt equaling one joule per coulomb (1V = 1J/C). You cannot convert joules to volts without knowing charge—different charge amounts give different voltages for the same energy. For capacitors, voltage can be calculated from energy and capacitance using V=2E/CV = \sqrt{2E/C}. For batteries, energy equals voltage times charge (E=V×QE = V \times Q). Always classify calculated voltage by safety standards—Extra-Low Voltage (ELV) below 50V AC is safe to touch, while Low Voltage (LV) 50-1000V AC requires protection.

Export as PDF — Generate professional reports for documentation, client presentations, or permit submissions.

Key Takeaways

  • Calculate voltage from energy and charge—voltage equals energy divided by charge (V=EQV = \frac{E}{Q}); you cannot convert joules to volts without knowing charge
  • Understand the fundamental relationship—one volt equals one joule per coulomb (1V=1J/C1\,\text{V} = 1\,\text{J/C}); voltage represents energy per unit charge
  • Use correct formula for capacitors—for capacitors, calculate voltage from energy and capacitance using V=2ECV = \sqrt{\frac{2E}{C}} derived from E=12CV2E = \frac{1}{2}CV^2
  • Calculate battery voltage correctly—for batteries, energy equals voltage times charge (E=V×QE = V \times Q), where Q=Ah×3600Q = \text{Ah} \times 3600 coulombs
  • Classify voltage by safety standards—Extra-Low Voltage (ELV) <50V AC is safe, Low Voltage (LV) 50-1000V AC requires protection, Medium/High Voltage requires specialized equipment
  • Use consistent units—always use joules (not kilojoules), coulombs (not milliamp-hours), and volts for accurate calculations
  • Account for different charge amounts—the same energy with different charge amounts gives different voltages; higher charge means lower voltage for the same energy

Further Learning

References & Standards

This guide follows established engineering principles and standards. For detailed requirements, always consult the electric current adopted edition in your jurisdiction.

Primary Standards

IEC 60449 Voltage bands for electrical equipment of power systems. Defines voltage classifications: Extra-Low Voltage (ELV) below 50V AC or 120V DC (safe to touch), Low Voltage (LV) 50-1000V AC or 120-1500V DC (requires protection), Medium Voltage (MV) 1-35kV, High Voltage (HV) above 35kV.

NFPA 70 (NEC) National Electrical Code. Provides safety requirements for electrical installations, including voltage classifications and protection requirements for different voltage levels.

Supporting Standards & Guidelines

IEC 60050 - International Electrotechnical Vocabulary International standards for electrical terminology and definitions, including voltage and energy-related terms.

Further Reading

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.

Frequently Asked Questions

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