Microcoulombs and coulombs are units of electric charge used to measure the amount of electric charge carried by particles such as electrons or ions.
The coulomb is the SI (International System of Units) unit of electric charge. One coulomb is defined as the amount of electric charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second. In mathematical terms, it can be expressed as:
1 C = 1 A x 1 s
This unit is relatively large and is commonly used for macroscopic electric charge measurements, such as in electrical circuits and industrial applications.
The microcoulomb is a subunit of the coulomb, and it represents one millionth (10^-6) of a coulomb. It is used for smaller-scale charge measurements. One microcoulomb is equal to 0.000001 coulombs.
1 μC = 0.000001 C
1C = 1000000μC
or
1μC = 0.000001C
Q(C) = Q(μC) / 1000000
Example – Convert 3 microcoulombs to coulombs:
Ans. Q(C) = 3μC / 1000000 = 0.000003C
Charge (microcoulomb) | Charge (coulomb) |
0 μC | 0 C |
1 μC | 0.000001 C |
10 μC | 0.00001 C |
100 μC | 0.0001 C |
1000 μC | 0.001 C |
10000 μC | 0.01 C |
100000 μC | 0.1 C |
1000000 μC | 1 C |
To convert microcoulombs (µC) to coulombs (C), you divide the value in microcoulombs by 1,000,000. This is because micro means one millionth (10^-6), so you're scaling down the value.
1 microcoulomb (µC) is equal to 0.000001 coulombs (C), which is one millionth of a coulomb.
To convert picocoulombs (pC) to coulombs (C), divide the value in picocoulombs by 1,000,000,000,000 (10^12). This is necessary because pico signifies one trillionth (10^-12), so you're adjusting the scale.
One coulomb (C) is the amount of electric charge carried by a current of one ampere (A) flowing for one second (s). In terms of elementary charge, it's approximately 6.242 x 10^18 elementary charges.
One microcoulomb (µC) of charge is equivalent to the charge carried by approximately 6.242 x 10^10 electrons. This value is obtained by dividing the charge of one coulomb by the elementary charge.
A microcoulomb (µC) of charge is composed of around 6.242 x 10^10 electrons. This number is determined by dividing the charge of one microcoulomb by the elementary charge.