What is kilocalorie per hour?

Kilocalorie per hour is a unit of power expressing energy transfer as dietary calories per hour. It is used in nutrition and exercise physiology to express the rate of energy expenditure during physical activity.

Real-world uses

Kilocalories per hour (kcal/h) are used in exercise physiology to express metabolic power output (a brisk walk burns about 300 kcal/h, cycling about 500–800 kcal/h), and in HVAC engineering in Asia and Latin America to rate heating and cooling equipment, where it bridges nutritional and thermal engineering contexts.

History

The kilocalorie per hour emerged as a natural unit at the intersection of nutritional science and physiology, where metabolic rates had long been expressed in food energy per unit time. In HVAC contexts, it provided a familiar scale for countries where kilocalories were the customary energy unit before SI adoption.

Common mistakes

Confusing kcal/h (power) with kcal (energy). A person burning 300 kcal/h for 2 hours has expended 600 kcal, not 300 kcal. Also, mixing up kcal/h with kJ/h: 1 kcal/h = 4.184 kJ/h ≈ 1.163 W.

What is BTU per hour?

BTU per hour is a unit of power used to measure the heating or cooling capacity of HVAC equipment. It is the standard rating system for air conditioners, furnaces, and heat pumps in the United States.

Real-world uses

BTU per hour is the standard power unit for rating furnaces, air conditioners, heat pumps, and boilers in the United States. A residential central air conditioner might be rated at 24,000–60,000 BTU/h. In casual use, the "/h" is often dropped, so "12,000 BTU air conditioner" actually means 12,000 BTU/h.

History

BTU/h became the standard power unit for the US HVAC industry during the post-World War II residential building boom, as central air conditioning and forced-air heating became widespread. Industry standards bodies such as AHRI codified BTU/h ratings for equipment comparison.

Common mistakes

Dropping the "/h": confusing BTU (energy) with BTU/h (power) is extremely common in HVAC contexts. A unit absorbing 12,000 BTU in one hour is operating at 12,000 BTU/h of capacity. Also, 1 ton of refrigeration = 12,000 BTU/h, which can cause confusion in capacity comparisons.

When is this conversion used?

Converting kilocalorie per hour to BTU per hour is useful in the power domain when comparing values across different measurement standards or applying formulas that require a specific unit.

Worked examples

1 kilocalorie per hour = 3.96832072 BTU per hour

1 BTU per hour = 0.29307107 watt

How to convert kilocalorie per hour to BTU per hour

To convert kilocalorie per hour to BTU per hour, multiply the value by 3.96832072.

To convert BTU per hour back to kilocalorie per hour, multiply by 0.25199576.

Measurement standards

The watt is the SI derived unit of power, defined as one joule per second (kg·m²/s³). Horsepower remains in widespread informal use, particularly in the automotive industry, but has no single universal definition across regions.

Did you know?

The human body at rest produces about 80 watts of power — roughly enough to keep an incandescent light bulb glowing. During intense exercise, a trained cyclist can sustain over 400 watts, and elite sprinters briefly exceed 2,000 watts.

Quick reference: kilocalorie per hour to BTU per hour

kilocalorie per hourBTU per hour
0.10.39683207
0.51.98416036
13.96832072
27.93664144
519.84160361
1039.68320722
2599.20801804
50198.41603608
100396.83207217
250992.08018041
5001,984.16036083
1,0003,968.32072166

Common values

kilocalorie per hourBTU per hour
LED light bulb8.59845228 kilocalorie per hour34.12141635 BTU per hour
Desktop computer257.95356836 kilocalorie per hour1,023.64249054 BTU per hour
Microwave oven859.84522786 kilocalorie per hour3,412.14163513 BTU per hour
Small car engine64,488.39208942 kilocalorie per hour255,910.62263498 BTU per hour
Wind turbine (large)2,579,535.68357696 kilocalorie per hour10,236,424.90539923 BTU per hour