Physics:Watt-hour per kilogram
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watt-hour per kilogram | |
---|---|
Unit system | Unit accepted for use with SI |
Unit of | Specific energy |
Symbol | W⋅h/kg |
Conversions | |
1 W⋅h/kg in ... | ... is equal to ... |
SI units | 3600 J/kg |
The watt-hour per kilogram (SI symbol: W⋅h/kg) is a unit of specific energy commonly used to measure the density of energy in batteries and capacitors.
SI Units
In the SI system of measurement, one watt-hour per kilogram is equal to 3600 joules per kilogram.
Typical values
The batteries that Tesla uses in their electric cars deliver about 254 W⋅h/kg,[1] compared to supercapacitors that are typically rated between 3 and 10 W⋅h/kg,[2] with the best commercially available supercapacitors as high as 47 W⋅h/kg.[3]
Nuclear batteries based on betavoltaics can reach up to 3300 W⋅h/kg, although over much longer time periods.[4]
References
- ↑ "Tesla’s batteries have reached their limit – here’s how they could go further", theconversation.com, 2017-11-16
- ↑ Achieving Both High Power and Energy Density in Electrochemical Supercapacitors with Nanoporous Graphene Materials. 2013. pp. 3. Bibcode: 2013arXiv1311.1413Y.
- ↑ Ronald Brakels, "Arvio Supercapacitor Energy Storage — Powerful Enough To Beat Batteries At Their Own Game?", Solarquotes.com, May 15, 2018. Retrieved 14 Oct. 2021
- ↑ Prototype Nuclear Battery, phys.org, June 6 2018
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watt-hour per kilogram.
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