Convert conductivity across engineering units with reliable precision. View instant results, tables, and export-ready summaries. Plot converted values clearly for analysis, reporting, and documentation.
| Material | W/(m·K) | Btu/(ft·h·°F) | kcal/(m·h·°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper | 401 | 231.694 | 345.029 |
| Aluminum | 237 | 136.936 | 203.92 |
| Glass | 1.05 | 0.607 | 0.903 |
| Water | 0.6 | 0.347 | 0.516 |
| Wood | 0.12 | 0.069 | 0.103 |
These rows show sample engineering values for quick unit interpretation and validation.
The calculator converts every input to a base SI value first, then converts that base value into the selected target unit.
Step 1: Base value in W/(m·K) = Input value × source unit factor
Step 2: Target value = Base value in W/(m·K) ÷ target unit factor
| Unit | Factor to W/(m·K) |
|---|---|
| W/(m·K) | 1 |
| W/(cm·K) | 100 |
| kcal/(m·h·°C) | 1.1622222222 |
| kcal/(m·s·°C) | 4,184 |
| kcal/(cm·s·°C) | 418,400 |
| cal/(cm·s·°C) | 418.4 |
| Btu/(ft·h·°F) | 1.730734666 |
| Btu/(in·h·°F) | 20.768815992 |
This factor method keeps the conversion logic consistent, transparent, and easy to audit in engineering workflows.
Thermal conductivity measures how effectively a material transfers heat through itself. Higher values indicate faster heat conduction, which matters in insulation design, heat exchangers, electronics cooling, and structural material selection.
Engineering teams often work across regions, industries, and legacy specifications. SI units dominate international design, while imperial units remain common in older building, manufacturing, and HVAC documentation.
W/(m·K) is a standard reference unit in engineering analysis. Converting every input through one base value improves accuracy, makes auditing easier, and simplifies support for many target units.
The numeric unit conversion stays the same because it depends on measurement definitions. However, the material’s actual conductivity value can change with temperature, pressure, composition, or moisture content.
Scientific notation helps when values are extremely large, extremely small, or span many orders of magnitude. It is useful in lab reports, research summaries, and technical calculations involving uncommon conductivity scales.
Some supported units are much larger or smaller than others for the same material property. The chart compares all equivalent values, so wide numerical spread can make visual differences appear dramatic.
Yes. Convert sample values into one consistent unit before comparing materials. That approach improves clarity when reviewing datasheets, supplier catalogs, insulation options, or thermal management components.
Verify the input value, source unit, target unit, and selected precision. Confirm that the displayed result matches your reporting requirement before downloading CSV or PDF copies for sharing or archiving.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.