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Convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius

Instantly convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K)) to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C)) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: kJ/(kg·K) to kcal/(kg·°C)multiply by 0.239006

Reference Table

Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K))Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C))
10.239006
51.19503
102.39006
255.97514
5011.9503
10023.9006

How to Convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius

Formula

To convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K)) to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C)): multiply by 0.239006

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K)).
  2. Multiply by 0.239006 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C)).

Conversion Factor

1 kJ/(kg·K) = 0.239006 kcal/(kg·°C)

Reverse Factor

1 kcal/(kg·°C) = 4.184 kJ/(kg·K)

Worked Example

Convert 25 Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius: 25 kJ/(kg·K) = 5.97514 kcal/(kg·°C)

About Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K))

A metric specific-heat unit equal to exactly 1,000 J/(kg·K). Because most common substances have specific heats in the 0.3-5 kJ/(kg·K) range, kJ/(kg·K) is the default working unit on every published thermodynamic property table (IAPWS-IF97 steam tables, NIST REFPROP refrigerant data, NASA CEA gas-property tables, Çengel-Boles 'Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach' textbook, Moran-Shapiro 'Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics'). Reference values: water at 25 °C is 4.186 kJ/(kg·K); structural steel ~0.49 kJ/(kg·K); aluminum 0.897 kJ/(kg·K); liquid nitrogen at saturation ~1.04 kJ/(kg·K); R-134a refrigerant vapour ~1.0 kJ/(kg·K) at saturation; R-1234yf (low-GWP automotive refrigerant) ~0.95 kJ/(kg·K). For ideal-gas calculations: dry air cp = 1.005 kJ/(kg·K), cv = 0.718 kJ/(kg·K), with ratio γ = cp/cv = 1.4 used in compressible-flow analysis. Steam tables in Çengel-Boles default to kJ/(kg·K) for both cp and cv.

About Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C))

A metric specific-heat unit numerically identical to cal/(g·°C) — since 1 kcal/kg = 1 cal/g and 1 K interval = 1 °C interval. Water's specific heat is exactly 1 kcal/(kg·°C) by the original 'large calorie' (= kilocalorie) definition. kcal/(kg·°C) appears in European food-science literature (calorimetry data in EU FOSS / Codex Alimentarius food-composition databases), pre-2000 European HVAC and process-engineering documentation (especially German DIN-era specs that haven't migrated fully to J/(kg·K)), nutrition-science papers reporting metabolic-rate calculations against the 1 kcal/(kg·°C) water baseline, and older chemistry literature from Eastern Europe and Russia. The choice between cal/(g·°C) and kcal/(kg·°C) is purely a matter of which mass scale is convenient — they encode the same physical quantity with the same numerical value. Convert kcal/(kg·°C) to J/(kg·K) by multiplying by 4,184; to BTU/(lb·°F) by dividing by 1.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin equals 0.239006 Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius
  • 1 Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius equals 4.184 Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin
  • Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin is a unit of specific heat capacity
  • Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius is a unit of specific heat capacity
  • This conversion is commonly used in thermal design, material selection, and climate modelling
  • The Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin belongs to the metric system

Common Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius Conversions

Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin (kJ/(kg·K))Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius (kcal/(kg·°C))
0.010.00239006
0.10.0239006
0.250.0597514
0.50.119503
10.239006
20.478011
30.717017
51.19503
102.39006
153.58509
204.78011
255.97514
5011.9503
7517.9254
10023.9006
25059.7514
500119.503
1000239.006
50001195.03
100002390.06

Understanding Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin

The Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin (symbol: kJ/(kg·K)) is a unit of specific heat capacity. A metric specific-heat unit equal to exactly 1,000 J/(kg·K). Because most common substances have specific heats in the 0.3-5 kJ/(kg·K) range, kJ/(kg·K) is the default working unit on every published thermodynamic property table (IAPWS-IF97 steam tables, NIST REFPROP refrigerant data, NASA CEA gas-property tables, Çengel-Boles 'Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach' textbook, Moran-Shapiro 'Fundamentals of Engineering Thermodynamics'). Reference values: water at 25 °C is 4.186 kJ/(kg·K); structural steel ~0.49 kJ/(kg·K); aluminum 0.897 kJ/(kg·K); liquid nitrogen at saturation ~1.04 kJ/(kg·K); R-134a refrigerant vapour ~1.0 kJ/(kg·K) at saturation; R-1234yf (low-GWP automotive refrigerant) ~0.95 kJ/(kg·K). For ideal-gas calculations: dry air cp = 1.005 kJ/(kg·K), cv = 0.718 kJ/(kg·K), with ratio γ = cp/cv = 1.4 used in compressible-flow analysis. Steam tables in Çengel-Boles default to kJ/(kg·K) for both cp and cv.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin are commonly used in thermal design, material selection, and climate modelling.

Understanding Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius

The Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius (symbol: kcal/(kg·°C)) is a unit of specific heat capacity. A metric specific-heat unit numerically identical to cal/(g·°C) — since 1 kcal/kg = 1 cal/g and 1 K interval = 1 °C interval. Water's specific heat is exactly 1 kcal/(kg·°C) by the original 'large calorie' (= kilocalorie) definition. kcal/(kg·°C) appears in European food-science literature (calorimetry data in EU FOSS / Codex Alimentarius food-composition databases), pre-2000 European HVAC and process-engineering documentation (especially German DIN-era specs that haven't migrated fully to J/(kg·K)), nutrition-science papers reporting metabolic-rate calculations against the 1 kcal/(kg·°C) water baseline, and older chemistry literature from Eastern Europe and Russia. The choice between cal/(g·°C) and kcal/(kg·°C) is purely a matter of which mass scale is convenient — they encode the same physical quantity with the same numerical value. Convert kcal/(kg·°C) to J/(kg·K) by multiplying by 4,184; to BTU/(lb·°F) by dividing by 1.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius are commonly used in thermal design, material selection, and climate modelling.

Why Convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius?

Converting between Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin and Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius is a frequent requirement for engineers, scientists, and students working with specific heat capacity values. Different industries and regions favour different unit systems, so having a dependable conversion tool saves time and prevents errors in technical calculations. Whether you are verifying a specification sheet, cross-checking simulation results, or preparing a report for an international audience, accurate specific heat capacity conversion is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius?

A metric specific-heat unit equal to exactly 1,000 J/(kg·K). To convert Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius, multiply by 0.239006. For example, 25 kJ/(kg·K) equals 5.97514 kcal/(kg·°C).

How many Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius are in 1 Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin?

There are 0.239006 Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius in 1 Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin.

How many Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin are in 1 Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius?

There are 4.184 Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin in 1 Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius.

What is the formula for Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin to Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 0.239006. This means 1 kJ/(kg·K) = 0.239006 kcal/(kg·°C).

Is a Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin bigger than a Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius?

Yes. One Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin is larger than one Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius because 1 kJ/(kg·K) equals 0.239006 kcal/(kg·°C), which is less than 1.

When do you need to convert between Kilojoules per Kilogram-Kelvin and Kilocalories per Kilogram-Celsius?

A metric specific-heat unit numerically identical to cal/(g·°C) — since 1 kcal/kg = 1 cal/g and 1 K interval = 1 °C interval. Kilojoule per Kilogram-Kelvin and Kilocalorie per Kilogram-Celsius are both specific heat units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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