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Convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin

Instantly convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K)) to Watts per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K)) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: W/(cm·K) to W/(m·K)multiply by 100

Reference Table

Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K))Watts per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K))
1100
5500
101000
252500
505000
10010000

How to Convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin

Formula

To convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K)) to Watts per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K)): multiply by 100

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K)).
  2. Multiply by 100 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Watts per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K)).

Conversion Factor

1 W/(cm·K) = 100 W/(m·K)

Reverse Factor

1 W/(m·K) = 0.01 W/(cm·K)

Worked Example

Convert 25 Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin: 25 W/(cm·K) = 2500 W/(m·K)

About Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K))

A thermal-conductivity unit equal to exactly 100 W/(m·K), used in semiconductor packaging engineering, thermoelectric materials research, and ultra-high-conductivity material characterization where W/(m·K) values would be inconveniently large. Reference values: diamond (single-crystal CVD) 10-22 W/(cm·K) — the highest natural-material thermal conductivity known, exploited in laser heatsink applications and CPU integrated heat-spreader research; graphene single-layer 30-50 W/(cm·K) (highest measured of any 2D material per Nature Materials papers); pyrolytic-graphite in-plane direction 16-19 W/(cm·K); silicon carbide (SiC) for high-power semiconductors 3.7 W/(cm·K). Solid-state-device thermal-interface-material (TIM) datasheets per JEDEC JESD51-series thermal-test standards, semiconductor-package thermal-resistance specifications, and thermoelectric figure-of-merit ZT calculations sometimes use W/(cm·K) for compactness. Convert W/(cm·K) to W/(m·K) by multiplying by 100; to BTU/(hr·ft·°F) by multiplying by 57.78.

About Watt per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K))

The SI unit of thermal conductivity k (ISO 80000-5 §5-9) — the rate of heat flow through a unit thickness of material per unit cross-sectional area per unit temperature gradient, defined by Fourier's law of heat conduction q = −k·∇T. W/(m·K) is the universal reference for steady-state and transient heat-conduction calculations, material selection for thermal management, building-envelope insulation design, and thermal-interface-material specification. Reference values per ASM Handbook and NIST: silver 429 W/(m·K, the highest of common metals); copper 401; aluminum 237; brass 109; carbon steel 50; stainless 304 16; titanium Ti-6Al-4V 6.7; glass 1.0; concrete 1.0-1.7; wood 0.12-0.17 (parallel to grain) / 0.04-0.05 (perpendicular); air at 25 °C 0.026 (this single value is why fiberglass / cellulose / aerogel insulation work — they immobilize air); polystyrene foam (EPS, XPS) 0.030-0.040; fiberglass batt 0.040; aerogel (Aspen Spaceloft) 0.015 — the lowest of common engineering materials. Every CFD solver, thermal-analysis tool (Ansys Mechanical Thermal, COMSOL Heat Transfer, ABAQUS), and building-energy simulation (EnergyPlus, IES VE, DesignBuilder per ASHRAE 90.1 compliance) uses W/(m·K).

Quick Facts

  • 1 Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin equals 100 Watts per Meter-Kelvin
  • 1 Watt per Meter-Kelvin equals 0.01 Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin
  • Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin is a unit of thermal conductivity
  • Watt per Meter-Kelvin is a unit of thermal conductivity
  • This conversion is commonly used in insulation design, heat exchanger engineering, and material science
  • The Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin belongs to the metric system

Common Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watt per Meter-Kelvin Conversions

Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin (W/(cm·K))Watts per Meter-Kelvin (W/(m·K))
0.011
0.110
0.2525
0.550
1100
2200
3300
5500
101000
151500
202000
252500
505000
757500
10010000
25025000
50050000
1000100000
5000500000
100001000000

Understanding Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin

The Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin (symbol: W/(cm·K)) is a unit of thermal conductivity. A thermal-conductivity unit equal to exactly 100 W/(m·K), used in semiconductor packaging engineering, thermoelectric materials research, and ultra-high-conductivity material characterization where W/(m·K) values would be inconveniently large. Reference values: diamond (single-crystal CVD) 10-22 W/(cm·K) — the highest natural-material thermal conductivity known, exploited in laser heatsink applications and CPU integrated heat-spreader research; graphene single-layer 30-50 W/(cm·K) (highest measured of any 2D material per Nature Materials papers); pyrolytic-graphite in-plane direction 16-19 W/(cm·K); silicon carbide (SiC) for high-power semiconductors 3.7 W/(cm·K). Solid-state-device thermal-interface-material (TIM) datasheets per JEDEC JESD51-series thermal-test standards, semiconductor-package thermal-resistance specifications, and thermoelectric figure-of-merit ZT calculations sometimes use W/(cm·K) for compactness. Convert W/(cm·K) to W/(m·K) by multiplying by 100; to BTU/(hr·ft·°F) by multiplying by 57.78.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin are commonly used in insulation design, heat exchanger engineering, and material science.

Understanding Watts per Meter-Kelvin

The Watt per Meter-Kelvin (symbol: W/(m·K)) is a unit of thermal conductivity. The SI unit of thermal conductivity k (ISO 80000-5 §5-9) — the rate of heat flow through a unit thickness of material per unit cross-sectional area per unit temperature gradient, defined by Fourier's law of heat conduction q = −k·∇T. W/(m·K) is the universal reference for steady-state and transient heat-conduction calculations, material selection for thermal management, building-envelope insulation design, and thermal-interface-material specification. Reference values per ASM Handbook and NIST: silver 429 W/(m·K, the highest of common metals); copper 401; aluminum 237; brass 109; carbon steel 50; stainless 304 16; titanium Ti-6Al-4V 6.7; glass 1.0; concrete 1.0-1.7; wood 0.12-0.17 (parallel to grain) / 0.04-0.05 (perpendicular); air at 25 °C 0.026 (this single value is why fiberglass / cellulose / aerogel insulation work — they immobilize air); polystyrene foam (EPS, XPS) 0.030-0.040; fiberglass batt 0.040; aerogel (Aspen Spaceloft) 0.015 — the lowest of common engineering materials. Every CFD solver, thermal-analysis tool (Ansys Mechanical Thermal, COMSOL Heat Transfer, ABAQUS), and building-energy simulation (EnergyPlus, IES VE, DesignBuilder per ASHRAE 90.1 compliance) uses W/(m·K).

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Watts per Meter-Kelvin are commonly used in insulation design, heat exchanger engineering, and material science.

Why Convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin?

Converting between Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin and Watts per Meter-Kelvin is a frequent requirement for engineers, scientists, and students working with thermal conductivity 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 thermal conductivity conversion is essential.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin?

A thermal-conductivity unit equal to exactly 100 W/(m·K), used in semiconductor packaging engineering, thermoelectric materials research, and ultra-high-conductivity material characterization where W/(m·K) values would b... To convert Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watts per Meter-Kelvin, multiply by 100. For example, 25 W/(cm·K) equals 2500 W/(m·K).

How many Watts per Meter-Kelvin are in 1 Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin?

There are 100 Watts per Meter-Kelvin in 1 Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin.

How many Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin are in 1 Watt per Meter-Kelvin?

There are 0.01 Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin in 1 Watt per Meter-Kelvin.

What is the formula for Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin to Watt per Meter-Kelvin conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 100. This means 1 W/(cm·K) = 100 W/(m·K).

Is a Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin bigger than a Watt per Meter-Kelvin?

No. One Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin is smaller than one Watt per Meter-Kelvin because 1 W/(cm·K) equals 100 W/(m·K), which is greater than 1.

When do you need to convert between Watts per Centimeter-Kelvin and Watts per Meter-Kelvin?

The SI unit of thermal conductivity k (ISO 80000-5 §5-9) — the rate of heat flow through a unit thickness of material per unit cross-sectional area per unit temperature gradient, defined by Fourier's law of heat conducti... Watt per Centimeter-Kelvin and Watt per Meter-Kelvin are both thermal conductivity 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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