Convert kilocalorie (IT)/hour/square meter to kilowatt/square meter Online | Free heat-flux-density Converter
Kilocalorie (IT) per Hour per Square Meter [kcal(IT)/(h·m²)]
The unit kilocalorie (IT) per hour per square meter, written as kcal(IT)/(h·m²), measures heat flux density or thermal power per unit area using the International Table kilocalorie (1 kcal(IT) = 4186.8 J). It represents the amount of heat energy transferred through 1 square meter of surface in 1 hour.
This unit is often used in building engineering, HVAC, and solar energy studies to quantify energy transfer through walls, roofs, or solar collectors. Typical applications include:
Heat gain or loss through building surfaces
Solar energy incident on rooftops or flat surfaces
Design of heating and cooling systems
Mathematically, heat flux is expressed as:
where q is heat flux in kcal(IT)/(h·m²), Q is total heat in kilocalories, A is area in m², and t is time in hours.
Conversion to SI units:
Although SI units such as W/m² are now standard, kcal(IT)/(h·m²) remains useful in legacy building and thermal engineering literature, providing an intuitive measure of energy transfer over time in kilocalories.
Kilowatt per Square Meter [kW/m²]
The unit kilowatt per square meter (kW/m²) measures heat flux density or radiant flux, representing the amount of energy transferred per unit area per unit time, scaled to kilowatts. One kilowatt equals 1000 watts, so 1 kW/m² = 1000 J of energy passing through 1 square meter every second.
This unit is widely used in solar energy, fire safety engineering, and high-intensity thermal applications to quantify power delivered per area. Typical applications include:
Solar concentrators and photovoltaic panels: assessing the intensity of sunlight on a surface
Fire testing: measuring heat flux from flames or radiative heaters
Industrial processes: calculating energy input in furnaces or reactors
Mathematically, heat flux is expressed as:
where q is heat flux in kW/m², Q is energy in kilojoules, A is area in square meters, and t is time in seconds.
For reference, direct sunlight at noon on a clear day provides roughly 1 kW/m² at the Earth’s surface.
kW/m² is an SI-derived unit and is convenient for large-scale energy calculations, replacing older units like Btu/ft²·h or cal/cm²·s. It provides a straightforward way to assess power per unit area in engineering and environmental applications.
No conversions available for heat-flux-density.