Approximate values of kT at 298 K | Units | |
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kT = | J | |
kT = | pN⋅nm | |
kT = | cal | |
kT = | meV | |
kT = | dBm/Hz | |
≈ [1] | cm−1 | |
= 25.7 | mV | |
RT = kT NA = | kJ⋅mol−1 | |
RT = 0.592 | kcal⋅mol−1 | |
= 0.16 | ps |
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More fundamentally, kT is the amount of heat required to increase the thermodynamic entropy of a system by k.
In physical chemistry, as kT often appears in the denominator of fractions (usually because of Boltzmann distribution), sometimes β = is used instead of kT, turning
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RT is the product of the molar gas constant, R, and the temperature, T. This product is used in physics and chemistry as a scaling factor for energy values in macroscopic scale (sometimes it is used as a pseudo-unit of energy), as many processes and phenomena depend not on the energy alone, but on the ratio of energy and RT, i.e. . The SI units for RT are joules per mole (J/mol).
It differs from kT only by a factor of the Avogadro constant, NA. Its dimension is energy or ML2T-2, expressed in SI units as joules (J):
kT =