A watt is a unit of power (Joules/second: energy / time). I guess it depends on what method you are using to get energy out of the water, as to how much energy is in it.
"Watt" is a rate of moving energy. Anynumber of watts can heat your liters,but the less watts you use, the longer the job will take.
1000 watts of energy
Do you mean how many watts are used to make hot water? It varies, but a typical home electric hot water heater consumes about 4,500 watts. Industrial hot water heaters might use 20,000 watts or more! I have a little warmer that keeps my coffee warm as I type this, it consumes about 300 watts. Of course it only heats 6 ounces of water....
You can't convert that.* A BTU is a unit of energy. * A watt is a unit of power (energy per unit time).
There are 768 teaspoons of water in one gallon.
2.4705 watts/hour
0.29308323563892147 watts per btu there for 5200 btu = 1524.0328253223915 watts 1 watt=3.412Btu/hr 1 Btu=the amount of energy needed to heat 1 Lb of water 1 degree. A gallon of water weighs aprox. 8 Lbs.
"Watt" is a rate of moving energy. The more watts you use, the faster the waterwill heat up. The fewer watts you use, the slower it will heat. If you can affordthe time to wait, then any amount of power will do the job, no matter how small.
1 gallon of water is 4540 cc and 1 degree F is 0.555 degrees C, so raising 4540 cc of water by 0.555 degree C would take 4540x0.555 calories, or 2520 calories. Multiply by 4.2 to convert to joules which gives 10590 joules. Therefore the energy required is 10590 joules which is the same as 10590 watt-seconds. That could be done by 100 watts in 105.9 seconds, or 1000 watts in 10.59 seconds.
"Watt" is a rate of moving energy. Anynumber of watts can heat your liters,but the less watts you use, the longer the job will take.
One kilowatt is 1000 Watts.
1000 watts of energy
If you have a gallon, you only can have one gallon.
57.73 watt-hours load for 24 hours It takes about 1 Kw of electricity to produce 3.5 lbs of steam from and at 212 F That is 970.2 btu of heat for every 286 watts. 1/2 gallon of water is 4.17 lbs of water. to raise the temperature and convert 1 lb to steam at 100% quality requires 1127.2 btu. for 4.17 lbs that is ~4700 btu. dividing that by 970.2btu/286w = ~1386 watts of energy needed. dividing that by 24 hours will give you a continuous load of 57.73 watt-hours for 24 hours to evaporate 1/2 gallon of water, exclusive of heat losses.
100
350-500
it may use 15 to 25 watts