PF to F
Convert picofarads into farads for capacitor sizing, prefix cleanup, and electronics reference work.
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PF to F Table
| Picofarads | Farads |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1E-12 |
| 10 | 1E-11 |
| 100 | 1E-10 |
| 1,000 | 1E-9 |
| 10,000 | 1E-8 |
| 100,000 | 1E-7 |
| 1E+6 | 0.000001 |
| 1E+7 | 0.00001 |
| 1E+8 | 0.0001 |
| 1E+9 | 0.001 |
Popular Conversions
- 1 picofarads = 1E-12 farads
- 10 picofarads = 1E-11 farads
- 100 picofarads = 1E-10 farads
- 1,000 picofarads = 1E-9 farads
- 10,000 picofarads = 1E-8 farads
- 100,000 picofarads = 1E-7 farads
- 1E+6 picofarads = 0.000001 farads
- 1E+7 picofarads = 0.00001 farads
What is Picofarad and Farad?
Picofarad
Definition: A picofarad is one-trillionth of a farad.
History/origin: It became common for very small capacitors in RF and high-frequency circuits.
Current use: Picofarads are used in antennas, oscillators, RF tuning, and parasitic-capacitance work.
Farad
Definition: A farad is the SI unit of capacitance.
History/origin: The farad became standard with the development of electrical theory and capacitor technology.
Current use: Farads and prefixed farads are used in circuit design, datasheets, and component selection.
Related Capacitance Conversions
Small capacitor values are usually compared across picofarad, nanofarad, microfarad, and farad scales.
| Related Conversion | Factor or Rule | Formula |
|---|---|---|
| nF to F | × 1E-9 | F = nF × 10^-9 |
| nF to uF | ÷ 1,000 | uF = nF ÷ 1,000 |
| nF to pF | × 1,000 | pF = nF × 1,000 |
| pF to F | × 1E-12 | F = pF × 10^-12 |
| pF to nF | ÷ 1,000 | nF = pF ÷ 1,000 |
| pF to uF | × 1E-6 | uF = pF × 10^-6 |
| Nanocoulombs to coulombs | × 1E-9 | C = nC × 10^-9 |
| Ohms to volts | needs current | V = I × R |
Typical Use Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why does PF to F move the decimal so much?
A: Many electrical pages cross SI prefixes such as pico, nano, micro, milli, or kilo, so the decimal can move a long way even though the component value is the same.
Q: What is a practical checkpoint for PF to F?
A: 1 picofarads equals 1E-12 farads, which is useful when comparing a part label, schematic, BOM, or datasheet.
Q: When should I convert instead of keeping the original prefix?
A: Convert when the meter, datasheet, circuit note, or spreadsheet expects a different prefix or display format.
Q: Why are prefixes used so heavily in electronics?
A: Circuit values often span many orders of magnitude, so prefixes keep numbers readable without long strings of zeros.
Q: How do I go from Farads back to Picofarads?
A: pF = F × 10^12. That reverse step is useful when the reference value already comes in the target prefix.
Q: Is this exact?
A: The calculation uses an exact factor.
