pF to µF | Picofarads to Microfarads

PF to UF

Convert picofarads into microfarads for capacitor sizing, prefix cleanup, and electronics reference work.

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Conversion Formula

PF to UFuF = pF × 10^-6
Microfarads to PicofaradspF = uF × 10^6

Conversion Examples

100 Picofarads100 picofarads equals 0.0001 microfarads. This is useful when a capacitor body marking and its datasheet do not use the same prefix.
1,000 PicofaradsWhen the starting value is 1,000 picofarads, the converted result becomes 0.001 microfarads. That makes small component values easier to compare in one common scale.
100,000 PicofaradsA value of 100,000 picofarads converts to 0.1 microfarads. This example fits RF, timing, and filter work where tiny capacitances matter.
1E+6 PicofaradsIf you begin with 1E+6 picofarads, you end up with 1 microfarads. It gives a compact reference for BOM cleanup and replacement checks.

PF to UF Table

PicofaradsMicrofarads
10.000001
100.00001
1000.0001
1,0000.001
10,0000.01
100,0000.1
1E+61
1E+710
1E+8100
1E+91,000

Popular Conversions

What is Picofarad and Microfarad?

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.

Microfarad

Definition: A microfarad is one-millionth of a farad.

History/origin: It became the practical capacitor scale for power supplies and many general-purpose circuits.

Current use: Microfarads are used in power electronics, motor capacitors, filters, and bulk decoupling.

Related Capacitance Conversions

Small capacitor values are usually compared across picofarad, nanofarad, microfarad, and farad scales.

Related ConversionFactor or RuleFormula
nF to F× 1E-9F = nF × 10^-9
nF to uF÷ 1,000uF = nF ÷ 1,000
nF to pF× 1,000pF = nF × 1,000
pF to F× 1E-12F = pF × 10^-12
pF to nF÷ 1,000nF = pF ÷ 1,000
pF to uF× 1E-6uF = pF × 10^-6
Nanocoulombs to coulombs× 1E-9C = nC × 10^-9
Ohms to voltsneeds currentV = I × R

Typical Use Cases

Capacitor labelsSwitch capacitance prefixes when a part body and its datasheet use different unit scales.
RF workCompare very small capacitance values in the prefix range most common for tuned circuits.
Replacement checksMake sure a substitute component lands in the same practical capacitance range.
Training examplesUse prefix conversions to show how small capacitor values map across common engineering notation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why does PF to UF 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 UF?

A: 1 picofarads equals 0.000001 microfarads, 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 Microfarads back to Picofarads?

A: pF = uF × 10^6. 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.