No. It is a unit of power. (That's the rate at which energy is moved or used.)
No relationship whatsoever. A 'cc', or cubic centimeter, is a unit of volume, while a kilowatt is a unit of power.
The watt (or kilowatt) is a unit of power (energy/time). Kilowatt per unit area, for example, kilowatt per square meter, doesn't have a special unit name, but the thing measured is called intensity.
One Kilowatt hour is one Unit. Expressed as :- 1 KWH = I UNIT
It is a commercial unit of energy.
The commerical unit (or trade unit)of energy is kilowatt-hour.
energy
There is no such thing as a "kilowatt per hour". Kilowatt is a unit of power, not of energy. A unit of energy is kilowatt-hour. That's kilowatt times hours, not "per" hour ("per" implies division, not multiplication). If a generator produces 10 kilowatts, that means it produces 10 kilowatt-hours every hour.
kW is kilowatt - a unit of power. 1 kilowatt is equal to 1000 watts: 1kW = 1000W
1. The kilowatt hour (kWh) is a unit of energy. 2. The unit of power is simple the kilowatt (kW). 3. 1 kW = 1 000 W; 33 W = 0,033 kW.
A Kilowatt hour.
1 kilowatt = 1000 watt ==> 1 watt = 0.001 kilowatt
A unit (as mentioned on the electricity bills) is represented in kWH or Kilowatt Hour. This is the actual electricity or energy used. If you use 1000 Watts or 1 Kilowatt of power for 1 hour then you consume 1 unit or 1 Kilowatt-Hour (kWH) of electricity.