centistokes (cSt) to stokes (St) conversion

1 cSt = 0.01 StStcSt
Formula
1 cSt = 0.01 St

Understanding centistokes to stokes Conversion

Both the centistokes (cSt) and the stokes (St) are CGS units of kinematic viscosity named after the physicist George Gabriel Stokes. The stokes is the larger unit — one stokes equals exactly 100 centistokes — and it is defined as one square centimetre per second. Because most practical fluids have kinematic viscosities of only a few centistokes, converting to stokes is mainly needed when reconciling modern viscometer readings with older literature and reference tables that quote values in stokes.

Conversion Formula

1 cSt=0.01 St1\ \text{cSt} = 0.01\ \text{St}

To convert centistokes to stokes, multiply by this factor:

St=cSt×0.01\text{St} = \text{cSt} \times 0.01

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 centistokes to stokes.

St=25×0.01=0.25 St\text{St} = 25 \times 0.01 = 0.25\ \text{St}

How to Convert centistokes to stokes

Both units are CGS, so this is a shift of two decimal places.

  1. Start with centistokes: Take the kinematic viscosity in cSt, for example 25 cSt.
  2. Multiply by 0.01: Because 100 centistokes make one stokes, apply the 0.01 factor.
  3. Calculate: 25×0.01=0.2525 \times 0.01 = 0.25.
  4. Write the answer: 25 centistokes equals 0.25 stokes.

centistokes to stokes conversion table

centistokes (cSt)stokes (St)
00
10.01
20.02
30.03
40.04
50.05
60.06
70.07
80.08
90.09
100.1
150.15
200.2
250.25
300.3
400.4
500.5
600.6
700.7
800.8
900.9
1001
1501.5
2002
2502.5
3003
4004
5005
6006
7007
8008
9009
100010
200020
300030
400040
500050
10000100
25000250
50000500
1000001000
2500002500
5000005000
100000010000

What is the centistokes?

The centistokes is a unit of kinematic viscosity, describing how readily a fluid flows under the influence of gravity by combining its dynamic viscosity and density. It is widely used in the petroleum, lubricant, and food industries because most everyday fluids fall in a convenient range when measured in centistokes.

Definition

The centistokes is one hundredth of a stokes, the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity. One stokes equals one square centimetre per second, so one centistokes equals one square millimetre per second.

1 cSt=1.00000×106 m2/s1\ \text{cSt} = 1.00000 \times 10⁻⁶\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}

Equivalently, 1 cSt=1 mm2/s=102 St1\ \text{cSt} = 1\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s} = 10⁻²\ \text{St}. Kinematic viscosity is the ratio of dynamic viscosity to density: ν=μ/ρ\nu = \mu / \rho.

Origin and History

The stokes was named after the Irish physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes (1819–1903), whose work on fluid flow led to Stokes' law and the Navier–Stokes equations. The name was adopted within the centimetre–gram–second (CGS) system of units, and the centistokes emerged as a practical subunit because water and many light oils have viscosities near 1 cSt.

Law and Notable Facts

The stokes and centistokes are not SI units, but they remain accepted for use and are ubiquitous in industry standards such as ASTM D445 and ISO 3104. Conveniently, pure water at about 20 °C has a kinematic viscosity of very nearly 1 centistokes, making it a natural reference point.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • Water at 20 °C: about 1.004 cSt (1.004×106 m2/s1.004 \times 10⁻⁶\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}).
  • SAE 30 motor oil at 40 °C: roughly 100 cSt.
  • Automotive gear oils are graded partly by their viscosity in centistokes at 100 °C.
  • 100 cSt=1 St=1.00000×104 m2/s100\ \text{cSt} = 1\ \text{St} = 1.00000 \times 10⁻⁴\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}.

What is the stokes?

The stokes (St) is the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to one square centimetre per second. Its common submultiple, the centistokes (cSt), is the everyday unit for reporting the kinematic viscosity of oils and other liquids.

Definition

One stokes equals one square centimetre per second, which in SI units is:

1 St=0.0001 m2/s1\ \text{St} = 0.0001\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}

Because 1 cm=102 m1\ \text{cm} = 10⁻²\ \text{m}, area scales as 10410⁻⁴, so 1 St=1 cm2/s=104 m2/s1\ \text{St} = 1\ \text{cm}^2/\text{s} = 10⁻⁴\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} exactly. One hundredth of a stokes is a centistokes: 1 cSt=106 m2/s=1 mm2/s1\ \text{cSt} = 10⁻⁶\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} = 1\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s}.

Origin and History

The unit is named after the Irish-British mathematician and physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes (1819–1903), whose work on fluid dynamics includes Stokes' law for the drag on a sphere and the Navier–Stokes equations. It was introduced as the natural CGS unit for kinematic viscosity, paralleling the poise for dynamic viscosity.

Law and Notable Facts

The stokes is a CGS unit and is not part of SI, which uses m²/s. Kinematic viscosity in stokes equals dynamic viscosity in poise divided by density in g/cm³ — a clean relationship within the CGS system, since water's density is very close to 1 g/cm³.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

Water at 20 °C has a kinematic viscosity of about 0.01 St, i.e. roughly 1 cSt. One stokes (104 m2/s10⁻⁴\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}, or 100 cSt) is comparable to a moderately heavy oil. To convert, 1 St=100 cSt=100 mm2/s1\ \text{St} = 100\ \text{cSt} = 100\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s}, and 1 m2/s=10,000 St1\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} = 10{,}000\ \text{St}.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many stokes are in one centistokes?

One centistokes equals 0.01 stokes, since the "centi-" prefix denotes one hundredth.

How many centistokes make one stokes?

Exactly 100 centistokes, the reverse of the 0.01 factor.

What is a stokes defined as?

One stokes is one square centimetre per second (cm²/s), the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity.

What is 25 cSt in stokes?

Multiply 25 by 0.01 to get 0.25 St.

Why is the centistokes used more often than the stokes?

Common fluids have kinematic viscosities of only a few centistokes, so the smaller unit gives convenient whole or near-whole numbers instead of tiny fractions of a stokes.

Complete centistokes conversion table

cSt
UnitResult
square metres per second (m2/s)0.000001 m2/s
square millimetres per second (mm2/s)1 mm2/s
stokes (St)0.01 St
square feet per second (ft2/s)0.00001076391 ft2/s