millipascal-seconds (mPa-s) to pound-force-seconds per square foot (lbf-s/ft2) conversion

1 mPa-s = 0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft2lbf-s/ft2mPa-s
Formula
1 mPa-s = 0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft2

Understanding millipascal-seconds to pound-force-seconds per square foot Conversion

A millipascal-second (mPa-s) is the SI submultiple of dynamic viscosity, one-thousandth of a pascal-second. A pound-force-second per square foot (lbf-s/ft2) is the US customary viscosity unit, equal to one pound-force of shear stress sustained per second over a square foot, and it is a very large unit: about 47,880 pascal-seconds. This conversion, multiplying by roughly 2.08854e-5, is needed when SI fluid data must feed into imperial engineering formulas common in North American petroleum and hydraulics practice.

Conversion Formula

1 mPa-s=0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft21\ \text{mPa-s} = 0.00002088543\ \text{lbf-s/ft2}

To convert millipascal-seconds to pound-force-seconds per square foot, multiply by this factor:

lbf-s/ft2=mPa-s×0.00002088543\text{lbf-s/ft2} = \text{mPa-s} \times 0.00002088543

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 millipascal-seconds to pound-force-seconds per square foot.

lbf-s/ft2=25×0.00002088543=0.000522136 lbf-s/ft2\text{lbf-s/ft2} = 25 \times 0.00002088543 = 0.000522136\ \text{lbf-s/ft2}

How to Convert millipascal-seconds to pound-force-seconds per square foot

This conversion bridges SI viscosity to the US customary unit by multiplying by a small factor.

  1. Note the viscosity: Take your value in mPa-s, for example 25 mPa-s.
  2. Apply the factor: Multiply by 0.00002088543, since 1 mPa-s = 0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft2.
  3. Compute: 25 × 0.00002088543 gives the result in imperial units.
  4. Result: 25 mPa-s equals about 0.000522136 lbf-s/ft2.

millipascal-seconds to pound-force-seconds per square foot conversion table

millipascal-seconds (mPa-s)pound-force-seconds per square foot (lbf-s/ft2)
00
10.00002088543
20.00004177087
30.0000626563
40.00008354174
50.0001044272
60.0001253126
70.000146198
80.0001670835
90.0001879689
100.0002088543
150.0003132815
200.0004177087
250.0005221359
300.000626563
400.0008354174
500.001044272
600.001253126
700.00146198
800.001670835
900.001879689
1000.002088543
1500.003132815
2000.004177087
2500.005221359
3000.00626563
4000.008354174
5000.01044272
6000.01253126
7000.0146198
8000.01670835
9000.01879689
10000.02088543
20000.04177087
30000.0626563
40000.08354174
50000.1044272
100000.2088543
250000.5221359
500001.044272
1000002.088543
2500005.221359
50000010.44272
100000020.88543

What is the Millipascal-Second?

The millipascal-second is a submultiple of the SI unit of dynamic viscosity, equal to one thousandth of a pascal-second. It is the everyday unit for the viscosity of liquids such as water, oils, and beverages.

Definition

One millipascal-second is one thousandth of a pascal-second, the SI derived unit of dynamic viscosity.

1 mPa-s=0.001 Pa·s1\ \text{mPa-s} = 0.001\ \text{Pa·s}

In SI base units this is 10⁻³ kg·m⁻¹·s⁻¹. The millipascal-second is numerically identical to the centipoise (cP), the widely used CGS-based unit, so 1 mPa·s = 1 cP exactly.

Origin and History

The unit follows from the SI prefix "milli-" applied to the pascal-second, which itself was defined when the International System of Units systematized viscosity in terms of the pascal. Its convenience comes from matching the pre-existing centipoise, letting historical viscosity data carry over unchanged.

Law and Notable Facts

As an SI-sanctioned submultiple, the millipascal-second is fully standard. Its enduring popularity rests on a near-coincidence: liquid water at 20 °C has a dynamic viscosity of about 1.002 mPa·s, making the unit an intuitive reference point.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • Water at 20 °C: about 1.0 mPa·s.
  • Whole milk: roughly 2 to 3 mPa·s.
  • Light motor oil (SAE 10 at operating temperature): tens of mPa·s.
  • 1 mPa·s equals exactly 1 centipoise and 0.001 Pa·s.

What is the pound-force-second per square foot?

The pound-force-second per square foot (lbf·s/ft²) is the unit of dynamic (absolute) viscosity in the English/US customary gravitational system. It is sometimes called the "slug per foot-second" because it is numerically identical to that combination.

Definition

One pound-force-second per square foot is the viscosity that produces a shear stress of one pound-force per square foot at a shear rate of one per second:

1 lbf·s/ft2=47.8803 Pa·s1\ \text{lbf·s/ft}^2 = 47.8803\ \text{Pa·s}

The exact value follows from the definitions 1 lbf=4.4482216152605 N1\ \text{lbf} = 4.4482216152605\ \text{N} and 1 ft=0.3048 m1\ \text{ft} = 0.3048\ \text{m}, giving 1 lbf·s/ft2=4.4482216152605/0.30482=47.880259 Pa·s1\ \text{lbf·s/ft}^2 = 4.4482216152605 / 0.3048² = 47.880259\ \text{Pa·s} exactly. It equals one reyn's cousin in ft units, and is identical to 1 slugft1s11\ \text{slug}\,\text{ft}^{-1}\,\text{s}^{-1}.

Origin and History

The unit belongs to the foot-pound-second (FPS) gravitational system used by English-speaking engineers, in which force (the pound-force) rather than mass is a base concept. It became standard in aeronautical and mechanical engineering texts in the United States during the 20th century, where fluid properties were often tabulated in customary units.

Law and Notable Facts

It is not an SI unit; the SI equivalent is the pascal-second. A closely related unit, the reyn (1 lbf·s/in²), is used in lubrication engineering and equals 6.89476×103 Pa·s6.89476\times10^{3}\ \text{Pa·s}, exactly 144 times the lbf·s/ft² because there are 144 square inches per square foot.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

Water at 20 °C, about 1.002 cP=0.001002 Pa·s1.002\ \text{cP} = 0.001002\ \text{Pa·s}, is roughly 2.09×105 lbf·s/ft22.09\times10^{-5}\ \text{lbf·s/ft}^2. Conversely, 1 lbf·s/ft2=47.8803 Pa·s=47,880.3 cP1\ \text{lbf·s/ft}^2 = 47.8803\ \text{Pa·s} = 47{,}880.3\ \text{cP}, a very viscous fluid comparable to thick syrup. Air at room temperature (1.8×105 Pa·s\approx 1.8\times10^{-5}\ \text{Pa·s}) is about 3.8×107 lbf·s/ft23.8\times10^{-7}\ \text{lbf·s/ft}^2.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pound-force-seconds per square foot are in a millipascal-second?

One millipascal-second equals about 0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft2, because the imperial unit is very large, roughly 47,880 Pa-s.

Why is the resulting number so small?

The pound-force-second per square foot is a coarse unit for everyday fluids, so a modest millipascal-second value maps to a tiny fraction of it.

What is water in these imperial units?

Water near room temperature, about 1 mPa-s, equals roughly 2.09e-5 lbf-s/ft2, which is why the reverse factor is around 47,880.

Where is lbf-s/ft2 used?

It appears in US customary engineering for hydraulics, lubrication, and petroleum flow, where forces in pounds and areas in square feet are standard.

How do I convert 100 mPa-s to lbf-s/ft2?

Multiply 100 by 0.00002088543 to get about 0.00208854 lbf-s/ft2.

Complete millipascal-seconds conversion table

mPa-s
UnitResult
pascal-seconds (Pa-s)0.001 Pa-s
poises (P)0.01 P
centipoises (cP)1 cP
pound-force-seconds per square foot (lbf-s/ft2)0.00002088543 lbf-s/ft2
pounds per foot-second (lb/(ft-s))0.000671969 lb/(ft-s)