Understanding square feet per second to square metres per second Conversion
The square foot per second (ft²/s) is the imperial unit of kinematic viscosity, expressing how quickly momentum spreads through a fluid. The square metre per second (m²/s) is the SI unit for the same quantity and is the base against which all viscosity units are defined. Converting ft²/s to m²/s is the fundamental step for bringing imperial fluid-dynamics data into SI engineering calculations.
Conversion Formula
To convert square feet per second to square metres per second, multiply by this factor:
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 25 square feet per second to square metres per second.
How to Convert square feet per second to square metres per second
Convert imperial kinematic viscosity into SI units with one multiplication.
- Start with ft²/s: Take your value, for example 25 ft²/s.
- Multiply by 0.09290304: This is the number of m²/s in one ft²/s.
- Compute the product: .
- State the result: 25 ft²/s equals about 2.32258 m²/s.
square feet per second to square metres per second conversion table
| square feet per second (ft2/s) | square metres per second (m2/s) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 0.09290304 |
| 2 | 0.1858061 |
| 3 | 0.2787091 |
| 4 | 0.3716122 |
| 5 | 0.4645152 |
| 6 | 0.5574182 |
| 7 | 0.6503213 |
| 8 | 0.7432243 |
| 9 | 0.8361274 |
| 10 | 0.9290304 |
| 15 | 1.393546 |
| 20 | 1.858061 |
| 25 | 2.322576 |
| 30 | 2.787091 |
| 40 | 3.716122 |
| 50 | 4.645152 |
| 60 | 5.574182 |
| 70 | 6.503213 |
| 80 | 7.432243 |
| 90 | 8.361274 |
| 100 | 9.290304 |
| 150 | 13.93546 |
| 200 | 18.58061 |
| 250 | 23.22576 |
| 300 | 27.87091 |
| 400 | 37.16122 |
| 500 | 46.45152 |
| 600 | 55.74182 |
| 700 | 65.03213 |
| 800 | 74.32243 |
| 900 | 83.61274 |
| 1000 | 92.90304 |
| 2000 | 185.8061 |
| 3000 | 278.7091 |
| 4000 | 371.6122 |
| 5000 | 464.5152 |
| 10000 | 929.0304 |
| 25000 | 2322.576 |
| 50000 | 4645.152 |
| 100000 | 9290.304 |
| 250000 | 23225.76 |
| 500000 | 46451.52 |
| 1000000 | 92903.04 |
What is the square foot per second?
The square foot per second is an imperial and US customary unit of kinematic viscosity, expressing how quickly momentum diffuses through a fluid relative to its density. It appears in older engineering references and in fields where imperial units persist, such as parts of the oil and gas industry.
Definition
One square foot per second is the kinematic viscosity of a fluid in which an area of one square foot's worth of momentum diffusion occurs each second. Because one foot equals exactly 0.3048 metre, the conversion follows directly from squaring that length.
Exactly, .
Origin and History
The unit derives from the imperial foot, a length whose modern definition was internationally standardized in 1959 as exactly 0.3048 metre. Kinematic viscosity expressed in ft²/s follows the same dimensional pattern as its SI counterpart (m²/s), simply substituting the foot for the metre.
Law and Notable Facts
The square foot per second is a coherent unit within the foot–pound–second system rather than an SI unit. It is a comparatively large unit: even highly viscous industrial fluids rarely exceed a small fraction of 1 ft²/s, so most practical values are much less than one.
Real-World Examples and Conversions
- Water at 20 °C (~1.004 cSt) is only about .
- A heavy oil at 100 cSt equals about .
- .
- .
What is the square metre per second?
The square metre per second (m²/s) is the SI derived unit of kinematic viscosity and of diffusivity. Kinematic viscosity is the ratio of a fluid's dynamic viscosity to its density, describing how readily a fluid flows under gravity independent of its mass.
Definition
One square metre per second is the SI coherent unit of kinematic viscosity, obtained by dividing dynamic viscosity (Pa·s) by density (kg/m³):
Equivalently, . Its dimensions are area per time (L²T⁻¹). The same unit measures mass diffusivity and thermal diffusivity.
Origin and History
The concept of kinematic viscosity was developed in fluid mechanics to separate a fluid's resistance to shear (dynamic viscosity) from the inertial effect of its density. The SI adopted the coherent unit m²/s as part of the metre-kilogram-second framework, replacing the older CGS stokes (cm²/s).
Law and Notable Facts
The m²/s is the SI-preferred unit, but it is inconveniently large for most liquids, so the millimetre-squared per second (mm²/s), equal to the centistokes, dominates practical tabulation. The Reynolds number, , uses kinematic viscosity directly in m²/s.
Real-World Examples and Conversions
Water at 20 °C has a kinematic viscosity of about (1.004 cSt). Air at 20 °C is roughly , higher than water because of air's low density. One equals or .
Frequently Asked Questions
How many square metres per second are in one square foot per second?
One ft²/s equals 0.09290304 m²/s, because one square foot is exactly 0.09290304 square metres.
How do I convert square feet per second to square metres per second?
Multiply the ft²/s value by 0.09290304. For example, 10 ft²/s is about 0.929030 m²/s.
How many square feet per second is one square metre per second?
About 10.7639 ft²/s, the reciprocal of 0.09290304.
Why convert to square metres per second?
The m²/s is the SI unit of kinematic viscosity, so converting into it standardizes imperial data for use in scientific formulas and international engineering reports.
How does m²/s relate to centistokes?
One m²/s equals 1,000,000 centistokes (cSt), since 1 cSt is 1 mm²/s; the m²/s is the large-scale base unit and cSt the practical industrial one.
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Complete square feet per second conversion table
| Unit | Result |
|---|---|
| square metres per second (m2/s) | 0.09290304 m2/s |
| square millimetres per second (mm2/s) | 92903.04 mm2/s |
| stokes (St) | 929.0304 St |
| centistokes (cSt) | 92903.04 cSt |