square millimetres per second (mm2/s) to centistokes (cSt) conversion

1 mm2/s = 1 cStcStmm2/s
Formula
1 mm2/s = 1 cSt

Understanding Square Millimetres Per Second to Centistokes Conversion

The square millimetre per second (mm²/s) is a metric unit of kinematic viscosity, and the centistokes (cSt) is the CGS-derived unit used across the lubricant and fuel industries. Remarkably, the two units are numerically identical: 1 mm²/s equals exactly 1 cSt. This one-to-one relationship makes the conversion a simple relabelling, which is why ISO viscosity grades and oil datasheets treat the two units as equivalent.

Conversion Formula

1 mm2/s=1.00000 cSt1\ \text{mm2/s} = 1.00000\ \text{cSt}

To convert square millimetres per second to centistokes, multiply by this factor:

cSt=mm2/s×1\text{cSt} = \text{mm2/s} \times 1

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 square millimetres per second to centistokes.

cSt=25×1=25 cSt\text{cSt} = 25 \times 1 = 25\ \text{cSt}

How to Convert Square Millimetres Per Second to Centistokes

This conversion is a direct one-to-one relabelling.

  1. Know the equivalence: One square millimetre per second equals exactly one centistokes.
  2. Read your value: Take the kinematic viscosity in mm²/s.
  3. Keep the number: The same numeric value is already in centistokes; no multiplication changes it.
  4. Worked result: For 25 mm²/s, 25 × 1 = 25 cSt.

square millimetres per second to centistokes conversion table

square millimetres per second (mm2/s)centistokes (cSt)
00
11
22
33
44
55
66
77
88
99
1010
1515
2020
2525
3030
4040
5050
6060
7070
8080
9090
100100
150150
200200
250250
300300
400400
500500
600600
700700
800800
900900
10001000
20002000
30003000
40004000
50005000
1000010000
2500025000
5000050000
100000100000
250000250000
500000500000
10000001000000

What is the square millimetre per second?

The square millimetre per second (mm²/s) is the practical SI unit of kinematic viscosity, numerically identical to the centistokes (cSt). It is the unit in which most liquid viscosities are quoted in engineering and lubrication data sheets.

Definition

One square millimetre per second is one millionth of a square metre per second:

1 mm2/s=0.000001 m2/s1\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s} = 0.000001\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}

Because 1 mm=103 m1\ \text{mm} = 10⁻³\ \text{m}, area scales as 10610⁻⁶, so 1 mm2/s=106 m2/s1\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s} = 10⁻⁶\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}. It is exactly equal to one centistokes: 1 mm2/s=1 cSt1\ \text{mm}^2/\text{s} = 1\ \text{cSt}.

Origin and History

As the SI displaced the CGS system, the centistokes was re-expressed in coherent SI form as mm²/s, keeping the numerical values in existing tables unchanged. This convenient one-to-one equality made the transition seamless for industries such as petroleum and lubricants that had decades of data in centistokes.

Law and Notable Facts

It is a coherent submultiple within SI usage and the de facto standard for viscosity grades. ISO viscosity grade (VG) numbers, such as ISO VG 46, are defined by the fluid's mid-point kinematic viscosity in mm²/s at 40 °C — so ISO VG 46 oil is nominally 46 mm²/s at 40 °C.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

Water at 20 °C is about 1.004 mm²/s (1.004 cSt). Typical engine oil at 100 °C ranges from roughly 5 to 21 mm²/s depending on SAE grade. One mm2/s\text{mm}^2/\text{s} equals 106 m2/s10⁻⁶\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} and 102 stokes10⁻²\ \text{stokes}.

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}.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many centistokes are in one square millimetre per second?

Exactly one — 1 mm²/s equals 1 cSt, because a square centimetre per second (the stokes) contains 100 square millimetres per second, and a centistokes is one hundredth of a stokes.

Do I need to do any arithmetic for this conversion?

No calculation is required beyond keeping the same number; the value in mm²/s is already the value in centistokes.

Why do two different names exist for the same value?

mm²/s is the SI-coherent expression, while centistokes is the traditional CGS-based name still printed on lubricant and fuel specifications, so both survive in parallel.

Where is this equivalence used?

ISO 3448 viscosity grades, engine-oil datasheets, and diesel-fuel specifications all rely on the fact that mm²/s and cSt are interchangeable.

Is the reverse conversion also one-to-one?

Yes, converting centistokes back to mm²/s uses the same factor of 1, so 25 cSt equals 25 mm²/s.

Complete square millimetres per second conversion table

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