square millimetres per second (mm2/s) to square feet per second (ft2/s) conversion

1 mm2/s = 0.00001076391 ft2/sft2/smm2/s
Formula
1 mm2/s = 0.00001076391 ft2/s

Understanding Square Millimetres Per Second to Square Feet Per Second Conversion

The square millimetre per second (mm²/s) is a small metric unit of kinematic viscosity, equal to the centistokes, while the square foot per second (ft²/s) is a much larger imperial unit. The two differ by a huge factor because a square foot dwarfs a square millimetre. This conversion is needed when practical lubricant viscosities given in mm²/s must be checked against imperial-based hydraulic or aerospace calculations.

Conversion Formula

1 mm2/s=1.07639×105 ft2/s1\ \text{mm2/s} = 1.07639 \times 10⁻⁵\ \text{ft2/s}

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

ft2/s=mm2/s×0.00001076391\text{ft2/s} = \text{mm2/s} \times 0.00001076391

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 square millimetres per second to square feet per second.

ft2/s=25×0.00001076391=0.000269098 ft2/s\text{ft2/s} = 25 \times 0.00001076391 = 0.000269098\ \text{ft2/s}

How to Convert Square Millimetres Per Second to Square Feet Per Second

This method converts a small metric kinematic-viscosity value into imperial units.

  1. Recall the factor: One square millimetre per second equals 0.00001076391 square feet per second.
  2. Take your value: Record the kinematic viscosity in mm²/s (equivalently centistokes).
  3. Multiply: Multiply by 0.00001076391 to obtain square feet per second.
  4. Worked result: For 25 mm²/s, 25 × 0.00001076391 = 0.000269098 ft²/s.

square millimetres per second to square feet per second conversion table

square millimetres per second (mm2/s)square feet per second (ft2/s)
00
10.00001076391
20.00002152782
30.00003229173
40.00004305564
50.00005381955
60.00006458346
70.00007534737
80.00008611128
90.00009687519
100.0001076391
150.0001614587
200.0002152782
250.0002690978
300.0003229173
400.0004305564
500.0005381955
600.0006458346
700.0007534737
800.0008611128
900.0009687519
1000.001076391
1500.001614587
2000.002152782
2500.002690978
3000.003229173
4000.004305564
5000.005381955
6000.006458346
7000.007534737
8000.008611128
9000.009687519
10000.01076391
20000.02152782
30000.03229173
40000.04305564
50000.05381955
100000.1076391
250000.2690978
500000.5381955
1000001.076391
2500002.690978
5000005.381955
100000010.76391

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 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.

1 ft2/s=0.0929030 m2/s1\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s} = 0.0929030\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}

Exactly, 1 ft2/s=(0.3048)2 m2/s=0.09290304 m2/s=92903.04 cSt1\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s} = (0.3048)^2\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} = 0.09290304\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} = 92903.04\ \text{cSt}.

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 1.08×105 ft2/s1.08 \times 10⁻⁵\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s}.
  • A heavy oil at 100 cSt equals about 1.076×103 ft2/s1.076 \times 10⁻³\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s}.
  • 1 ft2/s=0.09290304 m2/s1\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s} = 0.09290304\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}.
  • 1 m2/s10.7639 ft2/s1\ \text{m}^2/\text{s} \approx 10.7639\ \text{ft}^2/\text{s}.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many square feet per second are in one square millimetre per second?

One square millimetre per second equals about 0.00001076391 square feet per second, reflecting how tiny a square millimetre is compared with a square foot.

What is the formula for this conversion?

Multiply the mm²/s value by 0.00001076391. For example, 100 mm²/s equals 0.001076391 ft²/s.

Why is the resulting number so small?

Because a square foot contains roughly 92,903 square millimetres, any viscosity expressed per square foot yields a much smaller numerical value than the same quantity per square millimetre.

When would I use this conversion?

It arises when converting practical centistokes-scale lubricant or coolant data into imperial ft²/s for legacy US hydraulic, automotive, or aerospace analyses.

How do I reverse it back to mm²/s?

Multiply the ft²/s value by 92,903.04, so 0.001 ft²/s equals about 92.903 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