Understanding stokes to square feet per second Conversion
The stokes (St) is the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity, defined as one square centimetre per second, and is used to characterise how readily a fluid flows under its own weight. The square foot per second (ft2/s) is the corresponding US customary unit, occasionally encountered in older American petroleum and lubrication engineering data. Converting between them lets you reconcile fluid-flow measurements taken in metric laboratory instruments with imperial process specifications.
Conversion Formula
To convert stokes to square feet per second, multiply by this factor:
Step-by-Step Example
Convert 25 stokes to square feet per second.
How to Convert stokes to square feet per second
Converting kinematic viscosity from the CGS stokes to the US customary square foot per second takes a single multiplication.
- Note the stokes value: Start with your kinematic viscosity reading in St.
- Apply the factor: Multiply by 0.001076391, the number of ft2/s in one stokes.
- Read the result: The product is your viscosity expressed in ft2/s.
- Worked result: 25 St × 0.001076391 = 0.0269098 ft2/s.
stokes to square feet per second conversion table
| stokes (St) | square feet per second (ft2/s) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 0.001076391 |
| 2 | 0.002152782 |
| 3 | 0.003229173 |
| 4 | 0.004305564 |
| 5 | 0.005381955 |
| 6 | 0.006458346 |
| 7 | 0.007534737 |
| 8 | 0.008611128 |
| 9 | 0.009687519 |
| 10 | 0.01076391 |
| 15 | 0.01614587 |
| 20 | 0.02152782 |
| 25 | 0.02690978 |
| 30 | 0.03229173 |
| 40 | 0.04305564 |
| 50 | 0.05381955 |
| 60 | 0.06458346 |
| 70 | 0.07534737 |
| 80 | 0.08611128 |
| 90 | 0.09687519 |
| 100 | 0.1076391 |
| 150 | 0.1614587 |
| 200 | 0.2152782 |
| 250 | 0.2690978 |
| 300 | 0.3229173 |
| 400 | 0.4305564 |
| 500 | 0.5381955 |
| 600 | 0.6458346 |
| 700 | 0.7534737 |
| 800 | 0.8611128 |
| 900 | 0.9687519 |
| 1000 | 1.076391 |
| 2000 | 2.152782 |
| 3000 | 3.229173 |
| 4000 | 4.305564 |
| 5000 | 5.381955 |
| 10000 | 10.76391 |
| 25000 | 26.90978 |
| 50000 | 53.81955 |
| 100000 | 107.6391 |
| 250000 | 269.0978 |
| 500000 | 538.1955 |
| 1000000 | 1076.391 |
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:
Because , area scales as , so exactly. One hundredth of a stokes is a centistokes: .
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 (, or 100 cSt) is comparable to a moderately heavy oil. To convert, , and .
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 .
- .
- .
Frequently Asked Questions
How many square feet per second are in one stokes?
One stokes equals 0.00107639 ft2/s. Because a square foot is far larger than a square centimetre, the numerical value in ft2/s is much smaller than in stokes.
What is kinematic viscosity?
Kinematic viscosity is the ratio of a fluid's dynamic viscosity to its density, describing how quickly it flows under gravity. Both the stokes and the square foot per second measure this same property, just in different unit systems.
How do I convert square feet per second back to stokes?
Multiply the ft2/s value by 929.0304. For example, 1 ft2/s equals 929.0304 St.
Where is this conversion used in practice?
It appears when comparing lubricant, fuel oil, or hydraulic-fluid flow data reported in metric stokes against legacy US engineering specifications expressed in ft2/s.
Is the stokes a large unit for practical fluids?
For most everyday liquids the centistokes (one-hundredth of a stokes) is more convenient, since water at room temperature is about one centistokes.
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Complete stokes conversion table
| Unit | Result |
|---|---|
| square metres per second (m2/s) | 0.0001 m2/s |
| square millimetres per second (mm2/s) | 100 mm2/s |
| centistokes (cSt) | 100 cSt |
| square feet per second (ft2/s) | 0.001076391 ft2/s |