🌊 cSt to cm²/s — Centistokes to Square Centimeter/Second Converter

Convert kinematic viscosity units — m²/s, Stokes, centistokes, ft²/s and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 cSt = 0.01 cm²/s
UnitNameValue
m²/s Square Meter/Second 0.000001
cm²/s Square Centimeter/Second 0.01
St Stokes 0.01
ft²/s Square Foot/Second 0.000010763915
in²/s Square Inch/Second 0.0015500031

Quick Answer

Formula: cm²/s = Centistokes × 0.01

Multiply any Centistokes value by 0.01 to get cm²/s.

Reverse: Centistokes = cm²/s × 100

Water reference (20°C): 1.004 cSt = 0.01004 cm²/s

Worked Examples

0.01 cm²/s
1 cSt × 0.01 = 0.01 cm²/s
1 cSt = 0.01 cm²/s.
1 cm²/s
100 cSt × 0.01 = 1 cm²/s
100 cSt = 1 cm²/s = 1 St.
10 cm²/s
1000 cSt × 0.01 = 10 cm²/s
1,000 cSt = 10 cm²/s.
0.0001 cm²/s
0.01 cSt × 0.01 = 1.0000e-4 cm²/s
0.01 cSt = 0.0001 cm²/s.

Kinematic Viscosity of Common Fluids

Values at ~20°C unless noted. Factor: 1 cSt = 0.01 cm²/s

Centistokes (cSt)cm²/s (cm²/s)Fluid
0.015 cSt0.00015 cm²/sAir (20°C)
0.5 cSt0.005 cm²/sPetrol (gasoline)
1.004 cSt0.01004 cm²/sWater (20°C)
1.5 cSt0.015 cm²/sEthanol
3 cSt0.03 cm²/sDiesel fuel
35 cSt0.35 cm²/sSAE 10W motor oil
84 cSt0.84 cm²/sOlive oil
100 cSt1 cm²/sSAE 30 motor oil
180 cSt1.8 cm²/sSAE 90 gear oil
1410 cSt14.1 cm²/sGlycerin (20°C)
5000 cSt50 cm²/sHoney
8000 cSt80 cm²/sMolasses
5e+04 cSt500 cm²/sTomato ketchup
2.5e+05 cSt2500 cm²/sPeanut butter
1.000e+21 cSt1.000e+19 cm²/sGlass (room temp)

Mental Math Tricks

÷ 100 exactly

cSt ÷ 100 = cm²/s = St. Exact.

Key anchor

100 cSt = 1 cm²/s = 1 St. 1 cSt = 0.01 cm²/s.

Reverse

cm²/s × 100 = cSt.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Lubrication Engineer

Specifies lubricant viscosity grades in cSt at 40°C and 100°C per ISO VG and SAE standards.

Chemical Engineer

Uses kinematic viscosity in cSt for pipeline flow calculations, pump sizing, and heat exchanger design.

Petroleum Engineer

Measures crude oil and refined product viscosity in cSt for pipeline transport and refinery design.

Hydraulic Systems Engineer

Selects hydraulic fluids based on kinematic viscosity in cSt for pump compatibility and system efficiency.

Food Engineer

Characterizes food product viscosity (honey, sauces, oils) in cSt for process design and quality control.

Aerospace Engineer

Uses ft²/s or cSt for atmospheric kinematic viscosity in Reynolds number calculations for aircraft design.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Centistokes and cm²/s

Centistokes (cSt)

The centistokes (cSt) equals 0.01 Stokes = 10⁻⁶ m²/s and is the most widely used unit for specifying lubricant and fuel viscosity in industry. Water at 20°C has a kinematic viscosity of almost exactly 1 cSt — making it the universal reference.

cSt is the standard unit in lubricant specifications worldwide: ISO viscosity grades (ISO VG 32, 46, 68, 100, etc.) are defined at 40°C in cSt; SAE engine oil grades correlate to cSt at 100°C; ASTM fuel standards specify viscosity in cSt. Virtually every technical datasheet for oils, lubricants, and fuels uses cSt.

Interesting fact: Water's kinematic viscosity of ~1 cSt at 20°C is the reason the centistokes became so practically useful — the reference value is 1, making quick mental comparisons straightforward. Motor oils are typically 30–100 cSt at 40°C; glycerin is about 1,400 cSt; liquid honey 2,000–10,000 cSt.

cm²/s (cm²/s)

Square centimeter per second (cm²/s) equals exactly 1 Stokes — the CGS unit of kinematic viscosity. The equivalence cm²/s = St makes this unit important in older fluid mechanics literature and some industrial applications.

cm²/s = St is used in petroleum engineering viscometers, some lubricant standards, and pre-SI fluid mechanics texts. Water at 20°C = 0.01 cm²/s = 0.01 St = 1 cSt. Honey ≈ 500–10,000 cSt = 5–100 cm²/s.

Interesting fact: The Stokes unit is named after Sir George Gabriel Stokes, the Irish physicist who derived Stokes' Law (1851) describing the drag force on a sphere moving through a viscous fluid — the foundational equation for falling-sphere viscometers still used today.

About Centistokes to cm²/s Conversion

Kinematic viscosity (ν = μ/ρ) measures how a fluid flows under gravity. The cSt is dominant in industry; m²/s is the SI unit; St and cm²/s are the CGS equivalents. Key anchor: water at 20°C ≈ 1 cSt = 10⁻⁶ m²/s = 0.01 St.

Exact factor: 1 cSt = 0.01 cm²/s. Reverse: 1 cm²/s = 100 cSt.

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.