Misplaced Pages

Viscosity: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 06:41, 16 July 2002 edit217.168.172.202 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 01:54, 1 August 2002 edit undoMalcolm Farmer (talk | contribs)5,747 editsm link to orphan viscometerNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Viscosity''' is a property of ] describing its internal resistance to flow and may be thought '''Viscosity''' is a property of ] describing its internal resistance to flow and may be thought
of as a measure of fluid friction. ] is the field of science that deals with of as a measure of fluid friction. ] is the field of science that deals with
viscosity. viscosity; viscosity is measured with a ].


If the viscosity of a fluid is constant (neglecting temperature and pressure effects) If the viscosity of a fluid is constant (neglecting temperature and pressure effects)

Revision as of 01:54, 1 August 2002

Viscosity is a property of fluids describing its internal resistance to flow and may be thought of as a measure of fluid friction. Rheology is the field of science that deals with viscosity; viscosity is measured with a viscometer.

If the viscosity of a fluid is constant (neglecting temperature and pressure effects) it is said to be a 'newtonian' fluid. Non-newtonian fluids exhibit a variation of viscosity depending on gradients within the flow field, the history that a fluid 'particle' experiences on its flow path, etc. If the viscosity of a fluid depends solely on the gradients within the flow field it is called generalized newtonian or purely newtonian.

The viscosity of fluids is either given as dynamic viscosity η (Pa.s = kg/m/s) or as kinematic viscosity ν (m^2/s). Both terms are related via the fluid density ρ to each other: η = ν * ρ.

Some dynamic viscosities of (newtonian) fluids are listed below:

Gases (at 0 C):

hydrogen 8.4*10 Pa.s
air 17.4*10 Pa.s
xenon 21.2*10 Pa.s


Liquids (at 20 C):

acetone 0.33*10 Pa.s
methanol 0.59*10 Pa.s
water 1.0*10 Pa.s
nitrobenzol 2.0*10 Pa.s
sulfuric acid 30*10 Pa.s
olive oil 81*10 Pa.s
ricinus oil 985*10 Pa.s
glycerin 1485*10 Pa.s

Contrary to many assertions, glass is an amorphous solid, not a liquid, and it does not flow. See the article on glass for more details on this.

Many fluids like honey have a wide range of viscosity.