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Pa·s to cP Converter — Thermal Converter
Viscosity Converter
Mechanical
0

Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns dynamic viscosity between pascal-seconds, centipoise, millipascal-seconds and poise — instantly and with exact factors. Since one Pa·s is 1000 cP, this is handy for reading SI data back into the everyday centipoise scale. Type a value and read the answer as you type.

These are all dynamic (absolute) viscosity units. Kinematic units like centistokes need the fluid’s density to relate, so they are a separate quantity — see NIST SP 811 for the definitions.

02

The units it covers

Every unit is dynamic viscosity, so each converts through the pascal-second with a fixed ratio.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
Pascal-secondPa·s1SI unit of dynamic viscosity
CentipoisecP0.001Everyday fluids (water ≈ 1 cP)
Millipascal-secondmPa·s0.001SI equivalent of the centipoise
PoiseP0.1CGS unit, older references
03

The formula

Each unit has a fixed value in pascal-seconds, so any conversion goes through it once:

Conversion
result = value × factor_from ÷ factor_to

Where:

  • value = the number you typed, in the “from” unit
  • factor_from = the “from” unit’s value in pascal-seconds
  • factor_to = the “to” unit’s value in pascal-seconds
04

Worked example

Convert 0.5 Pa·s to centipoise.

Step 1 · The factor
1 cP = 0.001 Pa·s
Step 2 · Divide
0.5 ÷ 0.001 = 500 cP

So 0.5 Pa·s is 500 cP — a light oil. Note 1 cP = 1 mPa·s exactly.

05

The units in this example

Pascal-secondsymbol: Pa·s

The SI unit of dynamic viscosity — one pascal of shear stress per unit velocity gradient. Large for everyday fluids, so cP is used more often.

Common viscosity conversions
  • 1 Pa·s = 1,000 cP
  • 1 Pa·s = 1,000 mPa·s
  • 1 Pa·s = 10 poise
  • honey ≈ 10 Pa·s
Centipoisesymbol: cP

The most common practical unit of dynamic viscosity. Water at 20 °C is close to 1 cP, so the number reads intuitively for everyday fluids.

Common viscosity conversions
  • 1 cP = 0.001 Pa·s
  • 1 cP = 1 mPa·s
  • 1 cP = 0.01 poise
  • water ≈ 1 cP at 20 °C
06

FAQ

QHow many cP in 1 Pa·s?
One pascal-second equals 1,000 centipoise.
QIs 1 cP the same as 1 mPa·s?
Yes, exactly. One centipoise equals one millipascal-second.
08

Sources

NIST SP 811 — SI units · Britannica — viscosity

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team