Yes, the viscosity of petrol can change with temperature. As temperature increases, the viscosity of petrol decreases, making it flow more easily. Conversely, at lower temperatures, the viscosity of petrol increases, making it flow more slowly.
You can change the viscosity of honey by adding water. While you will no longer have pure honey, the water will change its viscosity. The viscosity of pure honey is approximately 10,000 cP at 20°C and at 1 atmosphere. However, this will vary with the type of honey you have.
You can change the viscosity of a substance by adjusting its temperature- generally, increasing temperature decreases viscosity and vice versa. You can also alter the composition of the substance by adding viscosity modifiers or solvents to increase or decrease viscosity accordingly. Mixing different substances together can also affect the overall viscosity of the mixture.
Yes. If the temperature changes enough, the viscosity of oil will change, too. Oil is designed to resist changes in viscosity with temperature changes, at least to a degree. But if the change (either hotter or colder) is extreme, then the viscocity will most certainly change. And, as you'd expect, as it gets hotter, the viscosity of oil decreases (it get thinner), and as it gets colder, the viscosity of oil increases (it gets thicker).
Possible indicators are: - new compounds are obtained - a change of phase may be possible - change of color - change of odor - change of temperature - change of viscosity - change of pH etc.
Viscosity index is a measure of how an oil's viscosity changes with temperature. Higher viscosity index oils are more resistant to changes in viscosity with temperature, making them perform more consistently across a range of temperatures.
viscosity is a physical characteristic not a physical change. it is the thickness of a substancephysical changes would be if it turned from solid into a liquid.for example a chocolate bar goes through a physical change when it becomes melted chocolate.
Yes, the viscosity of petrol can change with temperature. As temperature increases, the viscosity of petrol decreases, making it flow more easily. Conversely, at lower temperatures, the viscosity of petrol increases, making it flow more slowly.
You can change the viscosity of honey by adding water. While you will no longer have pure honey, the water will change its viscosity. The viscosity of pure honey is approximately 10,000 cP at 20°C and at 1 atmosphere. However, this will vary with the type of honey you have.
think of it as this viscosity is thick when it is heated what will happen
viscosity
You can change the viscosity of a substance by adjusting its temperature- generally, increasing temperature decreases viscosity and vice versa. You can also alter the composition of the substance by adding viscosity modifiers or solvents to increase or decrease viscosity accordingly. Mixing different substances together can also affect the overall viscosity of the mixture.
because they have better thermal stability then petroleum as silicon viscosity dont change due to temperature change while petroleum viscosity changes with any change in its tempareture
Viscosity changes when another agent is added to a fluid. For example, paint has a fairly thick viscosity and if intending to apply it using a spray gun, one would need to add thinners, varsol, or turpentine to the paint to thin it out so that it will pass through the gun. Thus changing the viscosity.
If something has a greater viscosity, it becomes more 'runny' compared to its original state when heated up. The greater the change from thick to runny = the greater the viscosity. So honey has a greater viscosity than water for example.
Viscosity is a property of liquids and gases. In every day terms syrup is viscous and water isn't. Liquids with high viscosity are difficult to stir, there is resistance to movement through the liquid. A change of state from liquid to gas would cause the viscosity to reduce. Technically viscosity is a resistance to shear or tensile stresses. Viscosity can be measured for all liquids and gases. Wikipedia gives a technical description.
Blood viscosity is measured by a test called a viscometer, which determines how easily blood flows. Factors that can affect blood viscosity include temperature, hematocrit levels, and the presence of certain proteins or diseases.