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Why are gases more viscous at higher temperatures?
"james maxwell published a famous paper in 1866 using the kinetic theory of gases to study gaseous viscosity.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscosity#cite_note-Maxwell1866-12 To understand why the viscosity is independent of pressure, consider two adjacent boundary layers (A and B) moving with respect to each other. The internal friction (the viscosity) of the gas is determined by the probability a particle of layer A enters layer B with a corresponding transfer of momentum. Maxwell's calculations showed him that the viscosity coefficient is proportional to both the density, the mean free path and the mean velocity of the atoms. On the other hand, the mean free path is inversely proportional to the density. So an increase of pressure doesn't result in any change of the viscosity."
so basically at higher temperatures theres a greater velocity/mean free path which means greater viscosity which this dude basically determined experimentally.
That was my initial thoughts. I thought it would be inversely proportional to temperature because cold air would be more dense and harder to transverse. But I guess im wrong. I guess more collions at a rapid rate makes it more viscous. In fairness, I live in florida and sometimes when its humid the air does feel kinda "thick", for lack of a better word, lol.
Also I would have said decreased viscocity: Temp proportional to KE, and gases have low (if any) intermol interactions - increasing temp gives them the ability to fight off those interactions by definition.
Viscosity is technically the ability of a fluid to transfer momentum between its particles. It is not really about particles "sticking" together - in gas that just does not happen, they collide and go away from each other.
A dense gas carries more more momentum but since the particles are closer to each other they're able to carry it over less distance. The molecules do move faster when T is higher and that does result in higher momentum transfer, aka higher viscosity.
The stickiness between molecules does play role when talking about liquids and is the reason why viscosity of fluids increases when the temperature is lowered.