Intrinsic viscosity
Intrinsic viscosity is a measure of a solute's contribution to the viscosity of a solution. If is the viscosity in the absence of the solute, is viscosity of the solution and is the volume fraction of the solute in the solution, then intrinsic viscosity is defined as the dimensionless number It should not be confused with inherent viscosity, which is the ratio of the natural logarithm of the relative viscosity to the mass concentration of the polymer.
When the solute particles are rigid spheres at infinite dilution, the intrinsic viscosity equals, as shown first by Albert Einstein.
In practical settings, is usually solute mass concentration, and the units of intrinsic viscosity are deciliters per gram, otherwise known as inverse concentration.
Formulae for rigid spheroids
Generalizing from spheres to spheroids with an axial semiaxis and equatorial semiaxes, the intrinsic viscosity can be writtenwhere the constants are defined
The coefficients are the '''Jeffery functions'''