The free stress-energy tensor can be defined as
Tμνfree=∫f(xμ,pμ)pμpνd3pp0m2
where f is the distribution function, and I assume massive particles of mass m. The interaction stress-energy tensor can then be chosen so that Tμν;ν is equivalent to the second moment of the collisional Boltzmann equation
f,Hfree=δfδt|coll.
Generally, this is not possible. However, it is generically possible to obtain a volume-averaged version of the second moment that offers an asymptotic description of the dynamics in terms of an averaged stress-energy tensor ˉTμν. This amounts to a free stress energy tensor with additional viscosity terms that scale as the gradients of stress energy times kinematic viscosity, ∼νTμνfree;κ. However, the volume averaging itself adds terms
¯Tμνfree≡1δV∫δVTμνfreed3x=Tμνfree+∝Tμνfree;κδV1/3+∝Tμνfree;κγδV2/3+...
In other words, the averaging volume itself adds kinematic viscosity, or Δν/ΔV1/3∼C, where C is a dimensionless geometrical-type constant. By going quantum, one can assume that δV1/3 needs to be about as large as the De Broglie wavelength or smaller for convergence (note I assume massive particles), and assuming an ideal-gas-type behaviour, we have δV1/3∼h/√mkBT, so I get
Δν√mkBT≲h
This is really nothing like your relation. However, it can perhaps be useful for you to see that what kind of relation you get depends on the physical context you cite.
I think you might get interesting stuff from a gradient-type expansion of a conformal quantum fluid rather than massive non-relativistic gases as considered in this answer.