Fluid Dynamics Basics
Fluid Dynamics Basics
Bibliography
Fundamentals of fluid mechanics, 4th Edition, Munson, Young and Okiishi, (Wiley, 2002) A physical introduction to fluid mechanics, Smits, (Wiley, 2000) Introduction to fluid mechanics, 5th Edition, Fox and McDonald, (Wiley, 1998) Fluid mechanics, 4th Edition, Douglas, Gasiorek and Swaffield, (Prentice Hall, 2001) The Feynman lectures on physics, Volume II, Feynman, Leighton and Sands, (Addison-Wesley, 1964) Fluid dynamics for physicists, Faber, (Cambridge, 1997) Physical fluid dynamics, Tritton, (Van Nostrand, 1977) Video: The mechanical universe and beyond No. 36, Vector fields and hydrodynamics
What do you remember from Physics I ? (Properties of matter and thermodynamics) Force Pressure Density Specific volume Specific weight Stress and strain Youngs modulus Bulk modulus Viscosity Surface tension Vapour pressure Thermodynamics: First Law, Second Law, Heat capacity Dimensional analysis.
Hydrostatistics
(The theory of liquids at rest) A fluid cannot maintain a sheer stress for any length of time. The measure of ease with which the fluid yields is given by its viscosity. It is complicated to include viscosity in our model first ignore viscous effects (frictionless or inviscid flow) When liquids are at rest there are no shear forces. In a static fluid the force per unit area across any surface is normal to the surface and is the same for all orientations of the surface.
Hydrostatistics 2 The normal force per unit area is the pressure, p. In a static fluid the pressure must be the same in all directions at a particular point in the liquid. The pressure, of course, z surface p = p atm may vary from point to point in the liquid. For example, in a p = patm + po gh h static liquid on static liquid the earths surface: : density (constant) p = patm + po h=0 patm : atmospheric pressure po : gauge pressure (pressure measured above patm) Absolute pressure = atm pressure + gauge pressure = patm + po 5
Video clip (2.3) A dam wall: For an incompressible fluid at rest the pressure increases linearly with the fluid depth. As a consequence, large forces can be developed on plane and curved surfaces in contact with the fluid. The Hoover Dam, on the Colorado river, is the highest concrete arch-gravity type of dam in the United States. The water behind Hoover dam is approximately 220 m deep and at this depth the pressure is 21 atm. To with-stand the large pressure forces on the face of the dam, its thickness varies from 15 m at the top to 200 m at the base. 6
Video Clip (3.5) Flow from a tank: According to the Bernoulli equation, the velocity of a fluid flowing through a hole in the side of an open tank or reservoir is proportional to the square root of the depth of fluid above the hole. The velocity of a jet of water from an open cooldrink bottle containing four holes is clearly related to the depth of water above the hole. The greater the depth, the higher the velocity.
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Hydrostatistics 3 Consider now a small cube of fluid with pressure varying in the x-direction only.
z
y
p+ x
p x x
i Pressure on the face at position x gives the force: pyz p i Pressure on the face at x + x gives the force: p + x yz x p Resultant pressure force on the cube in the x-direction: xyz i x and similarly for the other faces ... p Resultant pressure force on the cube in the y-direction: xyzj y p Resultant pressure force on the cube in the z-direction: xyzk 8 z
Hydrostatistics 4
Hydrostatistics 5
In general, p = 0 has no solution. since if the density varies in space in some arbitrary way, then there is no way for the forces to be in balance, and the fluid cannot be in static equilibrium. Convection currents will start up. Only when is constant is the potential term a pure gradient and the equation has a solution: p + = constant (a solution is also possible if is a function of only p) Liquids at rest are boring! ... it is much more interesting when the liquid is moving
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Fluid kinematics
Need both vector and scalar quantities
Steady flow: when the flow pattern and speed at each position remains unchanged over a given time period.
Steady flow doesnt exist in nature, but is a good approximation in many situations. so we use quasi-steady flow speed u u = uo + u at a u uo point fluctuations u time-dependent u
part
t+
uo =
u dt
2
time
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Video clip (4.3) Flow types: Among the many ways that flows can be categorized are: a) steady or unsteady, b) laminar or turbulent. Which type of flow occurs for a given situation depends on numerous parameters that affect the flow. The low speed flow of water from a small nozzle is steady and laminar. Unless the flow is disturbed (by poking it with a pencil, for example), it is not obvious that the fluid is moving. On the other hand, the flow within a clothes washer is highly unsteady and turbulent. Such motion is needed to produce the 14 desired cleaning action.
A typical portion of fluid contains so many molecules that it becomes totally unrealistic, except in special cases, for us to attempt to account for the motion of individual molecules. Rather, we employ the continuum hypothesis and consider fluids to be made up of fluid particles that interact with each other and with their surroundings. Each particle contains numerous molecules. Thus, we can describe the flow of a fluid in terms of the motion of fluid particles rather than individual molecules. The infinitesimal particles of a fluid are tightly packed together. Thus, at a given instant in time, a description of any fluid property such as density, pressure, velocity, and acceleration, may be given as a function of the fluids location. This representation of fluid parameters as functions of the spatial coordinates is termed a field representation of the flow. 15
In order to describe the motion of a fluid-need to describe its properties at every point: velocity, acceleration, pressure, density, temperature, electric current, magnetic field We need to specify each property as function of (x,y,z) and time t. One of the most important fluid variables is the velocity field: In Cartesian coordinates:
v ( x, y, z , t ) = vx ( x, y, z , t ) + v y ( x, y, z , t ) + vz ( x, y, z , t )k i j
or in cylindrical coordinates:
v ( r , , z , t ) = vr (r , , z , t )r + v y (r , , z , t ) + vz (r , , z , t )z
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Video clip (4.1) A Velocity Field: A field representation is often used to describe flows. In doing so, the flow parameters are specified as functions of the spatial coordinates and time. The velocity field describes a flow by giving the point-by-point fluid velocity throughout the flow field. The calculated velocity field in a shipping channel is shown as the tide comes in and goes out. The fluid speed is given by the length and color of the arrows. The instantaneous flow direction is indicated by the direction that the velocity arrows point. 17
In almost any flow situation, the velocity field actually contains all three velocity components. In many situations the three-dimensional flow characteristics are important in terms of the physical effects they produce. For these situations it is necessary to analyze the flow in its complete threedimensional character. The flow of air past an airplane wing provides an example of a complex three-dimensional flow. In many situations one of the velocity components may be small relative to the two other components. In situations of this kind it may be reasonable to neglect the smaller component and assume two-dimensional flow, which is simpler to deal with both pictorially and analytically.
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Eulerian: fix the temperature probe and measure T(xo, yo, zo, t)
Lagragian: attach the temperature-measuring device to a particular fluid particle (A) and record that particles temperature as it moves about. 20
In fluid mechanics it is usually easier to use the Eulerian method to describe a flow in either experimental or analytical investigations. There are, however, certain instances in which the Lagrangian method is more convenient. For example, some numerical fluid mechanics calculations are based on determining the motion of individual fluid particles, based on the appropriate interactions among the particles, thereby describing the motion in Lagrangian terms. Similarly, in some experiments individual fluid particles are tagged and are followed throughout their motion For example, oceanographic measurements obtained from devices that flow with the ocean currents provide this information. Similarly, by using X-ray opaque dyes it is possible to trace blood flow in arteries. A Lagrangian description may also be useful in describing fluid machinery, such as pumps and turbines, in which fluid particles gain or lose energy as they move along their flow paths. 21
The pathline is a Lagrangian concept that can be produced in the laboratory by marking a fluid particle (dying a small fluid element) and taking a time exposure photograph of its motion.
Streamline: line joining the tangent of instantaneous velocity vectors of the whole fluid as a function of position in the fluidform an instantaneous flow pattern.
v v v
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If the flow is steady, the streamlines are fixed lines in space. For unsteady flows the streamlines may change shape with time. Streamlines are obtained analytically by integrating the equations defining lines tangent to the velocity field. For 2D flows the slope of the streamline dy dx must be equal to the tangent of the angle that the velocity vector makes with the x-axis or dy = v y . dx vx Streamtube: a selection of streamlines considered together. There can be no flow across the surface of the streamtube.
streamtube
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Video clip (4.5) Streamlines: A streamline is a line that is everywhere tangent to the velocity field. For steady flow, the streamlines are fixed lines in a flow field which show the paths the fluid particles follow. Streamlines created by injecting dye into water flowing steadily around a series of cylinders reveal the complex flow pattern around the cylinders. Also, as shown for flow around a series of airfoil shapes, the stagnation streamline and corresponding stagnation point can be easily observed (see top airfoil). Stagnation points on the other airfoils could be located by 25 adjusting the upstream position of the incoming streamlines.
Video clip (4.6) Pathlines: A pathline is the line traced out by a given particle as it flows from one point to another. The lawn sprinkler rotates because the nozzle at the end of each arm points backwards. This rotation give the water a forward component. As a result, water particles leave the end of each spray arm in a nearly radial direction. Once the water exits the spray arm there is no external force to change its velocity (neglecting aerodynamic drag and gravity). Thus, the pathlines are essentially straight radial lines, whereas the shape of the water streams (which are not pathlines) is a complex spiral about the axis of rotation. 26
Stream surface: the surface of a stream tube, often used to illustrate an interface between two different regimes of flow. Streakline: a line connecting all the particles that have emanated from a single point in a flow field.
Stream surface
Streaklines are more of a laboratory tool than an analytical tool. They can be obtained by taking instantaneous photographs of marked particles that all passed through a given location in the flow field at some earlier time. Such a line can be produced by continuously injecting marked fluid at a given location in the flow. For steady flow, streamlines, streaklines, and pathlines are the same.
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= constant
If matter flows away from a point, there must be a decrease in the amount left behind. The mass of fluid which flows in a unit time across a unit area is the component of v normal to the surface, where v is the fluid velocity. Hydrodynamic equation of continuity: i( v ) = t (an expression of the conservation of mass of the fluid.)
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The streamlines must be solenoidal: they either form closed curves or terminate on a boundary or at infinity. This is analogous to the magnetic field lines around a current-carrying wire.
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Example: For a steady, two-dimensional flow field in the xy-plane, the x-component of velocity is given by vx = Ax. Determine a possible y-component for incompressible flow.
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Example: The velocity components for a certain steady, threedimensional flow field are vx = x2 + y2 + z2. vy = xy + yz + z vz = ? Determine vz.
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We still have two variables vx and vy to deal with, but they must be related in a special way. The continuity equation suggests that we can define a function (x, y) called the stream function which relates the velocities as
vx = y and vy = x
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The stream function ... 2 Another particular advantage of using the stream function is related to the fact that lines along which is constant are streamlines. Recall that streamlines are lines in the flow field that are everywhere tangent to the velocities. It follows from the definition of the streamline that the slope at any point along a streamline is given by dy v y = dx vx The change in the value of as we move from one point (x,y) to a nearby point (x+dx, y+dy) is given by the relationship:
d = dx + dy = v y dx + vx dy x y
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The stream function ... 3 Along a line of constant we have d = 0 so that v y dx + vx dy = 0 and, therefore, along a line of constant :
vy dy = dx vx
which is the defining equation for a streamline. Thus, if we know the function we can plot lines of constant to provide the family of streamlines that are helpful in visualizing the particular pattern of flow being studied.
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Example:
A steady, incompressible, two-dimensional flow field is described by: v ( x, y ) = 2 y + 4 x m s-1 i j Determine the stream function and show on a sketch several streamlines.
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The pressure force per unit volume = p (where is the potential per unit mass)
There may also be internal forces per unit volume due to that in a flowing fluid we can also be a shearing stress, called the viscous force: f visc
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The acceleration field ... 2 Putting this all together gives: Equation of motion: a = p + fvisc We are studying ideal, dry fluids (which is totally unnatural) Ignore
Setting fvisc = 0 is leaving out an essential property of a fluid. Our equation of motion becomes
a = p
This is called the Euler equation, or the momentum equation for inviscid flow. If fvisc is included, then it becomes the Navier-Stokes equation (see later)
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The acceleration
v v v v v = vx + vy + vz + t 0 t x y z t v Dv = v i v + = t Dt lim
local part ... describes the variation in the field with time at a given point
D Dt
v = 0 .) t
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v = 2t + zx + t 2 yk i j
m s-1
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Bernoullis theorem
For steady flow, the velocity of the fluid at every point is constant, v = 0 and our equation of motion reduces to: i.e t v i v = p
( Ai ) A = ( A ) A +
1 2
1 2
Ai A
( v ) v +
v =
2
Take the dot product of v on both sides ... p 1 2 Equation becomes v i + 2 v + = 0 since v i v v = 0
{(
) }
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Bernoullis theorem ... 2 This equation says that for a small displacement in the direction of the fluid velocity the quantity inside the curly brackets doesnt change. We can write = gz for a gravitational field with the z-axis vertically upward. In steady flow all displacements are along streamlines. Then for all the points along a streamline, we can write:
v2 + + gz = constant (along a streamline) 2 p
Bernoullis theorem
This equation only holds for inviscid, steady, incompressible flow along a steamline. 43
Bernoullis theorem ... 3 The constant may, in general, be different for different streamlines, but the left hand side of the equation is the same all along a given streamline. It is often convenient to express the Bernoulli Equation between two points along a streamline:
p1 v12 + + z1 = g 2g
2 p2 v2 + + z2 g 2g
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Flow of dry water continued ... Consider a fluid flowing through a streamtube as shown. Equation of continuity: i v = 0 for steady flow. where V is the volume of the tube
v1
v2
A1
A2
iv dV = 0
V
iv dV = vida = 0
S
S A1 A2 outer walls
=0
v i da
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If v is parallel to ends of tube and the end surfaces are perpendicular to v , then v1 i A1 = v 2 i A 2 or v1 A1 = v2 A2
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Video clip (3.6) A Venturi Channel: As a fluid flows through a converging channel (Venturi channel), the pressure is reduced in accordance with the continuity and Bernoulli equations. As predicted by the continuity equation, the velocity of air flowing through the channel increases due to the reduction in the channel area. As predicted by the Bernoulli equation, an increase in velocity will cause a decrease in pressure. The attached water columns show that the greatest pressure reduction occurs at the narrowest part of the channel. The same principle is used in a garden sprayer so that liquid chemicals can be sucked from the bottle and mixed with water in the hose. 47
... flow of dry water continued ... The continuity equation can be applied to determine the relation between the flows into and out of a junction. For steady conditions: total inflow to junction = total outflow from junction or v1 A1 = v2 A2 + v3 A3 A1 v1 A3 v3
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A2
v2
Example: A fluid flows from a 0.3 m diameter pipe in which the pressure is 300 kPa into a 0.15 m diameter pipe in which the pressure is 120 kPa. If the pipes are horizontal and viscous effects are negligible, determine the flowrate.
0.3 m 0.15 m
D2
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Video clip (10.2) Merging Channels: The simplest type of open channel flow is one for which the channel cross-sectional size and shape and the water depth remain constant along the length of the channel. In many situations these conditions are not met. Although the flow in each of the two merging channels of the model study shown may be essentially uniform flow upstream of their confluence, the actual merging of the two streams is quite complex and far from uniform flow. How the two streams mix to produce a single stream may be of considerable importance to downstream locations.
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Flux
The transport of fluid properties by the flow of a fluid across a surface is embodied across a surface per unit time The flux of (something) is the amount of that (something) being transported across a surface per unit time. There are a number of fluxes that can be considered. For a closed surface of volume V : Volume flux =
v i da
S
vi n da
S
where da = n da , where n is a unit vector pointing outwards at right angles to S. units of volume flux : m3 s-1
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Momentum flux =
( v ) v i da
S
v 2 v i n da
S
Dv = p Dt
( Ai ) A = ( A ) A +
)
1 2
AiA
and introduce a new vector field as curl v : v i v = v + 1 v 2 2 and our equation of motion becomes: v p 2 1 + v + 2 v = t The vector field is called the vorticity.
= v
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Recall the circulation of a vector field. The circulation around any closed loop in a fluid is the line integral of the fluid velocity at a given instant in time, around the loop. In other words, circulation = By Stokes theorem:
vidl
S
and the vorticity is the circulation around a unit area of fluid (perpendicular to the direction of ).
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Define vorticity: = v
Vorticity
unit: s-1
top view
Introduce a vorticity meter: If the meter (paddle wheel) rotates in a moving fluid indicates the presence of vorticity If the motion is in the straight line and the velocity is constant across the fluid, as shown, then the vorticity meter will not rotate. If the velocity varies across the parallel flow, the vorticity meter will rotate in clockwise sense as it drifts.
spin axis
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Vorticity 2
If = 0 (everywhere), then the flow is called irrotational If 0 (somewhere), then the flow is called rotational
Circulation =
vidl
ida
S
Think about this: a little bit of dirt (not an infinitesimal point) at any position in the field will rotate with angular velocity 2 Can you prove this?
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Example:
For a certain steady, two-dimensional flow field, the velocity is described by: 2 2
v = 4 xyi + 2( x y ) j
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v v 2 p (Newton II) + v + = t 2 If we are only interested in the velocity field, then we can eliminate the pressure by v p v 2 + v + = 2 t
+ v = 0 t
We can now specify the velocity field v at any time If we know at time t from = v and i v = 0 we know v everywhere from we know t
= v t
everywhere and = 0
at t + t .
If the flow started as irrotational, then it is permanently irrotational. We only need to solve i v = 0 and v = 0 .
(These velocity fields look like electrostatic or magnetostatic fields in free space.)
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a x
= 0 + 0 + k x + y + 0k i j i j = y + x = 2k i j Circulation, =
{(
{
) (
vidl
a dl = a ( 2 a )
area of the disc
)}
= 2 ( a 2 ) = 2 A The circulation = vorticity * disc area (true for all rigid body rotation)
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Vorticity is a microscopic, vector, point-wise measure of fluid element rotation. Circulation is a macroscopic, scalar, area-wise measure of fluid rotation. Vorticity is the measure of the fluid rotational aspects of an infinitesimal fluid parcel. Circulation includes the fluid rotational tendencies over a finite area of fluid.
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or v =
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For an incompressible fluid we know from conservation of mass that i v = 0 . and therefore for incompressible, irrotational flow (with v = ) it follows that 2 = 0 , where 2 is the Laplacian operator.
2 2 2 + 2 + 2 =0 In Cartesian coordinates: 2 x y z
This differential equation arises in many different areas of engineering and physics and is called Laplaces equation. Thus, inviscid, incompressible, irrotational flow fields are governed by Laplaces equation. This type of flow is commonly called a potential flow.
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Example:
v = ( x 4 y )i + ( y 4 x) j
Show that the flow satisfies the continuity equation and obtain the expression for the steam function. If the flow is potential, then obtain the expression for the velocity potential.
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Example:
Show that = x 3 3 xy 2 is a valid velocity potential and that it describes an incompressible flow field. Determine the corresponding stream function. Find the stagnation points, and the pressure distribution.
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Video clip (6.4) Potential Flow: Flow fields for which an incompressible fluid is assumed to be frictionless and the motion to be irrotational are commonly referred to as potential flows. Paradoxically, potential flows can be simulated by a slowly moving, viscous flow between closely spaced parallel plates. For such a system, dye injected upstream reveals an approximate potential flow pattern around a streamlined airfoil shape. Similarly, the potential flow pattern around a bluff body is shown. Even at the rear of the bluff body the streamlines closely follow the body shape. Generally, however, the flow would separate at the rear of the body, an important phenomenon not 69 accounted for with potential theory.
Uniform flow
Simplest plane flow, since all streamlines straight and parallel Magnitude of velocity is constant (in the x-direction) In this case: = U =0 y x Integrating yields = Ux + C where C is an arbitrary constant which is set to 0. Then = Ux The stream function can be obtained in a similar way, since:
= U and y
=0 x
therefore = Uy
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= U ( x cos + y sin )
and
= U ( y cos x sin )
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If m is positive, the flow is radially outward, and the flow is considered to be a source flow. If m is negative, the flow is toward the origin, and the flow is considered to be a sink flow. The flowrate, m is the strength of the source or sink. The stream function for the source can be obtained by integrating 1 m =0 = r r 2 r m = giving 2 It is apparent that the streamlines lines are radial lines, and the equipotential lines are concentric circles centered at the origin.
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Video clip (3.3) Stagnation Point Flow: On any body in a flowing fluid there is a stagnation point. Some of the fluid flows over and some under the body. The dividing line (the stagnation streamline) terminates at the stagnation point on the body. As indicated by the dye filaments in the water flowing past a streamlined object, the velocity decreases as the fluid approaches the stagnation point. The pressure at the stagnation point (the stagnation pressure) is that pressure obtained when a flowing fluid is decelerated to zero speed by a frictionless process. 75
Video clip (6.3) Half-Body: Basic velocity potentials and stream functions can be combined to describe potential flow around various body shapes. The combination of a uniform flow and a source can be used to describe the flow around a streamlined body placed in a uniform stream. Streamlines created by injecting dye in steadily flowing water show a uniform flow. Source flow is created by injecting water through a small hole. It is observed that for this combination the streamline passing through the stagnation point could be replaced by a solid boundary which resembles a streamlined body in a uniform flow. The body is open at the downstream end and is thus called a half-body. 76
vidl
For our free vortex, clearly the liquid is circulating But v = 0 in the liquid How can there be a circulation without a curl? the line integral of v around any loop enclosing the cylinder is not zero, although the line integral of v around any closed path which does not include the cylinder is zero
2
K rd = 2 K r
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The velocity field of a fluid in an irrotational circulation around a cylinder is analogous to the magnetic field circulating around a current-carrying wire.
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Think of the water moving down the drain in your bath As a particle of water moves inwards it picks up speed by the conservation of an angular momentum, and the water travels radially towards the hole. From i v = 0 it follows that the radial velocity 1/r So the total velocity increases as 1/r and the water particles spiral inwards towards the hole. The air water surface is at atmospheric pressure, so that gz + 1 mv 2 = constant 2 1 so the shape of the vortex surface is ( z z ) = k but v 0 r2 r which describes the typical whirlpool shape. 81
A combined vortex is one with a forced vortex as a central core and a velocity distribution corresponding to that of a free vortex outside the core.
Whirlpools, tornadoes and water spouts may be described in this way. They are all examples of a free vortex since the fluid flows in nearly circular paths with nearly zero vorticity. Only near the centre of the free vortex does the vorticity deviate significantly from zero.
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Video clip (3.2) Free Vortex For flow with curved streamlines, centrifugal acceleration causes the pressure on the outside of the bend to be greater than on the inside. The swirling water draining from an inverted bottle approximates a free vortex. The velocity increase and pressure decrease near the center of the flow produce a hollow air core. Similar flows in the atmosphere can produce tornados. The rotation (swirl) of the parent cloud is enhanced as the air is drawn into the strong updraft at the tornado core.
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Video clip (6.2) Vortex in a beaker: A flow field in which the streamlines are concentric circles is called a vortex. A vortex is easily created using a magnetic stirrer. As the stir bar is rotated at the bottom of a beaker containing water, the fluid particles follow concentric circular paths. A relatively high tangential velocity is created near the center which decreases to zero at the beaker wall. This velocity distribution is similar to that of a free vortex, and the observed surface profile can be approximated using the Bernoulli equation which relates velocity, pressure, and elevation. 84
85
86
=0
(free vortex)
The idealized tornado ... 2 v What about the circulation ? vo Inside the core: =
vidl
( r )rd
0
= 2 r 2 (r < ro) the circulation increases with r as expected, since circulation = (vorticity)(area) Outside the core: ro2 = v idl = rd r 0 = 2 ro2 (r > ro)
2
0 2 0 2 ro2 0
ro
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Vortex lines
General equations for the flow of an incompressible fluid: I i v = 0 II = v III
+ v = 0 t
Helmholtz describe the physics content the physics content of these theories in terms of 3 theorems Use vortex lines - field lines drawn in the direction of and have a density in any region which is proportional to the magnitude of . From equation II : i =i v = 0 i.e. the divergence of = 0 Vortex lines always form closed loops (like B lines)
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(= v)
Also, from v you can tell where the vortex lines are going to be a little later (they move with speed v ). Then with the new , use I & II to find the new v and so on ... If we have the flow pattern at one instant, it can in principle, be calculated at all subsequent times.
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1
area A1
91
m1 = m2
and A r 2 1 A1 = 2 A2
In the absence of viscosity, the angular momentum of an element of the fluid cannot change.
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The smoke ring is torus-shaped bundle of vortex lines. Since = v these vortex lines also represents a circulation of v . The circulating velocity around the bottom of the ring extends up to the top of the ring, having there a forward motion.
vortex lines
direction of motion
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Since the lines of moving with the fluid, they also move ahead with the velocity v . Of course the circulation of v around the top part of the ring is responsible for the forward motion of the vortex lines at the bottom. + v = 0 But there is a problem here! t If = 0 at t = 0, then will always be zero. It is impossible to produce any vorticity under any circumstance ... but we have produced a vortex ring in it is impossible to produce any vorticity our drum, although v = 0, = 0, everywhere in the drum before it was hit. There is a problem with our dry water model.
We need a theory of wet water to get a complete understanding of the behaviour of the fluid. We need to include the forces arising from the viscosity of the fluid.
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Viscosity
Although fluids do not support a shearing stress, they do offer some degree of resistance to shearing motion. This resistance to shearing motion is a form of internal friction, called viscosity, which arises as the adjacent layers of the fluid slide past one another. Consider two parallel layers of fluid, one fixed and the other moving under the action of an external force F . Adjacent layers of the fluid will be set into relative motion causing each portion (e.g. PQSR) to be distorted (into TUSR)
x=vt P T Q U
v F
l
S area of layer = A
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Viscosity ... 2
The upper plate moves with speed v and the fluid adjacent to it moves at the same speed, then strain x / l v The rate of change of shearing strain = = = t l t The coefficient of viscosity for the fluid is defined as
shearing stress = rate of change of shearing strain
This expression for only valid if the speed gradient v / l is uniform. If v / l is not uniform, then we must write F/A = dv / dy dv where is measured perpendicular to the direction of the velocity v. dy 96
Viscosity ... 3
Fluids for which shearing stress is not linearly related to the rate of shearing strain are designated as non-Newtonian fluids. Here the viscous force has the form
fvisc = 2 v + ( + ) i v
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Video clip (1.1) Viscosity: Viscosity is responsible for the shear force produced in a moving fluid. Although these two fluids shown look alike (both are clear liquids and have a specific gravity of 1), they behave very differently when set into motion. The very viscous silicone oil is approximately 10,000 times more viscous than the water.
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Video clip (6.1) Shear Deformation: Fluid elements located in a moving fluid move with the fluid and generally undergo a change in shape (angular deformation). A small rectangular fluid element is located in the space between concentric cylinders. The inner wall is fixed. As the outer wall moves, the fluid element undergoes an angular deformation. The rate at which the corner angles change (rate of angular deformation) is related to the shear stress causing the deformation. 99
The equations of motion for viscous (wet) fluids The Navier-Stokes equation
In order to model the flow of real fluids, we need to include the phenomenon of viscosity. Equation of motion:
fvisc v p + v iv = + t
where
fvisc = 2 v + ( + ) i v
2 v 2 v 2 v 2 + 2 + 2 y z x Therefore
Dv p 2 v = + Dt
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D = + v i Dt t
This is the Navier-Stokes equation. You will find it appearing in a wide variety of contexts dealing with fluid flow. When combined with the continuity equation of fluid flow i v = 0 it yields four equations in four unknowns: and v
In most situations it is impossible to solve exactly, therefore approximations are usually made, or more recently, computer simulations are made.
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This term was zero for the previous case of a dry fluid
If we disregard the term v , the we have a diffusion equation. The new term means that the vorticity diffuses through the fluid. If there is a large gradient in the vorticity, then it will speed out into the neighbouring fluid. The viscous equations can only be solved fully for a few special 102 cases.
Examples of viscous, incompressible, laminar flow A. channel flow (2D counterpart of pipe flow)
y dy dx x
p1
2a
Conditions: v (a ) = v ( a ) = 0 (no slip condition) density is constant everywhere velocity profile v ( y ) is the same everywhere along the channel pressure p is a function of x, but not y. the coefficient of viscosity is constant in space. 103
Video clip (6.6) Laminar Flow: The velocity distribution is parabolic for steady, laminar flow in circular tubes. A filament of dye is placed across a circular tube containing a very viscous liquid which is initially at rest. With the opening of a valve at the bottom of the tube the liquid starts to flow, and the parabolic velocity distribution is revealed. Although the flow is actually unsteady, it is quasi-steady since it is only slowly changing. Thus, at any instant in time the velocity distribution corresponds to the characteristic steady-flow parabolic distribution. 104
Video clip (1.2) No-Slip Condition: As a fluid flows near a solid surface, it sticks to the surface, i.e., the fluid matches the velocity of the surface. This so-called no-slip condition is a very important one that must be satisfied in any accurate analysis of fluid flow phenomena. Dye injected at the bottom of a channel through which water is flowing forms a stagnant layer near the bottom due to the no-slip condition. As the dye filament is moved away from the bottom, the motion of the water is clearly apparent. A significant velocity gradient is created near the bottom.
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Video clip (6.5) No-Slip Boundary Condition: Boundary conditions are needed to solve the differential equations governing fluid motion. One condition is that any viscous fluid sticks to any solid surface that it touches. Clearly a very viscous fluid sticks to a solid surface as illustrated by pulling a knife out of a jar of honey. The honey can be removed from the jar because it sticks to the knife. This no-slip boundary condition is equally valid for small viscosity fluids. Water flowing past the same knife also sticks to it. This is shown by the fact that the dye on the knife surface remains there as the water 106 flows past the knife.
The momentum of the element dxdydz is not changing - each fluid particle travels downstream at a constant distance from the centre of the channel with a constant speed.
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... a parabola
with vmax
The mass of a fluid passing through the channel per unit time per unit length in the z-direction = 2G a 3 vdy = ... = 3 a
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Video clip (10.3) Uniform Channel Flow: The Manning Equation is used to determine the constant-depth flowrate in a straight channel with constant slope and constant cross-section. Although the geometry for many man-made channels is sufficiently uniform to allow the use of the Manning equation, the irregularity of many channels (especially natural ones) makes the use of the Manning equation a rough approximation at best. Curves in the channel, variable flowrate along the channel (as with rainwater runoff into a gutter), or irregular channel cross-section may cause the calculated flowrates to be quite different than the actual flowrate.
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d r
v = v (r )
(independent of z)
Conditions: v (a ) = 0 (no slip condition) density is constant everywhere velocity profile v (r ) is the same everywhere along the pipe pressure p is a function of z only. the coefficient of viscosity is constant in space. 111
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p dp = G (a constant) = z dz
Ga 2 B = 4
since v = 0 at r = a
... a paraboloid
with
vmax
Ga 2 = 4
The mass per unit time (mass flux) passing through the pipe is
4 Ga 4 ( p1 p2 ) a 2 rv dr = 8 = 8 l 0
Video clip (8.1) Laminar/Turbulent Pipe Flow: Whether flow in a pipe is laminar, transitional, or turbulent depends on the value of the Reynolds number. In this experiment water flows through a clear pipe with increasing speed. Dye is injected through a small diameter tube at the left portion of the screen. Initially, at low speed (Re <2100) the flow is laminar and the dye stream is stationary. As the speed (Re) increases, the transitional regime occurs and the dye stream becomes wavy (unsteady, oscillatory laminar flow). At still higher speeds (Re>4000) the flow becomes turbulent and the dye stream is dispersed randomly throughout 115 the flow.
= v with the conditions: the velocity at large distances is constant, say V and parallel to the x-axis. the velocity at the surface of the cylinder is zero. i.e. vx = v y = vz = 0 D2 2 2 for x + y = 4
i v = 0
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Secondly we measure all distance in terms of the only length that appears - the diameter D. We then write x = xD , y = yD , z = zD. In the same way, we measure all velocities in terms of V, by setting v = vV where v = 1 at large distances. D D Our unit of time is then and we set t = t V V
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VD
If we remember that all our equations are to be written with all quantities in the new units, the primes may be omitted, giving: 1 2 + v = and = v Re t with the conditions: for x 2 + y 2 = 1 v=0 4
vx = 1 , v y = vz = 0 for
x 2 + y 2 + z 2 >>1
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arises naturally from the dimensional analysis. The Reynolds number is a measure of the ratio of the inertia force on an element of fluid to the viscous force on an element. When these two types of forces are important in a given problem, the Reynolds number will play an important role. However, if the Reynolds number is very small (Re ~ 1), this is an indication that the viscous forces are dominant in the problem, and it may be possible to neglect the inertial effects; that is, the density of the fluid will not be an important variable. Flows at very small Reynolds numbers are commonly referred to as creeping flows. Conversely, for large Reynolds number flows, viscous effects are small relative to inertial effects and for these cases it may be possible to neglect the effect of viscosity and consider the problem as one involving a non-viscous fluid. 119
Video clip (7.1) Reynolds Number: Important dimensionless groups can frequently be given useful physical interpretations. For example, the Reynolds number is an index of the ratio of inertia forces to viscous forces in a moving fluid. For a rotating tank containing a very viscous fluid, which gives a small Reynolds number, viscous forces are dominant. Thus, when the tank is suddenly stopped fluid particles also suddenly stop due to the dominance of viscous forces over inertia forces. Correspondingly, when a low viscosity fluid is in the tank, which gives a much higher Reynolds number, inertia forces are dominant. When the tank suddenly stops the fluid particles continue to move. 120
1 2 Re1 = V1 D1 = Re 2 = V2 D2 1 2
For any two situations which have the same Reynolds number, the flows will look the same in terms of the appropriately scaled x, y, z, and t. This principle allows the application of wind tunnel measurements on small scale airplanes, or model basin results on scale model boats, to the full scale objects. ( ... provided that the compressibility of the fluid can be neglected.)
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Video clip (9.6) Oscillating Sign: Steady flow past a blunt object may produce an oscillating Karman vortex street wake behind the object. The shedding of vortices from the body exerts a periodic force on the body that, if the frequency is right, can cause the body to oscillate. As shown in a computational fluid dynamics simulation, flow past a flat plate can produce a well-defined Karman vortex street. Similarly, wind blowing past a rectangular speed limit sign can excite the sign into significant twisting motion, provided the conditions (wind speed and direction, stiffness of the sign support, etc.) are correct.
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Video clip (8.3) Laminar/Turbulent Velocity Profiles: The velocity profile for laminar flow in a pipe is quite different than that for turbulent flow. An approximation to the velocity profile in a pipe is obtained by observing the motion of a dye streak placed across the pipe. With a viscous oil at Reynolds number of about 1, viscous effects dominate and it is easy to inject a relatively straight dye streak. The resulting laminar flow profile is parabolic. With water at Reynolds number of about 10,000, inertial effects dominate and it is difficult to inject a straight dye streak. It is clear, however, that the turbulent velocity profile is not parabolic, but is more nearly uniform than for laminar 133 flow.
Turbulence
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Trailing vortices
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Trailing vortices
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Video clip (4.2) Flow Past a Wing: Most flows involve complex, threedimensional, unsteady conditions. The flow past an airplane wing provides an example of these phenomena. The flow generated by an airplane is made visible by flying a model Airbus airplane through two plumes of smoke. The complex, unsteady, three-dimensional swirling motion generated at the wing tips (called trailing vorticies) is clearly visible. An understanding of this motion is needed to ensure safe flying conditions, especially during landing and take-off operations where it can be dangerous for an airplane to fly into the preceding airplane's trailing vorticies. 138
Video clip (9.3) Laminar/Turbulent Transition: Near the leading edge of a flat plate, the boundary layer flow is laminar. If the plate is long enough, the flow becomes turbulent, with random, irregular mixing. A similar phenomenon occurs at the interface of two fluids moving with different speeds. As shown in a computational fluid dynamic simulation, the interface between two fluids moving horizontally with different speeds becomes unstable and waves develop on the surface. Similarly, the rising smoke plume from a cigarette is laminar near the source, becomes wavy at a certain location, and then breaks into turbulence.
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Video clip (6.7) CFD example: Complex flows can be analyzed using the finite difference method in which the continuous variables are approximated by discrete values calculated at grid points. The governing partial differential equations are reduced to a set of algebraic equations which is solved by approximate numerical methods. The flow past a circular cylinder at a Reynolds number of 10,000 was calculated using a finite difference method based on the Navier-Stokes equations. The O-shaped grid contained 100 by 400 grid points. Particle paths clearly show the 140 Karmen vortex street.
Drag
Drag is an important quantity associated with the relative motion between a body and a fluid is the force produced on the body. One has to apply a force in order to move a body at constant speed through a stationary fluid. Correspondingly an obstacle placed in a moving fluid would be carried away with the flow if no force were applied to hold it in place. The force in the flow direction exerted by the fluid on an obstacle is known as the drag. Because of the force between it and the obstacle, the momentum is removed from the fluid. The rate of momentum transport downstream must be smaller behind the obstacle than in front of it. There is a reduction in the velocity in the wake region.
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Drag ... 2
When the velocity is very low (e.g. in cases of high viscosity) the inertial forces are negligible and the flow is described by the equation: 2 = 0 This equation was first solved by Stokes. For a small sphere moving under conditions of low Re, the drag force F = 6 aV where a = radius of the sphere and V is the speed of the sphere This is very useful for centifuges, sedimentation and diffusion.
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Drag ... 2
Introduce the drag coefficient CD : where: F: drag force , l : length of the cylinder , Curve shows the variation of CD as a function of Re. - based on CD experimental measurements, only at low Re can the experiments be matched to theory. F CD = 1 V 2 Dl 2
Re
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Drag ... 3
At low Re, the flow is steady and CD 1 / Re . For a given body in a given fluid (D, l , and ) this corresponds to F v . Between Re = 102 to 3 105, CD is approximately constant, corresponding to F v 2 . Above Re ~ 3 105, CD drops dramatically indicating a region where an increase in v produces a decrease in F. This Re corresponds to the onset of turbulance in the boundary layer resulting in a narrower wake and hence less momentum extraction from the flow (and lower F). A full understanding of this effect includes consideration of the changes in the pressure distribution over the surface.
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Video clip (7.5) Wind Tunnel Train Model: To maintain exact similarity between model and prototype flows in a wind tunnel, the model and prototype Reynolds numbers must be equal. This is usually not possible to achieve. Fortunately, flow characteristics are often not strongly influenced by the Reynolds number over the range of interest. The flow past a train with a cross wind is studied by observing the flow of smoke injected near a model in a wind tunnel. Although the model Reynolds number is less than that for the prototype, the complex flow characteristics observed for the model should also occur for the prototype.
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Video clip (9.8) Drag on a Truck: A significant portion of the power needed to drive a vehicle at highway speeds is lost overcoming aerodynamic drag. Appropriate design of the vehicle can reduce the drag and thus increase the fuel economy. Because of geometric constraints, little redesign can be done to the rear of a truck to reduce the drag. On the other hand, a simple, welldesigned air deflector on the cab can help smooth the airflow past the front of the truck and reduce its drag. However, even with the deflector, there is flow separation at the top leading edge of the trailer portion of the truck.
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Video clip (9.9): Wing Tip Vorticies: The pressure difference between the upper and lower surfaces of an airfoil causes trailing vorticies to form at the tips of the wing. The spoiler (wing) on a race car is used to produce a downward force, allowing the car to corner better. The high pressure surface for this negative lift device is the upper surface. The resulting trailing vorticies are made visible by the injection of smoke. Some airplane wings have vertical winglets at the wing tips to help reduce the effect of the trailing vorticies and therefore make the wing more efficient. 150
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