Chapter 7 - Part 2
Chapter 7 - Part 2
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Chapter 7 Assignment
Question: 7.3, 7.7, 7.29, 7.43, 7.45, 7.52, 7.80
Quiz: Monday or Tuesday 16 or 17 March
2015.
Quiz will start 5 minutes from the start of the
lecture) so make sure you arrive before the
time).
VL
This term is dimensionless, which is very well known in fluid mechanics, heat
VL
transfer.etc. It is called Reynolds number (Re).
Re
VL Inertia force
Re
Viscous force
For jet fighters or airplanes fly with a speed higher than sonic
speed, the Ma >1.
If less than sonic speed Ma<1.
If equal to sonic speed Ma=1
then
Concept of Similitude
The concept of similitude is used so that
measurements made on one system (for
example, in the laboratory) can be used to
describe the behavior of other similar systems
(outside laboratory)
Similitude Summary
Example 3
The drag on a 2-m-diameter satellite dish due to an 80 km/hr wind is to be
determined through a wind tunnel test using a geometrically similar 0.4-mdiameter model dish. Assume standard air for both model and prototype.
(a) At what air speed should the model test be run?
(b) With all similarity conditions satisfied, the measured drag on the model
was determined to be 170 N. What is the predicted drag on the prototype
dish?
Example 3 Solution
The drag on a 2-m-diameter satellite dish due to an 80 km/hr wind is to be
determined through a wind tunnel test using a geometrically similar 0.4m-diameter model dish. Assume standard air for both model and
prototype.
(a) At what air speed should the model test be run?
(b) With all similarity conditions satisfied, the measured drag on the
model was determined to be 170 N. What is the predicted drag on the
prototype dish?
Example 3 Solution
The drag on a 2-m-diameter satellite dish due to an 80 km/hr wind is to be
determined through a wind tunnel test using a geometrically similar 0.4m-diameter model dish. Assume standard air for both model and
prototype.
(a) At what air speed should the model test be run?
(b) With all similarity conditions satisfied, the measured drag on the
model was determined to be 170 N. What is the predicted drag on the
prototype dish?
Drag force
Example 4
The drag on an airplane shown in Fig.E7.7 cruising at 386
km/h in standard air is to be determined from tests on a
1:10 scale model placed in a pressurized wind tunnel. To
minimize compressibility effects, the air speed in the wind
tunnel is also to be 386 km/h.
Determine:
a)The required air pressure in the tunnel (assuming the
same air temperature for model and prototype), and
b)The drag on the prototype corresponding to a measured
force of 4 N on the model.
Example 4
a) Drag can be predicted from a geometrically similar model if the Reynolds numbers of the
prototype and the model are the same. Thus:
And therefore
The result shows that the same fluid with m = and m = cant be used if Reynolds number
similarity to be maintained. Instead, we can pressurize the wind tunnel to increase the density
of the air (with assumption that increase in density doesnt significantly change the viscosity).
Example 4
Therefore, if the viscosity is the same, the equation becomes:
Since the prototype is at standard atmospheric pressure, the required pressure in the wind
tunnel is:
Example 4
b) The drag could be obtained from:
or
Thus, for a drag of 4 N on the model the corresponding drag on the prototype is: