Fluid Flow PDF
Fluid Flow PDF
S ch ool of P h ysi cs
U n i v er si t y of S yd n ey Au st r a l i a
FLUID FLOW
STREAMLINE LAMINAR FLOW
TURBULENT FLOW
REYNOLDS NUMBER
The above pictures show how the effect of swirl on the flow around a sphere. The flow is
from top to bottom. The picture on the left is for zero swirl and the flow is attached on
the upstream hemisphere and separated downstream of the point of maximum
thickness. A separation bubble is formed on the downstream hemisphere and this is a
region of very slow reversed axial flow. When the swirl is increased a separation bubble
appears on the upstream hemisphere which is shown in the middle picture. As the swirl
is further increased this upstream separation bubble grows in length and becomes
increasingly unsteady and finally developed into the unsteady spiral structure as shown
in the picture on the right.
There are two kinds of fluid (liquids and gases) flow that are
observed: laminar (streamline) flow and turbulent flow.
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
streamlines
Streamlines for
fluid passing an
obstacle
v
Velocity of particle
- tangent to streamline
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
TURBULENT FLOW
A vigorous mixing (stirring) of the fluid occurs. A complex flow
pattern changes continuously with time. The velocity of the
particles at each given point various chaotically with time. The
erratic motion of the fluid often shows small whirlpool-like
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
Re = v L /
density of fluid
v
average flow velocity over the cross section of the
pipe
L
dimension characterising a cross section
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
Re is a dimensionless number
Re = v L /
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc
a03/p1/fluids/flow1.doc