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problems4

The document contains problem sets related to transport processes in the environment, focusing on diffusion and concentration fields in various scenarios. It includes specific problems involving mass release in confined spaces, concentration calculations over time, and the effects of boundary conditions on diffusion. The problems require estimates of concentration and time scales for uniform distribution in different geometries and conditions.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1 views

problems4

The document contains problem sets related to transport processes in the environment, focusing on diffusion and concentration fields in various scenarios. It includes specific problems involving mass release in confined spaces, concentration calculations over time, and the effects of boundary conditions on diffusion. The problems require estimates of concentration and time scales for uniform distribution in different geometries and conditions.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MIT OpenCourseWare

http://ocw.mit.edu

1.061 / 1.61 Transport Processes in the Environment


Fall 2008

For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms.
Problem 4.1

A slug of mass, M, is released instantaneously into the corner of a large, shallow box.
The full width and length of the box are LX = LY = 100L, and the height of the box is LZ =
0.01L. Every wall of the box is a no-flux boundary. The mass is released a distance L
from two adjacent walls, and mid-way between the top and bottom boundary.
Assume isotropic diffusion within the box, represented by diffusivity, D.

2
Describe the concentration field inside the box from t = 0 to t = L /D.

Hint 1 When will the mass be mixed uniformly in the vertical?


Hint 2 Estimate when the mass will reach each vertical wall in the box
Hint 3 How will each boundary impact the solution in the time t = 0 to L^2/D ?
Hint 4 Place image sources to satisfy the no-flux boundary condition

Problem 4.2

You own a house and dock along a boat canal, which ends 25 m upstream from you. One
day, your neighbor has a small (1 kg) fuel spill. Due to the boat traffic, the diffusivity in
the canal is quite high, D = 0.01 m2/s. The current in the canal is negligible, such that the
fuel is transported to your house (x = -50 m) by diffusion only. Assume the fuel mixes
rapidly across the width and depth, and that there is no flux through the canal walls.

(a) What is the concentration at your house 10 hrs after the spill?
(b) What is the maximum concentration at your house , and when does it occur?
(c) Suppose the safety limit is 0.2 g/m3. At what time after the spill is this concentration
reached?
(d) Repeat a, b & c assuming that the boundary at x = -75 m is totally absorbing.

Problem 4.3
A slug of dye, M = 1mg, is released at one end of a sealed tube and in such a way that it
uniformly fills the cross-section y-z. Every boundary of the tube is a no-flux boundary.
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The tube length is L = 10-cm, molecular diffusion is D = 10 cm2s-1, and the cross-
2
section of the tube is Ayz = 1 cm . Assume 1-D diffusion.

a) Estimate the time scale, T, at which the dye will become uniformly distributed in x.
b) Confirm your estimate by plotting C(x) at the times t = T/10, T/4, T/2, T.

Problem 4.4
Consider the two systems shown below. System 1 is enclosed by no-flux walls which
define a domain of dimensions 1m x 1m x 0.1m. System 2 is defined by parallel,
horizontal (x-y plane), no-flux boundaries at z = ± 0.1 m, but is otherwise unconstrained.
2 -1
Both systems have an isotropic diffusivity of D = 2 cm s . At t = 0 a mass, M = 100g, is
released into both systems at x=0, y=0, z=0. A concentration probe (A and A’) is located
in each system at the position (x = -0.5 m, y = 0, z = 0). The detection limit of these
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probes is 10 ppm (gm ).

a) Estimate the time at which the concentration measured at A and A’ begin to diverge?
b) What is the final concentration measured in each system, and when is this
concentration achieved?
c) Describe the evolution of the concentration field in each system, i.e. C(x,y,z,t).

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