FlowLabEOC2e CH09 PDF
FlowLabEOC2e CH09 PDF
484
DIFFERENTIAL ANALYSIS OF FLUID FLOW
Free surface
v
986
Water (r 998.2 kg/m3 and m 1.003
103 kg/m s) flows in a long, straight pipe. The flow is
steady, fully developed, and laminar, so the analytical velocity profile is known. Write an expression for axial velocity
component u as a function of radial coordinate r, pipe radius
R, and average axial velocity V. Run FlowLab with template
Pipe_1d_Reynolds at Re = 1000. Record the average velocity
and write the velocity profile data to a file. Generate a plot of
u(r) that compares the analytical velocity profile to that generated by CFD. Is there good agreement? Repeat for Re =
2000. Discuss your results.
987 The ru-component of the viscous stress tensor in
cylindrical coordinates is
tru tur mcr
Rtank
r, m
D
z
1 u r
uu
a b
d
r u
r r
(1)
u u
1 u r
tru tur mc a
u ub
d
r u
r
FIGURE P983
984 Repeat Prob. 983, but from a frame of reference
rotating with the stirrer blades at angular velocity v.
985 Consider liquid in a cylindrical tank. Both the tank
and the liquid rotate as a rigid body (Fig. P985). The free
surface of the liquid is exposed to room air. Surface tension
effects are negligible. Discuss the boundary conditions
required to solve this problem. Specifically, what are the
velocity boundary conditions in terms of cylindrical coordinates (r, u, z) and velocity components (ur, uu, uz) at all surfaces, including the tank walls and the free surface? What
pressure boundary conditions are appropriate for this flow
field? Write mathematical equations for each boundary condition and discuss.
(2)
Pin
y
W
L
Free
surface
FIGURE P988
P = Patm
pressible
velocity field: V (u, v) (ax b)i (ay
R
Liquid
z
r
FIGURE P985
485
CHAPTER 9
K
r
ur =
C
r
Oil film:
r, m
Air
FIGURE P991
Fixed
wall
992 Consider
the steady, two-dimensional,
incompressible
Fluid:
r, m
z
x
FIGURE P995
996 For the falling oil film of Prob. 995, generate an
expression for the volume
flow rate per unit width of oil
#
falling down# the wall (V
L) as a function of r, m, h, and g.
Calculate (V
L) for an oil film of thickness 5.0 mm with r
888 kg/m3 and m 0.80 kg/m s.
The first two viscous terms in the u-component of the
u u
uu
1
ar
b 2d.
NavierStokes equation (Eq. 962c) are mc
r r
r
r
997
x
Fixed
wall
P = Patm
Fixed
wall
FIGURE P993
994 For the fluid falling between two parallel vertical
walls (Prob. 993), generate
an expression for the volume
#
flow rate per unit width (V
L) as a function of r, m, h, and g.
Compare your result to that of the same fluid falling along
486
DIFFERENTIAL ANALYSIS OF FLUID FLOW
Ro
vi
Ri
FIGURE P998
999
Glycerin ( r 1259.9 kg/m3 and m
0.799 kg/m s) flows between two concentric cylinders as in
Prob. 998. The inner radius is 0.060 m, and the inner cylinder rotates at 300 rpm. The outer cylinder is stationary.
Recall from Chapter 2 that when the gap between the cylinders is small, the tangential velocity of the fluid in the gap is
nearly linear. When the gap is large, however, we expect the
linear approximation to fail. Run FlowLab with template
Concentric_gap. Run two cases: (a) a small gap of 0.001 m
and (b) a large gap of 0.060 m. For each case, plot and save
the velocity profile data. Compare to the analytical prediction
for both cases. Is there good agreement? How good is the linear approximation? Discuss your results.
9100 Repeat Prob. 999, but let the inner cylinder be stationary and the outer cylinder rotate at angular velocity vo.
Generate an exact solution for uu(r) using the step-by-step
procedure discussed in this chapter.
9101
Glycerin (r 1259.9 kg/m3 and m
0.799 kg/ms) flows between two concentric cylinders as in
Prob. 9100. The inner radius is 0.060 m, and the outer cylinder rotates at 500 rpm. The inner cylinder is stationary. Run
FlowLab with template Concentric_outer, setting vo 500
rpm. Plot and save the velocity profile data to a file. On the
same plot, compare the analytical prediction from Prob.
9100. Is there good agreement? How good is the linear
approximation? Discuss your results.
9102 Analyze and discuss two limiting cases of Prob.
998: (a) The gap is very small. Show that the velocity profile approaches linear from the outer cylinder wall to the
inner cylinder wall. In other words, for a very tiny gap the
velocity profile reduces to that of simple two-dimensional
Couette flow. (Hint: Define y Ro r, h gap thickness
Ro Ri, and V speed of the upper plate Ri vi.) (b) The
outer cylinder radius approaches infinity, while the inner
cylinder radius is very small. What kind of flow does this
approach?
9103 Repeat Prob. 998 for the more general case.
Namely, let the inner cylinder rotate at angular velocity vi
and let the outer cylinder rotate at angular velocity vo. All
else is the same as Prob. 998. Generate an exact expression
for velocity component uu as a function of radius r and the
other parameters in the problem. Verify that when vo 0
your result simplifies to that of Prob. 998.
9104
Glycerin (r 1259.9 kg/m3 and m
0.799 kg/m s) flows between two concentric cylinders as in
Prob. 9103. The inner radius is 0.060 m, and the outer
radius is 0.12 m. In this problem, we compare analytical to
CFD results. Run FlowLab with template Concentric_gap.
Run two cases: (a) vi 300 rpm, vo 0 and (b) vi 200
rpm, vo 400 rpm. For each case, plot and save the velocity
profile data to a file. Compare to the analytical prediction for
both cases. Is there good agreement? Discuss your results.
9105 Analyze and discuss a limiting case of Prob. 994 in
which there is no inner cylinder (Ri vi 0). Generate an
expression for uu as a function of r. What kind of flow is
this? Describe how this flow could be set up experimentally.
Answer: vor
r
x
P1
x1
Ri
Ro
P P2 P1
=
x x2 x1
FIGURE P9106
P2
x2