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Compressible Flow Tut Add

The document contains 5 questions related to compressible flow through nozzles and normal shock waves: 1. It asks to calculate properties of a gas flowing through a Laval nozzle including exit area, pressure, velocity, and mass flow rate given properties at the throat and reservoir. 2. It asks to estimate the stagnation temperature and pressure on Superman's head given his supersonic speed through air. 3. It provides a diagram of a supersonic wind tunnel and asks to calculate pressures and Mach numbers at various points, and to explain why the Pitot tube pressure is less than the reservoir pressure. 4. It asks to calculate the throat area and exit pressure of carbon dioxide flowing through a

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
181 views2 pages

Compressible Flow Tut Add

The document contains 5 questions related to compressible flow through nozzles and normal shock waves: 1. It asks to calculate properties of a gas flowing through a Laval nozzle including exit area, pressure, velocity, and mass flow rate given properties at the throat and reservoir. 2. It asks to estimate the stagnation temperature and pressure on Superman's head given his supersonic speed through air. 3. It provides a diagram of a supersonic wind tunnel and asks to calculate pressures and Mach numbers at various points, and to explain why the Pitot tube pressure is less than the reservoir pressure. 4. It asks to calculate the throat area and exit pressure of carbon dioxide flowing through a

Uploaded by

Peter Adam
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Tutorial Additional Compressible Flows

Question 1

A gas with R = 300 J/kg/K and k =1.3 passes through a Laval nozzle. The Mach number
at the throat is 1 and the throat area is 0.1 m2. If the reservoir pressure and temperature
are 600 kPa and 3000 K, respectively, and the exit Mach number is 2.5, determine (a) the
area at the exit, (b) the exit pressure, (c) the exit velocity, and (d) the mass flow rate.

Question 2

Superman is traveling faster than a speeding bullet. In fact, he is traveling at 10 times the
speed of sound in the ambient atmosphere (temperature 15C at 101 kPa). Estimate the
maximum temperature on his head (stagnation temperature). Also, determine the
maximum pressure on his head, taking into consideration the normal shock wave standing
in front of him.

Question 3

Throat
Test section
Reservoir M1 = 1

0 1 2 3 4
Shock wave

Pitot tube
A blow-down supersonic wind tunnel (see above) is supplied with air from a large
reservoir as shown. The Mach number in the test section is M2 = 2, and the pressure is
below atmospheric so that a shock wave is formed just at the exit. The pressure at Point 3
immediately behind the shock is 101 kPa.

(a) Find p0, p1, p2, and M3.


(b) A Pitot tube is placed in the exit jet as shown. What is the pressure p4? Why is p4
< p0?
Normal Shock Waves Laval Nozzle
k +1
p2 1 + kM 12
= 1 1 + ( k 1) 2 M 2( k 1)
2
A
p1 1 + kM 22 =
k
A M ( k + 1) 2
pt1 p1 1 + ( k 1) 2 M 1 k 1
2
Mach Number Relationships
=
pt 2 p2 1 + ( k 1) 2 M 22 k 1 2
=
Tt T 1 + M

T2 1 + ( k 1) 2 M 1
2 2
= k ( k 1)
T1 1 + ( k 1) 2 M 22 k 1 2
=
pt p 1 + M
2
M 22 =
( k 1) M 12 + 2 1 ( k 1)
2kM 12 ( k 1) k 1 2
t = 1 + M
2
Question 4

Carbon dioxide (R= 189 J/kg/K, k = 1.3) flows through a Laval nozzle. A normal shock
wave occurs in the expansion section where the Mach number is 2 and the cross-sectional
area is 1 cm2. The exit area is 1.5 cm2. The total pressure before the shock wave is 400
kPa. Find the area at the throat and the exit pressure.

Question 5

Air (R = 287 J/kg/K, k = 1.4) at 800 kPa and 20C exhausts through a truncated nozzle
with an area of 0.6 cm2 to a back pressure of 100 kPa. Calculate the flow rate.

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