Fluid Mechanics 3

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 3

CREST Foundation Studies Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics

3. Fluid Dynamics

[This material relates predominantly to modules ELP034, ELP035]

3.1 Uniform flow, steady flow


3.2 Compressible or incompressible flow
3.3 3-D flow

This section discusses the analysis of fluid in motion - fluid dynamics. The motion of
fluids can be predicted in the same way as the motion of solids are predicted using the
fundamental laws of physics together with the physical properties of the fluid.
It is not difficult to envisage a very complex fluid flow. Spray behind a car; waves on
beaches; hurricanes and tornadoes or any other atmospheric phenomenon are all example
of highly complex fluid flows which can be analysed with varying degrees of success (in
some cases hardly at all!). There are many common situations which are easily analysed.

3.1 Uniform flow, steady flow

It is possible - and useful - to classify the type of flow which is being examined into small
number of groups.

If we look at a fluid flowing under normal circumstances - a river for example - the
conditions at one point will vary from those at another point (e.g. different velocity) we
have non-uniform flow. If the conditions at one point vary as time passes then we have
unsteady flow.

Under some circumstances the flow will not be as changeable as this. The following terms
describe the states which are used to classify fluid flow:
• uniform flow: If the flow velocity is the same magnitude and direction at every
point in the fluid it is said to be uniform.
• non-uniform: If at a given instant, the velocity is not the same at every point the
flow is non-uniform. (In practice, by this definition, every fluid that flows near a
solid boundary will be non-uniform - as the fluid at the boundary must take the
speed of the boundary, usually zero. However if the size and shape of the cross-
section of the stream of fluid is constant the flow is considered uniform.)
• steady: A steady flow is one in which the conditions (velocity, pressure and cross-
section) may differ from point to point but DO NOT change with time.
• unsteady: If at any point in the fluid, the conditions change with time, the flow is
described as unsteady. (In practise there is always slight variations in velocity and
pressure, but if the average values are constant, the flow is considered steady.

Combining the above we can classify any flow in to one of four type:
1. Steady uniform flow. Conditions do not change with position in the stream or with
time. An example is the flow of water in a pipe of constant diameter at constant
velocity.

1
CREST Foundation Studies Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics
2. Steady non-uniform flow. Conditions change from point to point in the stream but
do not change with time. An example is flow in a tapering pipe with constant
velocity at the inlet - velocity will change as you move along the length of the pipe
toward the exit.
3. Unsteady uniform flow. At a given instant in time the conditions at every point are
the same, but will change with time. An example is a pipe of constant diameter
connected to a pump pumping at a constant rate which is then switched off.
4. Unsteady non-uniform flow. Every condition of the flow may change from point to
point and with time at every point. For example waves in a channel.
If you imaging the flow in each of the above classes you may imagine that one class is
more complex than another. And this is the case - steady uniform flow is by far the most
simple of the four. You will then be pleased to hear that this course is restricted to only this
class of flow. We will not be encountering any non-uniform or unsteady effects in any of
the examples (except for one or two quasi-time dependent problems which can be treated
at steady).

3.2 Compressible or incompressible flow

All fluids are compressible - even water - their density will change as pressure changes.
Under steady conditions, and provided that the changes in pressure are small, it is usually
possible to simplify analysis of the flow by assuming it is incompressible and has constant
density. As you will appreciate, liquids are quite difficult to compress - so under most
steady conditions they are treated as incompressible. In some unsteady conditions very
high pressure differences can occur and it is necessary to take these into account - even for
liquids. Gasses, on the contrary, are very easily compressed, it is essential in most cases to
treat these as compressible, taking changes in pressure into account.

3.3 3-D flow

Although in general all fluids flow three-dimensionally, with pressures and velocities and
other flow properties varying in all directions, in many cases the greatest changes only
occur in two directions or even only in one. In these cases changes in the other direction
can be effectively ignored making analysis much more simple.
Flow is one dimensional if the flow parameters (such as velocity, pressure, depth etc.) at a
given instant in time only vary in the direction of flow and not across the cross-section.
The flow may be unsteady, in this case the parameter vary in time but still not across the
cross-section. An example of one-dimensional flow is the flow in a pipe. Note that since
flow must be zero at the pipe wall - yet non-zero in the centre - there is a difference of
parameters across the cross-section. Should this be treated as two-dimensional flow?
Possibly - but it is only necessary if very high accuracy is required. A correction factor is
then usually applied.

One dimensional flow in a pipe.

2
CREST Foundation Studies Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics

Flow is two-dimensional if it can be assumed that the flow parameters vary in the direction
of flow and in one direction at right angles to this direction. Streamlines in two-
dimensional flow are curved lines on a plane and are the same on all parallel planes. An
example is flow over a weir for which typical streamlines can be seen in the figure below.
Over the majority of the length of the weir the flow is the same - only at the two ends does
it change slightly. Here correction factors may be applied.

Two-dimensional flow over a weir.

In this course we will only be considering steady, incompressible one and two-dimensional
flow.

You might also like