AE 233 (Chapter 3) Fluid Mechanics For Chemical Engineering
AE 233 (Chapter 3) Fluid Mechanics For Chemical Engineering
AE 233 (Chapter 3) Fluid Mechanics For Chemical Engineering
CIVIL ENGINEERING
Chapter 3: Basic of Fluid Flow
SEQUENCE OF CHAPTER 3
Introduction
Objectives
3.1 Uniform Flow, Steady Flow
3.1.1 Laminar, Turbulent Flow
3.1.2 Relative Motion
3.1.3 Compressible or Incompressible
3.1.4 One, Two or Three-dimensional Flow
3.1.5 Streamlines
3.1.6 Streamtubes
3.2.1 Mass Flow Rate
3.2.2 Volume Flow Rate
3.3 The Fundamental Equations of Fluid Dynamics
3.3.1 Continuity (Principle of Conservation of Mass)
3.3.2 Work and Energy (Principle of Conservation of Energy)
Summary
Introduction
Discusses the analysis of fluid in motion: fluid dynamics.
When a fluid flows through pipes and channel or around bodies such as
aircraft and ships, the shape of the boundaries, the externally applied
forces and the fluid properties cause the velocities of the fluid
particles to vary from point to point throughout the flow field.
The motion of fluids can be predicted using the fundamental laws of
physics together with the physical properties of the fluid.
The geometry of the motion of fluid particles in space and time is
known as the kinematics of the fluid motion.
A fluid motion may be specified by either tracing the motion of a
particle through the field of flow or examining the motion of all
particles as they pass a fixed point in space.
This course will use the second method where the emphasis is on the
spatial position rather than on the particle, or known as Eulerian
Approach.
Objectives
1. comprehend the concepts necessary to analyse fluids in
motion.
2. identify differences between steady/unsteady,
uniform/non-uniform and compressible/incompressible
flow.
3. construct streamlines and stream tubes.
4. appreciate the Continuity principle through Conservation of
Mass and Control Volumes.
5. derive the Bernoulli (energy) equation.
6. familiarise with the momentum equation for a fluid flow.
3.1 Uniform Flow, Steady Flow
uniform flow: flow velocity is the same magnitude and direction at every
point in the fluid.
non-uniform: If at a given instant, the velocity is not the same at every
point the flow. (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 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 practice there is
always slight variations in velocity and pressure, but if the
average values are constant, the flow is considered steady.)
3.1 Uniform Flow, Steady Flow (cont.)
Steady uniform flow:
Conditions: do not change with position in the stream or with time.
Example: the flow of water in a pipe of constant diameter at constant
velocity.
Steady non-uniform flow:
Conditions: change from point to point in the stream but do not change with
time.
Example: 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.
Unsteady uniform flow:
At a given instant in time the conditions at every point are the same, but will
change with time.
Example: a pipe of constant diameter connected to a pump pumping at a
constant rate which is then switched off.
Unsteady non-uniform flow:
Every condition of the flow may change from point to point and with time at
every point.
Example: waves in a channel.
3.1.1 Laminar and Turbulent Flow
Laminar flow
all the particles proceed along smooth parallel paths
and all particles on any path will follow it without
deviation.
Hence all particles have a velocity only in the
direction of flow.
Typical
particles
path
Particle
paths
Transition Flow
exists between laminar and turbulent flow.
In this region, the flow is very unpredictable and often changeable back
and forth between laminar and turbulent states.
Modern experimentation has demonstrated that this type of flow may
comprise short ‘burst’ of turbulence embedded in a laminar flow.
3.1.2 Relative Motion
Observer
Observer
mass of fluid
mass flow rate = m =
time taken to collect the fluid
mass
time =
mass flow rate
3.2.2 Volume flow rate - Discharge
volume of fluid
discharge = Q =
time
=
mass of fluid
density x time ( density =
mass
volume )
&
mass fluid rate m
= = r
density
3.2.3 Discharge and mean velocity
Figure 3.8:
Discharge in pipe
If the area of cross section of the pipe at point X is A, and the mean
velocity here is um, during a time t, a cylinder of fluid will pass point X
with a volume A um t. The volume per unit time (the discharge) will
thus be :
Q=
volume
time
A um t
t
Q= Aum
Q
or um=
A
Q
Let um= V um = V =
A
Figure 3.9:
A typical
velocity profile
across a pipe
• Note how carefully we have called this the mean velocity. This is because
the velocity in the pipe is not constant across the cross section.
• Crossing the centre line of the pipe, the velocity is zero at the walls,
increasing to a maximum at the centre then decreasing symmetrically to
the other wall.
• This variation across the section is known as the velocity profile or
distribution. A typical one is shown in the figure
• This idea, that mean velocity multiplied by the area gives the discharge,
applies to all situations - not just pipe flow.
Example 3.1
An empty bucket weighs 2.0 kg. After 7 seconds of collecting
water the bucket weighs 8.0 kg, then:
mass of fluid in bucket
mass flow rate = ṁ = time taken to collect the fluid
8.0 -2.0
= = 0.857 kg/s (kg s-1)
7
Example 3.2
If we know the mass flow is 1.7 kg/s, how long will it take to
fill a container with 8 kg of fluid?
mass
time =
mass flow rate
8
= = 4.7s
1.7
Example 3.3
If the density of the fluid in the above example is 850 kg/m3
what is the volume per unit time (the discharge)?
mass fluid rate m
Q = density
= r
= 0.857
850
= 0.00108 m3/s (m3s-1)
= 1.008 10-3 m3/s
but 1 litre = 1.0 10-3m3,
so Q = 1.008 l/s
Example 3.4
If the cross-section area, A, is 1.2 x 10-3 m2 and the discharge,
Q is 24 l/s, what is the mean velocity, of the fluid?
= 2.0 m/s
3.3 The Fundamental Equations of Fluid
Dynamics
1. The law of conservation of matter
stipulates that matter can be neither created nor
destroyed, though it may be transformed (e.g. by a
chemical process).
Since this study of the mechanics of fluids excludes
chemical activity from consideration, the law reduces to
the principle of conservation of mass.
2. The law of conservation of energy
states that energy may be neither created nor destroyed.
Energy can be transformed from one guise to another (e.g.
potential energy can be transformed into kinetic energy),
but none is actually lost.
Engineers sometimes loosely refer to ‘energy losses’ due to
friction, but in fact the friction transforms some energy into
heat, so none is really ‘lost’.
3. The law of conservation of momentum
states that a body in motion cannot gain or lose
momentum unless some external force is applied.
The classical statement of this law is Newton's Second
Law of Motion, i.e.
force = rate of change of momentum
3.3.1 Continuity (Principle of Conservation of
Mass)
CONTROL Outflow
Inflow
VOLUME
Control surface
A1 pd12/4 d12
V2 = V1= V1= V1
A2 pd2 /4
2 d22
( )
2
d12
V2 = V1 (3.6)
d22
Another example is a diffuser, a pipe which expands or
diverges as in the figure below
The continuity principle can also be used to determine the
velocities in pipes coming from a junction.
Total mass flow into the junction = Total mass flow out of the
junction
r1Q1 = r2Q2 + r3Q3
When the flow is incompressible (e.g. water) r1 = r2 = r
Q1 = Q2 + Q3
A1V1 = A2V2 + A3V3 (3.7)
Example 3.5
If the area in Figure 3.12 A1 = 10 10-3 m2 and A1 = 10 10-3
m2 and and the upstream mean velocity, V1 = 2.1 m/s, what
is the downstream mean velocity?
= 7.0 m/s
Example 3.6
If the diameter of a diffuser (Figure 3.13) at section 1 is d1 =
30 mm and at section 2 d2 = 40 mm and the mean velocity at
section 2 is V2 = 3.0 m/s. Calculate the velocity entering the
diffuser.
( )
2
40
V2 = 3.0 = 5.3m/s
30
Example 3.7
For a junction (Figure 3.14), if pipe 1 diameter = 50 mm,
mean velocity 2 m/s, pipe 2 diameter 40 mm takes 30% of
total discharge and pipe 3 diameter 60 mm. What are the
values of discharge and mean velocity in each pipe?
friction: negligible
sum of kinetic energy and gravitational potential
energy is constant. Recall :
Kinetic energy = ½ mV2
Gravitational potential energy = mgh
(m: mass, V: velocity, h: height above the datum).
To apply this to a falling body we have an initial velocity of
zero, and it falls through a height of h.
Initial kinetic energy = 0
Initial potential energy = mgh
Final kinetic energy = ½ mV2
Final potential energy = 0
We know that,
kinetic energy + potential energy = constant
= 0.01378 m3/s
c) The density of water is 1000 kg/m3 so the mass flow rate is
ṁ = density volume flow rate
=rQ
= 1000 0.01378
= 13.78 kg/s
Bernoulli's Equation
2 2
p1 V1 p 2 V2
z1 z2
rg 2 g rg 2 g
We see that from applying equal pressure or zero velocities we get
the two equations from the section above. They are both just special
cases of Bernoulli's equation.
Bernoulli's equation has some restrictions in its applicability, they
are:
Flow is steady;
Density is constant (which also means the fluid is incompressible);
Friction losses are negligible.
The equation relates the states at two points along a single streamline,
(not conditions on two different streamlines).
Figure 3.19 :
A contracting
expanding pipe
A1V1
V2
A2
2
d
V2 1 V1
d2
2
0.1
5
0. 08
= 7.8125 m/s
H1± HE = H2 + Hf (3.11)
or
2 2
p1 V1 p V
z1 H E 2 2 z2 H f (3.12)
rg 2 g rg 2 g
HE = energy head added/loss due to external source such as pump/turbines
This equation is really a restatement of the First Law of Thermodynamics for an incompressible
fluid.
The Power Equation
In the case of work done over a fluid the power input into the
flow is :
P = rgQHE (3.13)
where Q = discharge,
HE = head added / loss
If p = efficiency of the pump, the power input required,
rgQH E
Pin = (3.14)
p
Summary
This chapter has outlined and discussed on the fundamental of fluid
in motion. Students are aspect to be able to discuss and visualise on
the following aspect:
Able to classify FOUR (4) types of flow- Steady uniform flow, Steady
non-uniform flow, Unsteady uniform flow and Unsteady non-uniform
flow
The differences between Laminar Flow, Turbulent Flow and
also Transition Flow
The idea of using the streamline to visualise the flow pattern
The calculation of mass flow rate, volume flow rate and the
mean velocity of the flow
Able to explain and apply the THREE (3) laws- conservation of
matter (conservation of mass); conservation of energy and
conservation of momentum
The important of Bernoulli Equation and the derivation