Fluid Properties 1
Fluid Properties 1
Fluid Properties 1
Properties of Fluids
WHAT IS A FLUID?
Substance exits in three primary phases: solid, liquid, and gas. A
substance in the liquid or gas phase is referred to as a fluid.
Gas
Expands until it encounters the
walls of the container and fills the
entire available space because
cohesive forces are very small.
Gases cannot form a free surface.
Compressible.
Density not constant with pressure
Gas and vapor are often used as
synonymous words
Properties of Fluids
• Any characteristic of a system is called a property.
– Familiar: pressure P, temperature T, volume V, and mass m.
– Less familiar: viscosity, thermal conductivity, modulus of
elasticity, thermal expansion coefficient, vapor pressure, surface
tension.
• Intensive properties are independent of the mass of the
system. Examples: temperature, pressure, and density.
• Extensive properties are those whose value depends on
the size of the system. Examples: Total mass, total
volume, and total momentum.
• Extensive properties per unit mass are called specific
properties. Examples include specific volume v = V/m
and specific total energy e=E/m.
Density And Specific Gravity
The density of a substance is the quantity of matter contained in a unit
volume of the substance. It can be expressed in three different ways.
1. Mass Density
• Mass Density, p, (rho), is defined as the mass of substance per unit
volume.
• Units: Kilograms per cubic metre, kg / m3 (or kgm-3 )
• Typical values:
Water = 1000 kgm-3 , Mercury = 13546 kgm-3 Air = 1.23 kgm-3 , Paraffin
Oil = 800 kgm-3 .(at pressure =1.013 x 10-5 N m-2 and Temperature =
288.15 K.)
2.Specific volume
• Is defined as v = 1/r = V/m.
• For a gas, density depends on temperature and pressure.
• The density gases is proportional to pressure and inversely proportional
to temperature.
• Unit is m3/kg
3. Specific weight
• Specific Weight , (sometimes (gamma), and sometimes known as specific
gravity) is defined as the weight per unit volume.
or
• Typical values:
Water =9814 N m-3 , Mercury = 132943 N m-3 , Air =12.07 N m-3 , Paraffin Oil
=7851 N m-3
Solution
EXAMPLE 2
Solution
Weight 46 800 = mg
r 852
Relative density SG 0.852
rH O
2
1000
EXAMPLE 3
The density of an oil is 850 kg/m3. Find its relative density and Kinematic
viscosity if the dynamic viscosity is 5 x 10-3 kg/ms.
Solution
r oil = 850 kg/m3
r water = 1000 kg/m3
SGoil = 850 / 1000 = 0.85
Kinematic viscosity = = / r
Density of Ideal Gases
• Equation of State: equation for the relationship between
pressure, temperature, and density.
• The simplest and best-known equation of state is the
ideal-gas equation.
P RT or P rRT
• where P is the absolute pressure, v is the specific
volume, T is the thermodynamic (absolute) temperature,
and R is the constant. The value of R for several
substance is given in Table A-1.
• Ideal-gas equation holds for most gases.
• However, dense gases such as water vapor and
refrigerant vapor should not be treated as ideal gases.
Tables should be consulted for their properties, e.g.,
Tables A-4 in textbook.
EXAMPLE 4
Determine the density, specific gravity, and mass of the air in a room whose
dimensions are 4 m x 5 m x 6 m at 100 kPa and 25°C.
P 100kPa
r 3
RT
0.287kPa.m3 / kg.K 25 273K
1.17 kg / m
r 1.17kg / m3
SG 0.00117
rH O 2
1000kg / m3
Finally, the volume and the mass of air in the room are
V 4m5m6m 120m3
m rV 1.17kg / m3 120m3 140kg
Viscosity
• Viscosity is a property that represents the internal resistance of a
fluid to motion or the “fluidity”.
•To obtain a relation for viscosity, consider a fluid layer between two very large
parallel plates separated by a distance ℓ. A constant parallel force F is applied to
the upper plate while the lower plate is held fixed. The fluid in contact with the
upper plate sticks to the plate surface and moves with it at the same velocity, and
shear stress acting on this fluid layer is
F
A
Using the no-slip condition,
u(0) = 0 and u(ℓ) = V, the velocity profile and gradient are
u y V
y du V
and
dy
•Shear stress for “Newtonian Fluids” obey the linear relationship given by
Newton’s law of viscosity, du .
Newtonian
dy
fluids -Fluids for
is the “coefficient of dynamic viscosity” – see next slide. which the rate of
deformation is
proportional to
•The shear force acting on a Newtonian fluid layer is
the shear stress.
du
F A A
dy
where A is the contact area between the plate and the fluid
Variation of shear stress with the
rate of deformation for
The rate of deformation (velocity gradient) Newtonian and non-Newtonian
of a Newtonian fluid is proportional to fluids (the slope of a curve at a
shear stress, and the constant of point is the apparent viscosity of
proportionality is the viscosity. the fluid at that point).
Coefficient of Dynamic Viscosity
(absolute viscosity)
The Coefficient of Dynamic Viscosity, , is defined as the shear force, per unit
area, (or shear stress, ),required to drag one layer of fluid with unit velocity past
another layer a unit distance away.
Units: Newton seconds per square metre, N sm-2 or Kilograms per meter per
second, kgm-1 s-1 .
Typical values:
Water =1.14 x10-3 kgm-1 s-1 , Air =1.78 x10-5 kgm-1 s-1 , Mercury =1.552 kgm-1 s-1,
Paraffin Oil =1.9 kgm-1 s-1 .
Coefficient of Kinematic Viscosity
Kinematic Viscosity, , is defined as the ratio of dynamic viscosity to mass density.
Typical values:
Water =1.14 x 10-6 m2 s-1 , Air =1.46 x 10-5 m2 s-1 , Mercury =1.145 x 10-4 m2 s-1 ,
Paraffin Oil =2.375 x 10-3 m2 s-1 .
More About Viscosity
The viscosity of liquids decreases
and the viscosity of gases
increases with temperature.
(dynamic & kinematics viscosity)
Example 5
If the viscosity of a liquid is 0.01 pa.s, find its viscosity in centipoises.
Solution
1 pa.s = 10 poise
1 pa.s = 1000 centipoise
Therefore
1 pa.s
0.01 pa.s
1000centipoise
10centipoise
Example 6
The density of an oil is 850 kg/m3. Find its relative density and Kinematic
viscosity if the dynamic viscosity is 5 x 10-3 kg/ms.
Solution
Kinematic viscosity = = / r
Example 7
The velocity distribution of a viscous liquid (dynamic viscosity = 0.9 Ns/m2)
flowing over a fixed plate is given by u = 0.68y - y2 (u is velocity in m/s and y is
the distance from the plate in m).
What are the shear stresses at the plate surface and at y=0.34m?
Solution
At y = 0.34m,
As the velocity gradient is zero at y=0.34 then the shear stress must also be zero.
Example 8
In a fluid the velocity measured at a distance of 75mm from the boundary is
1.125m/s. The fluid has absolute viscosity 0.048 Pa s and relative density 0.913.
What is the velocity gradient and shear stress at the boundary assuming a linear
velocity distribution.
Solution
= 0.048 Pa s
= 0.913
Example 9
For a parallel plate arrangement of the type shown in slide 14, it is found that
when the distance between plates is 2 mm, a shearing stress of 150 Pa
develops at the upper plate when it is pulled at a velocity of 1 m/s. Determine
the viscosity of the fluid between the plates.
Answer:
Example 10
A 25-mm-diameter shaft is pulled through a cylindrical bearing as
shown in above. The lubricant that fills the 0.3-mm gap between
the shaft and bearing is an oil having a kinematic viscosity of 0.8 x
10^-4 m^2/s and specific gravity of 0.91. Determine the force P
required to pull the shaft at a velocity of 3 m/s. Assume the velocity
distribution in the gap is linear.
Answer:
VISCOMETRY
• How is viscosity
measured? A rotating
viscometer.
– Two concentric cylinders
with a fluid in the small gap ℓ.
– Inner cylinder is rotating,
outer one is fixed.
MEASUREMENT OF VISCOSITY
T FR
du
F A A
dy
V
F A A 2RL
l
V R
2n
4 R nL2 3
T
Example 11
The space between two 40-cm-long concentric cylinders is filled with glycerin
(viscosity = 0.158 N.s/m^2). The inner cylinder has a radius of 11 cm and the
gap width between cylinder is 0.15 cm. Determine the torque and power
required to rotate the inner cylinder at 300 rev/min. The outer cylinder is fixed.
Assume the velocity distribution in the gap to be linear.
Surface Tension
Examples
Water droplets from rain hang from
branches or leaves of trees (Picture)
WHAT IS SURFACE TENSION
• The cohesive forces between molecules down into a liquid are
shared with all neighboring atoms. Those on the surface have no
neighboring atoms above, and exhibit stronger attractive forces
upon their nearest neighbors on the surface. This enhancement of
the intermolecular attractive forces at the surface is called surface
tension.
Capillary Effect
Capillary effect: The rise or fall of a liquid in a small-diameter tube inserted into the
liquid.
Capillaries: Such narrow tubes or confined flow channels.
The capillary effect is partially responsible for the rise of water to the top of tall trees.
Meniscus: The curved free surface of a liquid in a capillary tube.
The strength of the capillary effect is
quantified by the contact (or wetting)
angle, defined as the angle that the
tangent to the liquid surface makes with
the solid surface at the point of contact.
When the attractive forces are between unlike molecules, they are said to
be adhesive forces. The adhesive forces between water molecules and the
walls of a glass tube are stronger than the cohesive forces (attraction
between like molecules) lead to an upward turning meniscus at the walls of
the vessel and contribute to capillary action.
Vapor Pressure
The pressure at which a liquid will boil is called its vapor pressure. This pressure is
a function of temperature (vapor pressure increases with temperature). In this
context we usually think about the temperature at which boiling occurs.
For example, water boils at 100C at sea-level atmospheric pressure (1 atm abs).
However, in terms of vapor pressure, we can say that by increasing the temperature
of water at sea level to 100C, we increase the vapor pressure to the point at which it
is equal to the atmospheric pressure (1 atm abs), so that boiling occurs.
It is easy to visualize that boiling can also occur in water at temperatures much
below 100°C if the pressure in the water is reduced to its vapor pressure. For
example, the vapor pressure of water at 10°C is 0.01 atm.
Therefore, if the pressure within water at that temperature is reduced to that value,
the water boils. Such boiling often occurs in flowing liquids, such as on the suction
side of a pump or tip regions of impellers. When such boiling does occur in the
flowing liquids, vapor bubbles start growing in local regions of very low pressure
(high velocity) and then collapse in regions of high downstream pressure (low
viscosity). This phenomenon is called as cavitation. Cavitations must be avoided
(or at least minimized) in most flow systems since it reduces performances,
generates annoying vibrations and noise, and causes damage to equipment.