Lecture 2 - Chap 1 Lecture Notes
Lecture 2 - Chap 1 Lecture Notes
Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Science and Technology Faculty of Mechanical Engineering 1
Characteristics of fluids
For a solid, application of a shear stress causes a deformation which, if
modest, is not permanent and solid regains original position.
2
Shear force on a Solid & Fluid
F
Solid
A
(Stress is proportional to strain)
Fluid
F
A
V
h
(Stress is proportional to strain rate)
3
Characteristics of fluids - Viscosity
As a fluid flows near a solid surface, it "sticks" to the surface, i.e., the fluid matches the
velocity of the surface. This so-called "no-slip" condition is a very important one that must be
satisfied in any accurate analysis of fluid flow phenomena.
Dye injected at the bottom of a channel through which water is flowing forms a stagnant layer
near the bottom due to the noslip condition. As the dye filament is moved away from the
bottom, the motion of the water is clearly apparent. A significant velocity gradient is created
near the bottom.
4
• The behavior of a flowing fluid
depends on various fluid
properties. Viscosity, one of the
important properties, is
responsible for the shear force
produced in a moving fluid.
For Solids
6
Newton’s Law of Viscosity
The water will start to move continuously with the upper plate with velocity U
similar to plate’s velocity. (Def of fluid)
For Fluids
The fluid in contact with the bottom fixed plate has a zero velocity.
The fluid between the two plates moves with velocity that would be found to vary
linearly Thus, a velocity gradient is developed which = U/b
7
Newton’s Law of Viscosity
The experimental observation that the fluid (liquid/gas)
“sticks” to the solid boundaries is a very important one in
fluid mechanics and is usually referred to as the no-slip
condition.
For a small time , the line AB rotates by (function of
force P and time), so that:
a
tan
b
Since a U t
U t
b
U du
Rate of shearing strain lim
t 0 t b dy
Experimentally proven: For fluids shearing stress is
proportional to the rate of shearing strain (velocity
gradient). du
Newton’s Law of Viscosity:
dy 8
Newton’s Law of Viscosity
du
dy
The constant of proportionality is designated by the Greek
symbol (mu) and is called the absolute viscosity,
dynamic viscosity, or simply the viscosity of the fluid.
9
Newton’s Law of Viscosity
For Newtonian fluids shearing stress is linearly proportional to the
rate of shearing strain (angular deformation)
Most common fluids are Newtonian.
A rotating parallel-
disk
Linear variation of shearing stress with rate of rheometer
shearing strain for common fluid
10
Viscosity
Viscosity is very sensitive to
temperature
𝑇 =𝑟 × 𝐹
𝑇 =𝑟 ×𝜏 𝑑𝐴
𝑑𝐴=2 𝜋 𝑟 𝑑𝑟
2𝜋
4 𝑟𝑝𝑚 × =𝑟𝑎𝑑 / 𝑠
𝑇 =2 𝜋𝜇𝜔 𝑅 / 4 𝑏 60
1 𝑓𝑡=12 𝑖𝑛𝑐h𝑒𝑠
𝑇 =0.0772 𝑓𝑡 . 𝑙𝑏
16
Problem 1
Solution 1.89: