FM CH 1
FM CH 1
OBJECTIVES
Have a working knowledge of the basic properties of
INTRODUCTION
Property: Any characteristic of a system.
volume V, and mass m. Properties are considered to be either intensive or extensive. Intensive properties: Those that are independent of the mass of a system, such as temperature, pressure, and density. Extensive properties: Those whose values depend on the sizeor extentof the system. Specific properties: Extensive properties per unit mass.
SPECIFIC GRAVITY
Specific gravity: The ratio of the density of a substance to
the density of some standard substance at a specified temperature (usually water at 4C)
SPECIFIC WEIGHT
Specific weight: The weight of a unit volume of a
substance.
VISCOSITY
Viscosity: A property that represents the internal
the flow direction. The magnitude of this force depends, in part, on viscosity.
The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its resistance to
deformation. Viscosity is due to the internal frictional force that develops between different layers of fluids as they are forced to move relative to each other
VISCOSITY
A fluid moving relative to a body exerts a drag force on the body, partly because of friction caused by viscosity.
Newtonian fluids: Fluids for which the rate of deformation is proportional to the shear stress.
Shear stress
The behavior of a fluid in laminar flow between two parallel plates when the upper plate moves with a constant velocity.
Shear force
coefficient of viscosity
Dynamic (absolute) viscosity kg/m s or N s/m2 or Pa s 1 poise = 0.1 Pa s
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The rate of deformation (velocity gradient) of a Newtonian fluid is proportional to shear stress, and the constant of proportionality is the viscosity.
Variation of shear stress with the rate of deformation for Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids (the slope of a curve at a point is the apparent viscosity of the fluid at that point).
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For gases, this is also the case for dynamic viscosity (at low to moderate pressures), but not for kinematic viscosity since the density of a gas is proportional to its pressure.
Dynamic viscosity, in general, does not depend on pressure, but kinematic viscosity does.
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The viscosity of a fluid is directly related to the pumping power needed to transport a fluid in a pipe or to move a body through a fluid. Viscosity is caused by the cohesive forces between the molecules in liquids and by the molecular collisions in gases, and it varies greatly with temperature. In a liquid, the molecules possess more energy at higher temperatures, and they can oppose the large cohesive intermolecular forces more strongly. As a result, the energized liquid molecules can move more freely. In a gas, the intermolecular forces are negligible, and the gas molecules at high temperatures move randomly at higher velocities. This results in more molecular collisions per unit volume per unit time and therefore in greater resistance to flow.
The viscosity of liquids decreases and the viscosity of gases increases with temperature.
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This equation can be used to calculate the viscosity of a fluid by measuring torque at a specified angular velocity. Therefore, two concentric cylinders can be used as a viscometer, a device that measures viscosity.
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Attractive forces acting on a liquid molecule at the surface and deep inside the liquid. Stretching a liquid film with a Ushaped wire, and the forces acting on the movable wire of length b.
Surface tension: The work done per unit increase in the surface area of the liquid.
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The free-body diagram of half a droplet or air bubble and half a soap bubble.
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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.
Capillary Effect
The meniscus of colored water in a 4-mm-inner-diameter glass tube. Note that the edge of the meniscus meets the wall of the capillary tube at a very small contact angle.
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The capillary rise of water and the capillary fall of mercury in a smalldiameter glass tube.
The forces acting on a liquid column that has risen in a tube due to the capillary effect.
Capillary rise is inversely proportional to the radius of the tube and density of the liquid.
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Coefficient of compressibility (also called the bulk modulus of compressibility or bulk modulus of elasticity) for fluids
The coefficient of compressibility represents the change in pressure corresponding to a fractional change in volume or density of the fluid while the temperature remains constant. What is the coefficient of compressibility of a truly incompressible substance (v = constant)? A large value of indicates that a large change in pressure is needed to cause a small fractional change in volume, and thus a fluid with a large is essentially incompressible. This is typical for liquids, and explains why liquids are usually considered to be incompressible.