1 / 73

KULIAH VIII - IX

KULIAH VIII - IX. MEKANIKA FLUIDA II Nazaruddin Sinaga. Entrance Length. Shear stress and velocity distribution in pipe for laminar flow. Typical velocity and shear distributions in turbulent flow near a wall: (a) shear; (b) velocity. Solution of Pipe Flow Problems. Single Path

derry
Download Presentation

KULIAH VIII - IX

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. KULIAH VIII - IX MEKANIKA FLUIDA II NazaruddinSinaga

  2. Entrance Length

  3. Shear stress and velocity distribution in pipe for laminar flow

  4. Typical velocity and shear distributions in turbulent flow near a wall: (a) shear; (b) velocity.

  5. Solution of Pipe Flow Problems • Single Path • Find Dp for a given L, D, and Q • Use energy equation directly • Find L for a given Dp, D, and Q • Use energy equation directly

  6. Solution of Pipe Flow Problems • Single Path (Continued) • Find Q for a given Dp, L, and D • Manually iterate energy equation and friction factor formula to find V (or Q), or • Directly solve, simultaneously, energy equation and friction factor formula using (for example) Excel • Find D for a given Dp, L, and Q • Manually iterate energy equation and friction factor formula to find D, or • Directly solve, simultaneously, energy equation and friction factor formula using (for example) Excel

  7. Example 1 • Water at 10C is flowing at a rate of 0.03 m3/s through a pipe. The pipe has 150-mm diameter, 500 m long, and the surface roughness is estimated at 0.06 mm. Find the head loss and the pressure drop throughout the length of the pipe. Solution: • From Table 1.3 (for water):  = 1000 kg/m3 and  =1.30x10-3 N.s/m2 V = Q/A and A=R2 A = (0.15/2)2 = 0.01767 m2 V = Q/A =0.03/.0.01767 =1.7 m/s Re = (1000x1.7x0.15)/(1.30x10-3) = 1.96x105 > 2000  turbulent flow To find , use Moody Diagram with Re and relative roughness (k/D). k/D = 0.06x10-3/0.15 = 4x10-4 From Moody diagram,  0.018 The head loss may be computed using the Darcy-Weisbach equation. The pressure drop along the pipe can be calculated using the relationship: ΔP=ghf = 1000 x 9.81 x 8.84 ΔP = 8.67 x 104 Pa

  8. Example 2 • Determine the energy loss that will occur as 0.06 m3/s water flows from a 40-mm pipe diameter into a 100-mm pipe diameter through a sudden expansion. Solution: • The head loss through a sudden enlargement is given by; Da/Db = 40/100 = 0.4 From Table 6.3: K = 0.70 Thus, the head loss is

  9. Example 3 • Calculate the head added by the pump when the water system shown below carries a discharge of 0.27 m3/s. If the efficiency of the pump is 80%, calculate the power input required by the pump to maintain the flow.

  10. Solution: Applying Bernoulli equation between section 1 and 2 (1) P1 = P2 = Patm = 0 (atm) and V1=V2 0 Thus equation (1) reduces to: (2) HL1-2 = hf + hentrance + hbend + hexit From (2):

  11. The velocity can be calculated using the continuity equation: Thus, the head added by the pump: Hp = 39.3 m Pin = 130.117 Watt ≈ 130 kW.

  12. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • Energy equation • All terms are in dimension of length (head, or energy per unit weight) • HGL – Hydraulic Grade Line • EGL – Energy Grade Line • EGL=HGL when V=0 (reservoir surface, etc.) • EGL slopes in the direction of flow

  13. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • A pump causes an abrupt rise in EGL (and HGL) since energy is introduced here

  14. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • A turbine causes an abrupt drop in EGL (and HGL) as energy is taken out • Gradual expansion increases turbine efficiency

  15. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • When the flow passage changes diameter, the velocity changes so that the distance between the EGL and HGL changes • When the pressure becomes 0, the HGL coincides with the system

  16. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • Abrupt expansion into reservoir causes a complete loss of kinetic energy there

  17. EGL & HGL for a Pipe System • When HGL falls below the pipe the pressure is below atmospheric pressure

  18. FLOW MEASUREMENT • Direct Methods • Examples: Accumulation in a Container; Positive Displacement Flowmeter • Restriction Flow Meters for Internal Flows • Examples: Orifice Plate; Flow Nozzle; Venturi; Laminar Flow Element

  19. Definisi tekanan pada aliran di sekitar sayap

  20. Flow Measurement • Linear Flow Meters • Examples: Float Meter (Rotameter); Turbine; Vortex; Electromagnetic; Magnetic; Ultrasonic Float-type variable-area flow meter

  21. Flow Measurement • Linear Flow Meters • Examples: Float Meter (Rotameter); Turbine; Vortex; Electromagnetic; Magnetic; Ultrasonic Turbine flow meter

  22. Flow Measurement • Traversing Methods • Examples: Pitot (or Pitot Static) Tube; Laser Doppler Anemometer

  23. The measured stagnation pressure cannot of itself be used to determine the fluid velocity (airspeed in aviation). • However, Bernoulli's equation states: • Stagnation pressure = static pressure + dynamic pressure • Which can also be written

  24. Solving that for velocity we get: • Note: The above equation applies only to incompressible fluid. • where: • V is fluid velocity; • pt is stagnation or total pressure; • ps is static pressure; • and ρ is fluid density.

  25. The value for the pressure drop p2 – p1 or Δp to Δh, the reading on the manometer: Δp = Δh(ρA-ρ)g • Where: • ρA is the density of the fluid in the manometer • Δh is the manometer reading

  26. EXTERNAL INCOMPRESSIBLE VISCOUS FLOW

  27. Main Topics • The Boundary-Layer Concept • Boundary-Layer Thickness • Laminar Flat-Plate Boundary Layer: Exact Solution • Momentum Integral Equation • Use of the Momentum Equation for Flow with Zero Pressure Gradient • Pressure Gradients in Boundary-Layer Flow • Drag • Lift

  28. The Boundary-Layer Concept

  29. The Boundary-Layer Concept

  30. Boundary Layer Thickness

  31. Boundary Layer Thickness • Disturbance Thickness, d where • Displacement Thickness, d* • Momentum Thickness, q

  32. Boundary Layer Laws

  33. Laminar Flat-PlateBoundary Layer: Exact Solution • Governing Equations

  34. Laminar Flat-PlateBoundary Layer: Exact Solution • Boundary Conditions

  35. Laminar Flat-PlateBoundary Layer: Exact Solution • Equations are Coupled, Nonlinear, Partial Differential Equations • Blassius Solution: • Transform to single, higher-order, nonlinear, ordinary differential equation

  36. Laminar Flat-PlateBoundary Layer: Exact Solution • Results of Numerical Analysis

  37. Momentum Integral Equation • Provides Approximate Alternative to Exact (Blassius) Solution

More Related