1 / 19

Conservation Equations

Conservation Equations. Is a mathematical description of the movement and accumulation of an extensive property in a system. Conserved Property is one that is neither created nor destroyed.

ilana
Download Presentation

Conservation Equations

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. Conservation Equations • Is a mathematical description of the movement and accumulation of an extensive property in a system. • Conserved Property is one that is neither created nor destroyed. • The conservation law: Property is neither created nor destroyed despite changes in the system or the surroundings.

  2. Accounting and Conservation Equations • An accounting Equation is a mathematical description of the movement, generation, consumption, and accumulation of an extensive property in a system. • Mass, moles, Energy, charges, Momentum • Value express in specific unit of measurement or expressed as proxy to real value (depth, ppm)

  3. Mathematically • Accounting Equation Input – Output + Generation –Consumption Accumulation. (Irrigation –Drainage –Evapotranspiration Accumulated water in field)

  4. Mathematically Conservation Law Equation Input – Output  Accumulation…..a Input – Output  Depletion…..….b a: Input>Output; b: Input<Output

  5. Conservation of mass • Amount of water in lake/soil. • Rainfall –Evaporation = Quantity • (R-E=Q) • Unit expression: mm/unit time/unit area. • mm/hr; mm/day • Depth =mm as proxy to Volume/Area.

  6. Conservation of mass in hydrosphere (lake) • R-E=Q ( mass balance equation) • Calculate the amount of water in the lake after one month ( during the wet season) ; monthly rainfall is 350mm and monthly evaporation is 150 mm. Assume no runoff water flow into the lake and drainage gate is close, surface area of lake about 2ha. • From the equation : • 350 mm-150 mm= 200mm • Answer: there is an increase of 20 cm of water level in lake. Absolute value of Q,= Depth x Area.

  7. Q in Volume • Area (ha) x10000(meter2/ha) x depth ( meter)= value in cubic meter • Eg 2ha x10000m2/ha x 200mmx 1m/1000mm) 4000 cubic meter • 4000 000 liter • 4 megaliter • (1 cubic meter = 1000 liter)

  8. System Accumulation The final and initial amounts in the system mathematically describe the accumulation term in both the accounting and conservation equation Final Condition – Initial Condition= Accumulation.

  9. Simulation of accumulation. • Bathroom accumulate 30 liter of water after you take shower. It accumulate at the rate 1.5lit/min. • Your shower head spray at 5 liter/min. • What is the rate of water flowing out of drainage outlet.? • How long do you take your shower.

  10. Simulation of accumulation • Base on mass balance equation (LCM) • Inflow-outflow = Acc • 5lit/min-outflow= 1.5lit/min • Outflow= 3.5 lit/min • Drainage Rate = 3.5 lit/min.

  11. Simulation of accumulation • Diff between begin and final water= 30 liter • To calculate time of shower. • Inflow-Outflow=Acc (MBE, integral acc) • 5 lit/min -3.5 lit/min = 30 lit • Integrate at t=0, MBE • 1.5lit/min =30lit, ; t final = 30lit/1.5lit/min • 20 min

  12. Simulation of accumulation • Calculate time to drain the water. • After the shower turn off. In flow=0 • MBE - Outflow rate= final volume • At t=0, integrate with respect to time • -3.5 lit/min at Final time= 30 lit • Final time= 30lit/3.5lit/min=8.6 min

  13. Accumulation • Generation term describes the quantity of an extensive property that created by the system. • Consumption term describes the quantity that is used or destroyed by the system • Net Production = Generation + Consumption

  14. Concept of Generation/Consumption of extensive property of System. 6 CO2 + 12 H20 + LIGHT  C6H12O6 + 6 O2 + 6 H20 Consumption ( REACTANTS) Generation ( PRODUCTS) TOTAL MASS REMAIN THE SAME

  15. Accounting and Conservation Equations • ALGEBRAIC • DIFFERENTIAL • INTEGRAL

  16. ALGEBRAIC ACCOUNTION STATEMENTS • Algebraic equations can be applied when discreate quantities or “chunks” of extensive property are involved. • Ψin – Ψout + Ψgen – Ψcons= Ψacc • Ψf – Ψ0 = Ψacc Ψ

  17. DIFFERENTIAL ACCOUNTION STATEMENTS The differential form of accounting statement is most appropriate when the extensive properties are specified as RATES eg gm/min , liter/sec. Ŷin- Ŷout +Ŷgen -Ŷcons = Ŷacc = dŶ/dt

  18. INTEGRAL ACCOUNTION STATEMENTS • Integral balances are most useful when trying to evaluate conditions between two discrete time points

  19. Accumulation between to and t1

More Related