Fluid Statics & Dynamics Flashcards
Define Fluid
A fluid is any substance that flows freely because its particles are not rigidly attached to one another. Fluids have no repeating crystalline structure.
State and explain Pascal’s Principle.
Pascal’s principle states that pressure applied to a confined fluid is transmitted undiminished throughout the confining vessel or system. Fluid force acts equally, at right angles, to every portion of its container surface.
Define buoyancy
Buoyancy is defined as the tendency of a body to float or rise when submerged in a fluid. Archimedes’ principle states: “A body wholly or partially immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.” If the density of the body is greater than the fluid it displaces, it sinks. If its density is less, it floats.
State and explain Archimedes’ Principle
Archimedes’ principle states: “A body wholly or partially immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.”
Define and explain mass flow rate.
The mass flow rate equals the product of the density of the fluid, the cross-sectional area of flow, and average velocity of the fluid. If specific volume is used, mass flow rate is equal to the product of cross-sectional area and average velocity divided by the specific volume of the fluid.
Define and explain Volumetric Flow Rate
The volumetric flow rate of a fluid is defined as the volume of the fluid that passes a
reference point per unit time. The volumetric flow rate equals the product of the average velocity of the fluid and the cross-sectional area of flow.
How are Volumetric and Mass Flow Rates related?
The mass flow rate and the volumetric flow rate are related by the density or, specific volume, of the fluid.
What is viscosity? How does temperature impact viscosity?
- Physically, the viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its resistance to flow when subjected to a shear stress.
- For liquids, viscosity decreases with increasing temperature.
- For gases, viscosity increases with increasing temperature.
Describe the two types of fluid flow and their velocity profiles.
The first type is known as laminar, streamline, or viscous flow. The significance of these terms is:
- The fluid particles move in parallel layers where the layers of fluid move
smoothly over adjacent layers without mixing between them. - The particles move in definite and observable paths or streamlines.
- The flow is characteristic of viscous fluid or is one in which viscosity plays a significant part.
The second type of flow is known as turbulent flow. It is characterized by irregular motion of the fluid molecules. This velocity profile is flattened at the centerline. For
well-developed turbulent flow, the average velocity is only slightly less than the
centerline velocity.
Explain the continuity of fluid flow.
Continuity of fluid flow, or steady flow, occurs when the same mass flow exists everywhere in a pipe, meaning that the same quantity of fluid flows past any two reference points along the pipe in any given time. The continuity fluid flow
equation, when applied to fluid flow, is merely a statement of the continuity of fluid flow.
What is the Continuity Equation?
State the conditions where Bernoulli’s equation may be applied.
Bernoulli’s equation applies only when the flow of the fluid is treated as ideal, with no fluid friction.
Bernoulli’s equation results from the application of the general energy equation to a steady flow system in which:
- No heat is transferred to or from the fluid
- No work is done by or on the fluid
- No change occurs in the internal energy of the fluid.
Write and Explain Bernoulli’s equation in terms of the general energy equation.
PE1 + KE1 + P1V1 = PE2 + KE2 + P2V2
Where
PE = potential energy (ft lbf)
KE = kinetic energy (ft lbf)
P = pressure (lbf /ft2)
V = volume (ft3)
State and explain the Bernoulli Equation with higher detail energy terms.
What is the NRC version of the Bernoullie equation?
What is elevation head?
Elevation head (z) represents the potential
energy the fluid possesses due to its elevation
above a reference level. It is expressed by
the vertical distance, in feet, between the
reference level and the level of the fluid.
What is velocity head?
Velocity head - (Vav)2/ 2g - represents the kinetic energy the fluid possesses due to its velocity. It is the height, in feet, to which the flowing fluid would rise in a column if all of its kinetic energy were converted to potential energy.
What is pressure head?
Pressure head (Pυ) represents the PV energy the fluid possesses due to its pressure. It is expressed by the height, in feet, of a column of the fluid whose weight is equivalent to the pressure of the fluid. This pressure is the static pressure, which is the sum of gravity, applied forces, and atmospheric pressure.
Explain and distinguish between static pressure, dynamic pressure and total pressure.
Static pressure in a fluid is caused by the motion of molecules. The pressure felt due to flow is called dynamic pressure. These two pressures combine to make up total pressure.
Explain and define head loss
It is the conversion of fluid pressure and velocity to heat
energy through friction.
Hf = Wf / m = u2 - u1
- Hf = head loss (friction head) due to fluid friction (ft)
- Wf = work done against fluid friction (ft lbf)
- m = mass (lbm)
- u2 = specific internal energy exiting system (Btu/lbm)
- u1 = specific internal energy entering system (Btu/lbm)
Explain the effects on head loss from viscosity
(Hf) represents the energy used in overcoming fluid friction. Although this represents a loss of energy from the standpoint of fluid flow, it does not normally represent a loss of total energy from the fluid.
Although the total head of the working fluid decreases because of fluid friction, the internal energy of the fluid, as reflected by its temperature, increases. In an insulated pipe in which there is no heat loss to the surroundings, the head loss equals the internal energy gain.
Discuss operational consideration of viscosity as related to head loss
Experimental studies of the flow of liquids in pipes showed that the head loss due to fluid friction varies:
- Directly with the length of the pipe, since a longer pipe has more surface area
- Inversely with the diameter of the pipe, since a pipe with a larger diameter has less surface area per unit of cross-sectional area than a pipe with a smaller diameter.
- Directly with the velocity head of the fluid
What is the formula for head loss (Hf) due to friction?
Explain and define pump head
Pump head (H<sub>p</sub>) is the head added by the pump to each pound of fluid to maintain or increase its pressure or velocity.
Hp = Wp / m = h2 - h1
H<sub>p</sub> = head added by the pump (ft) W<sub>p</sub> = work done on the fluid by the pump (ft lbf) h<sub>2</sub> = specific enthalpy exiting the pump (Btu/lbm) h<sub>1</sub> = specific enthalpy entering the pump (Btu/lbm)
Specific enthalpy of a working fluid, h, is a property of the fluid which is defined as: h=u+P v where, u= Specific internal energy P= Pressure v= Specific volume
What is Bernoulli’s equation with terms for the work done against fluid friction and work of the pump?
What is the Reynolds Number
The experimental investigations of Osborne Reynolds in 1883 indicated that for an
noncompressible fluid completely filling a pipe, the mode of flow is determined by:
- Average velocity of the fluid (Vav)
- Diameter of the pipe (d)
- Kinematic viscosity (ν).
Unit analysis, confirmed by experiment, showed that these variables could be grouped to form a unit-less constant called the Reynolds number (NRe) which can be used to determine the mode of flow.