Title: Flow in Pipes Fluid Friction
1TOPIC 6
- Flow in Pipes Fluid Friction
2The Pressure-Drop Experiment
P1
P2
Q
L
3Laminar vs. Turbulent Flow
- Laminar flow Fluid flows in smooth layers
(lamina) and the shear stress is the result of
microscopic action of the molecules. - Turbulent flow is characterized by large scale,
observable fluctuations in the fluid and flow
properties are the result of these fluctuations.
4Reynolds Number
- The Reynolds number can be used as a criterion
to distinguish between laminar and turbulent flow
(6.1)
- For flow in a pipe
- Laminar flow if Re lt 2100
- Turbulent flow if Re gt 4000
- Transitional flow if 2100lt Re lt 4000
- For very high Reynolds numbers, viscous forces
are negligible inviscid flow - For very low Reynolds numbers (Reltlt1) viscous
forces are dominant creeping flow
5Pressure Driven Flow in pipes
P1
P2
L
6Forces acting on a fluid
- The forces acting on a fluid are divided into two
groups - Body forces act without physical contact. They
act on every mass element of the body and are
proportional to its total mass. Examples are
gravity and electromagnetic forces - Surface forces require physical contact (i.e.
surface contact) with surroundings for
transmission. Pressure and stresses are surface
forces.
7Stresses
- In fluid mechanics it is convenient to define a
force per unit area (F/A), called a stress (same
units as pressure). - Normal stress acts perpendicular to the surface
(Fnormal force).
F
F
F
F
A
A
Tensile causes elongation
Compressive causes shrinkage
(Pressure is the most important example of a
compressive stress)
8Stresses
- Shear stress acts tangentially to the surface
(Ftangential or shear force).
- Recall from Topic 1
- A fluid is defined as a substance that deforms
continuously when acted on by a shearing stress
of any magnitude.
9Shear Stress Profile
1
2
ro
r
Force balance on cylindrical fluid element
(6.2)
10Shear Stress profile
From (6.3) shear stress varies linearly with r
(6.3)
At the wall (rro)
(6.4b)
(6.4a)
or
(6.5)
Shear stress is a function of the radial
coordinate
11Case 1 Laminar Flow
12Shear Flow
- NO-SLIP CONDITION The fluid sticks to the
solid boundaries. The velocity of the fluid
touching each plate is the same as that of the
plate (Vo for the top plate, 0 for the bottom
plate). - The velocity profile is a straight line The
velocity varies uniformly from 0 to Vo
13Shear Flow
The force, F is proportional to the velocity Vo,
the area in contact with the fluid, A and
inversely proportional to the gap, yo
Recall, shear stress, t F / A
In the limit of small deformations the ratio
Vo/yo can be replaced by the velocity gradient
dV/dy
Rate of shearing strain or shear rate
14Newtons law of Viscosity
(6.6)
m N/m2 . sPa . s Viscosity n m/r
Kinematic viscosity m2/s
Newtonian fluids Fluids which obey Newtons law
Shearing stress is linearly related to the rate
of shearing strain.
- The viscosity of a fluid measures its resistance
to flow under an applied shear stress.
15Example Shear stress
- The space between two plates, as shown in the
figure, is filled with water. Find the shear
stress and the force necessary to move the upper
plate at a constant velocity of 10 m/s. The gap
width is yo0.1 mm and the area A is 0.2
m2. The viscosity of water is 0.001 Pa.s.
Vo
F
A
t F/A
yo
Water
16Effect of temperature on viscosity
- Viscosity is very sensitive to temperature
- The viscosity of gases increases with temperature
Power-law
Sutherland equation
- The viscosity of liquids decreases with
temperature
17Non-Newtonian fluids
- Non-Newtonian fluids Fluids which do not obey
Newtons law Shearing stress is not linearly
related to the rate of shearing strain. - Bingham plastics
- Shear thinning
- Shear thickening
- The study of these materials is the subject of
rheology
18Laminar Flow Velocity profile
Lets consider again the flow of a fluid inside a
pipe. In cylindrical coordinates (6.6) can be
written
(6.7)
By combining (6.3) and (6.7) and integrating
6.8 (a)
6.8 (b)
Velocity profile is parabolic
19Laminar Flow Velocity profile
- Minimum velocity, V0 at the pipe wall
- Maximum velocity Vmax at pipe centerline (located
at r0)
(6.9)
The velocity profile can be written
6.8 (c)
20Laminar flow Velocity and Shear stress profiles
21Fully Developed Flow
- Flow in the entrance region of a pipe is complex.
- Once the velocity profile no longer changes, we
have reached fully developed flow. Mathematically
dV/dx 0 - Typical entrance length, 20 D lt Le lt 30 D
22Hagen-Poiseuille Law
The volumetric flowrate through the pipe is
(6.10)
Average velocity
(6.11)
And because of (6.9)
(6.12)
23Losses due to Friction
Mechanical energy equation (5.2) between
locations 1 and 2 (page 6.8) in the absence of
shaft work
For flow in a horizontal pipe, under SS
conditions and no diameter change
The shear stress at the wall is responsible for
the losses due to friction
(6.13)
(6.14)
24Example 1 Laminar Flow in Pipes
- A polymer of density r0.80 g/cm3 and viscosity
m230 cP flows at a rate Q1560 cm3/s in a
horizontal pipe of diameter 10 cm. Evaluate the
following - The mean (average) velocity
- The Reynolds number Re. Is the flow laminar?
- The maximum velocity. Where does the maximum
occur? - The pressure drop per unit length
- The wall shear stress
- The frictional dissipation (losses due to
friction) for 100 cm of pipe.
25Example 2 Flow of oil inside a pipe
- An oil with viscosity of m 0.4 N s/m2 and
density r900 kg/m3 flows in a pipe of diameter
D0.020 m. - What is the pressure difference P1-P2 needed to
produce a flow rate of Q2 10-5 m3/s if the pipe
is horizontal and has a length of 10 m? - What is the pressure difference if the pipe is
located on a hill with inclination q 13.34? - What would the pressure difference be if the oil
flowed downwards instead?
Inclined pipe
Horizontal pipe