Title: Ch. 11: Introduction to
1Ch. 11 Introduction to Compressible Flow
- Focus on 1-dimensional, compressible, inviscid
flows
- Liquids, ? constant for us (1 increase in ?
for every 1.6 km deep)
- Air, 1 change for every 26 m deep
- M 0.3 5 ??/? M 0.3 100 m/s or 230
mph
- Significant density changes imply significant
compression - or expansion work on the gas, which can change
T, e, s,
- Compressibility fluid acceleration because of
friction, fluid deceleration in a converging
duct, fluid temperature decrease - with heating
- Ideal Gas p ?RT (simple, good approximations
for our engineering - applications, captures trends)
2- Smits/A Physical Introduction To Fluid Mechanics
3Density gradients will affect how light is
transmitted though medium (by affecting index of
refraction). By applying the Gladstone-Dale
formula it becomes evident that the shadowgraph
is sensitive to changes in the 2nd derivative of
the gas density. Strength of shock can be related
to width of dark band. - Methods of Experimental
Physics Vol 18, Martin
Deflection of light caused by shock compressed
gas ahead of a sphere flying at supersonic
speed.
4Thoughts on the increased complexity of
incompressible flow
5GOVERNING EQUATIONS FOR NEWTONIAN
FLUIDS INCOMPRESSIBLE
??/?t ?/?xk(?uk) 0 becomes
?uk/?xk 0 ??uj/?t ?uk?uk/?xk
-?p/?xj?/?xj(? ?uk/?xk)?/?xi?(?ui/?xj?uj/?xi)
?fj becomes ??uj/?t
?uk?uj/?xk -?p/?xj ?(?2ui/?xj?xj) ?fj
4 Equations continuity and three momentum 4
Unknowns p, u, v, w Know ?, ?, fj
6GOVERNING EQUATIONS FOR NEWTONIAN
FLUIDS COMPRESSIBLE
??/?t ?/?xk(?uk) 0 ??uj/?t ??uk/?xk
-?p/?xj ?/?xj(? ?uk/?xk) ?/?xk?(?ui/?xk
(?uj/?xi) ?fj p p(?,T) Thermal p ?RT e
e(?,T) Caloric e CvT ??e/?t ?uk?e/?xk
-p?uk/?xj ?/?xj(k ?T/?xj) ?(?uk/?xk)2
?(?ui/?xk ?uj/?xi)(?uk/?xk)
e is the internal energy
7 Equations continuity, momentum(3), energy,
thermal, state 7 Unknowns p, u, v, w, e, T,
? Know ?, fj, ?, k
7Thoughts on the speed of sound
8COMPRESSIBLE FLOW
front
c2 (?p/??)s
9COMPRESSIBLE FLOW
front
If fluid incompressible, gas would behave like
solid body and move everywhere at piston speed.
If pressure disturbance is small relative to p1
then front propagates at speed of sound. If
large shock waves occur where speed,
temperature, density and pressure change
significantly across shock. (Speed of shock is
between the speed of sound in the compressed and
undisturbed gas.)
10 SPEED OF SOUND
Sound waves are pressure disturbances ltlt ambient
pressure. For loud noise p 1Pa whereas
ambient pressure is 105 Pa Speed of sound c2
(?p/??)s Assumptions ideal gas isentropic
p/?k const, or differentiating
dp/?k pk ?-k-1 d? 0 dp/(p/cont) (const
?k) k ?-k-1 d? 0 dp/p kd?/? 0
11 SPEED OF SOUND
dp/p kd?/? 0 dp/d? kp/?
p ?RT for ideal gas then c2 kRT For
20oC and 1 atmosphere c 343 m/s 1126 ft/s
768 mph
12M 1
Dynamic Pressure ? Static Pressure
13 M V/c M2 V2/c2 V2/kRT (ideal gas) p
?RT (ideal gas) M2 2(1/2V2/kRT) 2(1/2
V2/(kp/?)) M2 21/2 ?V2/(kp) 1/2
?V2/p M2 dynamic pressure/ static pressure
14Thoughts on the speed of sound
As related to the speed of the source
15- Regimes of flow
- Acoustics fluid velocities ltlt c, speed of
sound - fractional changes in p, T and ? are important.
- (2) Incompressible flow fluid velocities lt c,
speed of sound - fractional changes in ? are not significant
fractional changes - in p and T are very important
- (3) Compressible flow (gas dynamics) fluid
velocities c, - speed of sound fractional changes in p, T and ?
are all - important.
16 SUB SONIC
SUPER
Propagation of Sound Waves from a Moving Source
17Some Assumptions
18It is assumed that the system is always in
equilibrium.
19It has been found by experiment that as long as
the temperatures and pressures are not too
extreme, the flow attains an instantaneous
equilibrium. This continues to hold even inside
shock waves. For all the flows examined here,
all systems will be assumed to be in equilibrium
at all times.
p1,?1, T1, s1, h1
p2,?2, T2, s2, h2
20It is assumed that all gases obey ideal gas law
p ? RT
Kelvin (or Rankine)
Not gauge pressure
R Ru/Mm 287.03 m2/(s2-K) (N-m)/(kg-K)
J/(kg-K) R 1716.4 ft2/(s2-R)
21Conservation of Energy
(note that u is now the internal energy)
22FIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS
?Q ?W ?E ?(KE PE U)
?Q/m ?W/m ?E/m ?q ?w ?u
W - ?pdV
U, internal energy, is energy stored in
molecular bonding forces and random molecular
motion. (?KE and ?PE we will
ignore)
23Ideal gas is composed of point particles which
exhibit perfect elastic collisions. Thus internal
energy is a function of temperature only. U
f(T) Enthalpy, h, defined as h u pv
h f(T) since h(T) u(T) RT
24Specific Heat for Ideal Gas
dQ mCv,pdT
25Specific heat is defined as the amount of heat
required to raise the temperature of a unit mass
of substance by1oK. Different for constant
volume or pressure.
26Definition of heat capacity at constant volume
mCvdT dQ or CvdT dq
dq dw du
if Vol constant, w -pdv 0, then dq du,
Cv du/dT It can be
shown that du Cv dT even
if volume not held constant!!
- pg 41, Thermal-Fluid Engineering, Warhaft
27 Definition of heat capacity at constant
pressure mCpdT dQ or Cp
dq/dT
dq dw dq pdv du h u pv dh du
pdv vdp
if pressure constant, dh du pdv dq Cp
dh/dT again can be shown to be true even if
pressure is not constant!!
28Cp dh/dT
Cv du/dT
h u pv u RT dh du RdT dh/dT du/dT
R Cp Cv R
IDEAL GAS
29cp/cv k
cp cv R
cp/cp cv/cp R/cp
1 1/k R/cp
(1 1/k)/R 1/cp
cp R/(1-1/k) kR/(k-1)
30cp/cv k
cp cv R
cp/cv cv/cv R/cv
k 1 R/cv
(k 1)/R 1/cv
cv R/(k 1)
31Another Assumption
32It is assumed that cp/cv is not a function of T
calorically perfect For a perfect gas cp/cv
1.4
33cp/cv k is not a function of temperature
k
34cp/cv k 1.4 for perfect gas
35The Second Law
36The second law of thermodynamics can be stated
in several ways, none of which is easy to
understand. Smits, A Physical Introduction to
Fluid Mechanics
DEFINITION ?S ?rev ?Q/T or dS (?Q/T)rev
dq du pdv Tds du pdv dh vdp
always true!
37DEFINITION ?S ?rev ?Q/T or dS (?Q/T)rev
Change in entropy intimately connected with the
concept of reversibility for a reversible,
adiabatic process entropy remains constant. For
any other process the entropy increases.
38What we can do with
Tds du pdv dh vdp ideal gas and constant
specific heats
39Cv du/dT Ideal Gas Cp dh/dT p ?RT
(1/v)RT
Tds du pdv dh vdp ds du/T ?RTdv/T
ds CvdT/T (R/v)dv
s2 s1 Cvln(T2/T1) Rln(v2/v1)
s2 s1 Cvln(T2/T1) - Rln(?2/?1)
40s2 s1 Cvln(T2/T1) - Rln(?2/?1)
If isentropic s2 s1 0 ln(T2/T1)Cv
ln(?2/?1)R
Cp Cv R R/Cv k 1
?2/?1 (T2/T1)Cv/R (T2/T1)1/(k-1)
assumptions ISENROPIC IDEAL GAS constant cp,
cv
41Cv du/dT Ideal Gas Cp dh/dT p ?RT
(1/v)RT
Tds du pdv dh vdp ds dh/T - vdp
ds CpdT/T - (RT/pT)dp
s2 s1 Cpln(T2/T1) - Rln(p2/p1)
s2 s1 Cpln(T2/T1) - Rln(p2/p1)
42s2 s1 Cpln(T2/T1) - Rln(p2/p1) If isentropic
s2 s1 0 ln(T2/T1)Cp ln(p2/p1)R
Cp Cv R R/Cp 1- 1/k
p2/p1 (T2/T1)Cp/R (T2/T1)k/(k-1)
assumptions ISENROPIC IDEAL GAS constant cp,
cv
43Stagnation Reference (V0)
44BE 1-D, energy equation for adiabatic and no
shaft or viscous work. (p2/?2) u2 ½ V22
gz2 (p1/?1) u1 ½ V12 gz1 Definition h
u pv u p/? assume z2 z1 h2 ½
V22 h1 ½ V12 ho 0 Cp dh/dT
(ideal gas) ho h1 cp (To T) ½ V12 T0
½ V12/cp T T (1 V2/2cpT)
45 T0 ½ V12/cp T T (1 V2/2cpT)
cp kR/(k-1)
T0 T (1 V2/2(kR/(k-1)T)
T0 T (1 (k-1)V2/2kRT)
c2 kRT
T0 T (1 (k-1)V2/2c2)
V2/ c2
T0 T (1 (k-1)/2 M2)
46To/T 1 (k-1)/2 M2
STEADY, 1-D, ENERGY EQUATION FOR ADIABATIC FLOW
OF A PERFECT GAS
47?/?o (T/To)1/(k-1) To/T 1 (k-1)/2 M2 ?/?o
(1 (k-1)/2 M2 )1/(k-1) Ideal gas and
isentropic and constant cp, cv (isentropic
adiabatic reversible)
48p/p0 (T/To)k/(k-1) To/T 1 (k-1)/2 M2 p/p0
(1 (k-1)/2 M2)k/(k-1) Ideal gas and
isentropic and constant cp, cv (isentropic
adiabatic reversible)
49QUIZ
- When a fixed mass of air
- is heated from 20oC to 100oC
- What is the change in enthalpy?
- For a constant volume process,
- what is the change in entropy?
- For a constant pressure process,
- what is the change in entropy?
- For an isentropic process
- what are the changes in p and ??
- Compare speed of sound
- for isentropic and isothermal conditions.
50- h2 h1 Cp(T2- T1)
- s2 s1 Cvln(T2/T1)
- s2 s1 Cpln(T2/T1)
- ?100/ ?20 (T100/T20)2.5
- 2.5 1/(k-1) k 1.4 for ideal gas
- p100 / p20 (T100/T20)3.5
- 3.5 k/(k-1) k 1.4 for ideal gas
51(e) c2 dp/d? But c2 (?p/??)T does
not equal c2 (?p/??S) If isentropic p/?k
constant (ideal gas) Then c (?p/??)S1/2
(kRT)1/2 (1.4 287.03 (20 273.15))1/2
343.2 m/s If isothermal p ?RT (ideal
gas) Then c (?p/??)T1/2 (RT)1/2
(287.03 X (20 273.15)1/2 290.07 m/s 18
too low