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CEE 262A H YDRODYNAMICS

CEE 262A H YDRODYNAMICS. Lecture 5 Conservation Laws Part I. Conservation laws.

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CEE 262A H YDRODYNAMICS

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  1. CEE 262A HYDRODYNAMICS Lecture 5 Conservation Laws Part I

  2. Conservation laws The ultimate goal is to use Newton's 2nd law (F=ma) to relateforces on fluid parcels to their acceleration. A natural way to do this is to compute the equations of motion following a volume of fluid; We first begin with the governing equations for a solid, non-deformable object with volumeV, surface area A, and density r: V A Mass of object: Momentum of object:

  3. Newton's 2nd law for the object is given by: Surface forcese.g. Friction Body forcese.g. Gravity Example: Block of mass m pushed with force Falong surface with friction coefficient b: u F g m N

  4. velocity of boundary The problem for fluids is that the volume is generally not fixed in time, and so mass and momentum may leave the volume unless a material volume is employed. The key to understanding what to do is Leibniz's Theorem: Consider a volume V(t) for which the bounding surface moves (butnot necessarily at the fluid velocity) Which in 3D becomes:

  5. Fixed volume–VF : Flow of fluid through system boundary (control surface) is non zero, but velocity of boundary is zero. For this case we getMaterial Volume–VM : Consists of same fluid particles and thus the bounding surface moves with the fluid velocity. Thus, the second term from the Leibnitz rule is now non-zero, soUsing Gauss' theorem: This is Reynolds transport theorem, where D/Dt is the same as d/dtbut implies a material volume.

  6. Note that the Reynolds transport theorem is often written in themore general form which does not assume that the control volumeis bounded by a material surface. Instead, the control volume isassumed to move at some velocity and that of the fluid is defined as relative to the control volume, such thatIn this case, V is not necessarily a material surface. If ur=0, thenub=u and we revert to the form on the previous page. ~ ~ ~

  7. The general form of all conservation laws that we will use is: 1 Note: momentum is a vector quantity

  8. Conservation of Mass For any arbitrary material volume Mass is conserved (non-relativistic fluid mechanics) Since integral is zero for any volume, the integrand must be zero Process: We have taken an integral conservation law and used it to produce a differential balance for mass at any point

  9. However, and Thus if the density of fluid particles changes, the velocity field must be divergent. Conversely, if fluid densities remain constant,

  10. But Any other fluid property (scalar, vector,.. also drop triple integral)

  11. Net Applied Force = Mass Acceleration Why is this important/useful? Rate of Change of Momentum = Net Applied Force Because Newton’s 2nd law: But from above: Independent of volume type!

  12. Some Observations 1. Incompressible [ No volumetric dilatation, fluid particle density conserved] Differential form of “Continuity”

  13. Allows us to treat fluid as if it were slightly incompressible 2. Slightly Compressible • Typically found in stratified conditions where Perturbation density due to motion (typ. 0.1-10 kg/m3 for water) Reference density (1000 kg/m3 for water) Background variation (typ. 1-10 kg/m3 for water) • Boussinesq Approximation • Vertical scale of mean motion << scale height • or Note: Sound and shock waves are not included !

  14. Informal “Proof” If a fluid is slightly compressible then a small disturbance caused by a change in pressure, , will cause a change in density . This disturbance will propagate at celerity, c. • If pressure in fluid is “hydrostatic” Now and [ Streamline curvature small]

  15. Typically: g ≈10 m/s2 ; c ≈ 1500 m/s ; w ~ 0.1m/s

  16. Conservation of Momentum – Navier-Stokes We have: • Two kinds of forces: • Body forces • Surface forces • Two kinds of acceleration: • Unsteady • Advective (convective/nonlinear) • Two kinds of surface forces: • Those due to pressure • Those due to viscous stresses Divergence of Stress Tensor

  17. Plan for derivation of the Navier Stokes equation • Determine fluid accelerations from velocities etc. (done) • Decide on forces (done) • Determine how surface forces work : stress tensor • Split stress tensor into pressure part and viscous part • Convert surface forces to volume effect (Gauss' theorem) • Use integral theorem to get pointwise variable p.d.e. • Use constitutive relation to connect viscous stress tensor to strain rate tensor • Compute divergence of viscous stress tensor (incompressible fluid) • Result = Incompressible Navier Stokes equation

  18. Forces acting on a fluid a) Body Forces: - distributed throughout the mass of the fluid and are expressed either per unit mass or per unit volume - can be conservative & non-conservative Force potential • Examples: • force due to gravity (acts only in negative z direction) • force due to magnetic fields We only care about gravity

  19. b) Surface forces: - are those that are exerted on an area element by the surroundings through direct contact - expressed per unit of area - normal and tangential components

  20. c) Interfacial forces: • - act at fluid interfaces, esp. phase discontinuities (air/water) • do not appear directly in equations of motion (appear as boundary conditions only) • e.g. surface tension – surfactants important • very important for multiphase flows (bubbles, droplets,. free surfaces!)

  21. Very important deviation from text!!! CEE262a (and most others) Full stress Deviatoric (viscous) stress Kundu and Cohen Full stress Deviatoric (viscous) stress

  22. Stress at a point (From K&C – remember difference in nomenclature,i.e. tij ← sij)

  23. What is the force vector I need to apply at a face defined by theunit normal vector to equal that of the internal stresses? Consider a small (differential) 2-D element cut away

  24. Defining the stress tensor to be d force component in x1 direction [ has magnitude of 1] And in general

  25. “ Surface force per unit area” (note this is a 2D area) But [see Kundu p90] Total, or net, force due to surface stresses

  26. Conservation of momentum Dimensions:dx1. dx2. dx3

  27. Defining i component of surface force per unit volume to be Sum of surface forces in x1 direction:

  28. In general : Force = divergence of stress tensor “Cauchy’s equation of motion”

  29. But Important Note: This can also be derived from the Integral From of Newton’s 2nd Law for a Material Volume VM and

  30. Constitutive relation for a Newtonian fluid “Equation that linearly relates the stress to the rate of strain in a Newtonian Fluid Medium” • Static Fluid: - By definition cannot support a shear stress • - still feels thermodynamic pressure • (in compression) (ii) Moving Fluid: - develops additional components of stress (due to viscosity) Hypothesis Note difference from Kundu ! Deviatoric stress tensor [Viscous stress tensor]

  31. Assume 4th order tensor (81 components!) that depend on thermodynamic state of medium If medium is isotropic and stress tensor is symmetric only 2 non-zero elements of which gives or See derivation of l in Kundu, p 100

  32. (i) Incompressible (ii) Static Special cases In summary Cauchy's equation Constitutive relation fora compressible, Newtonian fluid.

  33. Navier-Stokes equation The general form of the Navier-Stokes equation is given by substitutionof the constitutive equation for a Newtonian fluid into the Cauchy equation of motion: Incompressible form (ekk=0):

  34. Assuming where

  35. If “Inviscid” Euler Equation Or in vector notation Inertia Pressure gradient Gravity (buoyancy) Divergence of viscous stress (friction)

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