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Turbomachinery Lecture 2a - Conservation of Mass, Momentum - Bernoulli Equation - Performance Parameters 1 Fluid Flow • Microscopic: atomic- molecular motion • Macroscopic: continuum motion approach 2 Eulerian Control Volume Approach • Lagrangian Approach: – Follow fluid particle or droplet on path [called path line]. – Fluid particle is an aggregate of discrete particles of fixed identity. Focus on particles as they move through flow. – Each particle is labeled by its original position. – Examples are particle tracking for sprays and coatings, continuum mechanics, oceanographics [flow meters drift along prevailing currents] t0+t; xi=xi(t0+t) t0; xi0=xi(t0) 3 Eulerian Control Volume Approach • Eulerian or Control Volume Approach: – Watch a fixed point in space, not one particle, as time proceeds. – CV is designated in space and the bondary known. The amount and identity of the matter in CV may change with time, but shape is fixed. – Property field, e.g. V=velocity=V(x,y,z,t) [streamline] is defined. – Path lines and streamlines are identical in a steady flow. V 4 Eulerian Control Volume Approach • Eulerian – Lagrangian – Extensive property: dependent on mass in volume under consideration: N – Intensive property: independent of mass in volume under consideration: n N n dV ndm For example M n 1 dV dm 5 Eulerian Control Volume Approach • Elemental Fixed Volume Cube dV = dx*dy*dz uu u dy dz dx 6 Brief Math Review • • • • • • Cartesian, cylindrical coordinate systems Unit vectors [i, j, k, n] Dot products Grad, curl operators Green’s integral theorem Ordinary, partial, and material derivatives • Be careful, many variables have same symbol – V=volume, V=velocity, etc. 7 Eulerian Control Volume Approach • Scalar convection – Substantial derivative [for a coordinate system] of an extensive property N – Consider some arbitrary extensive property N of fluid associated with CV N ndV – n = N per unit mass and dV is the elemental mass • Differentiate along particle path a Lagrangian process dN DN dt system Dt N sources where total or Stokes derivative reflects the change in N over time and space 8 Scalar Conservation Time=t Time=t+t V III dN N N N source dt dt 1 ndV ndV ndV ndV t II / II I III / ndV nV d A t II I III II I II / Time rate of change convection 9 Conservation Laws DN n dV n V n dA N source Dt t Mass [ particle identity ] N M dV n 1 Ns 0 n u, v Ns n e0 N s Qadded Won system Momentum [ Newton] N M ax , a y Energy [1st law of thermo] V2 N Eo E 2 F ,F x y 10 Conservation Laws n 2D Steady Flow p V n dA 0 V V n dA pndA F ... e V n dA p V n dA viscous 0 Qconduction Qdissipation ... No. equations = 5 No. unknowns = , u, v, w, p, h0 Therefore need additional relations to close system p RT dh c p dT 11 Conservation Laws 2D Steady Flow of Energy e V n dA p V n 0 dA Qconduction Qdissipation ... e V n 0 dA p V n dA Qconduction Qdissipation ... h V n 0 dA Qconduction Qdissipation ... 12 Conservation Laws 2D Steady Flow V n dA 0 r 2 u2 (r ) uCL 1 R What is uCL ? R 1u1 i i R 2 2u2 (r )i i rdr 0 2 0 u1 13 Conservation Laws n 2D Steady Flow V n dA 0 p V V n dA pndA Fviscous ... x component , no friction u V n dA pn idA 14 Mass to Continuity dV V n dA 0 F .V . t Apply Green ' s / Divergence Theorem Integral B n dA B dV dV V dV 0 t or integro differential equation V t dV 0 or partial differential equation V 0 t or d V 0 dt F .E. F .D. 15 Bernoulli’s Equation Assume Steady , Inviscid Flow [no gravity , no shear stresses ] Integral form uV ndA pn i dA Differential form V V p Vector Identity V 2 V V V 2 where V 16 Bernoulli’s Equation Differential form V 2 V p 2 Option 1: Steady, Irrotational [ 0] Option 2 : Along a streamline [dr ] V 2 0 2 V 2 dp d 2 0 p or What is meant by incompressible? Bernoulli - Steady - Inviscid - Irrotational 0 or on streamline -Incompressible 17 Pitot – Kiel Head Pressure Probe ps V 1 1 V 2 2 p0 ps V ps 2 2 g lbf ft lbm p 2 V 3 ft sec ft lbm ft g lbf sec 2 lbf lbf lbm ft 2 lbf ft ft 2 ft 2 ft 3 sec 2 lbm sec2 p0 Inviscid Momentum Equation • Adding additional force terms (gravity, magnetism, etc.) on flow, gives more general form of inviscid, integral momentum equation: PdA F Vd V V dA t • Equation is basis of C.V. approach to many problems • Note - for steady flow calculate force on immersed object from flow variables on surface of C.V.!!! • To solve unsteady and/or viscid flows must integrate throughout the volume - orders of magnitude more 19 difficult! Steady Inviscid Momentum Equation • Integral form of Inviscid Momentum Equation n PdA F V V dA • n is outward normal from surface area. In 2D: n i cos j sin n n i i cos 2 j j sin 2 1 V ui vj V i cos j sin V n n V u cos v sin 20 Steady Inviscid Momentum Equation For cylindrical surface, use cylindrical coordinates n i r i cos j sin V ui vj ur ir u i n V u cos v sin ur y r x 21 Steady Inviscid Momentum Equation • Substituting into vector equation: P i cos j sin dA F ui vj u cos v sin dA • Writing this as two scalar equations: P cos dA Fx u u cos v sin dA P sin dA Fy vu cos v sin dA 22 Steady Inviscid Momentum Equation • The math works - but don't lose common sense. Still: F ma mV • Pressure force is positive to right, acceleration is positive to right, so: PdA F V V dA P1 P2 A F m V2 V1 23 Steady Inviscid Momentum Equation • Examples: – Circular cylinder in flight: Compressible flow homework – Circular cylinder in duct: Compressible flow homework – Jet Engine In Flight e d f c g Vo, Ao Vj, Aj h i j b a 24 Inviscid Momentum Equation • Example: Application to Jet Engine in Flight Fx P cos dA AB BC CD DE EF FG GH HI IJ JA 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 uu cos v sin dA cancels IJ jV j 2 A j cancels EF 1 0V0 2 A j A0 2 cancels CD 1 0V0 2 A j A0 2 0V0 A0 2 1 0V0 2 A j A0 2 cancels AB 1 V A A 2 2 0 0 j 0 25 Inviscid Momentum Equation • Summing terms: Fx jV j A j 0V0 A0 2 2 Fx mV j V0 • Jet engine control volume chosen to eliminate PdA • Same result for any control volume fully enclosing the engine • Generally cannot eliminate PdA for internal flows 26 Effect of Ambient Pressure [patm] Uninstalled (Ideal) Thrust • So From Force Considerations (Control Volume Analysis), the Uninstalled (Ideal) Thrust for an Engine is: F (m air m fuel ) Vexit m air Vinlet gc ( Pexit Pinlet ) A • Why now pressure term? • What is effect of Pambient term? 28 Specific Fuel Consumption • The Rate of Fuel Used by the Propulsion System per Unit of Thrust: m fuel – uninstalled: S – installed: m fuel • So TSFC T F mass flow rate of fuel installed engine thrust S TSFC (1 inlet nozzle ) 29 3D Steady Flow Energy Equation e V n dA p V n 0 dA e V n 0 dA h 0 V n dA p V n dA 0 h dm Q 0 0 Energy based on 1st law If flow velocity brought to zero adiabatically, apply Gibbs equation at stagnation properties h01 h02 T01 T02 T02 1 P02 s2 s1 1 P02 ln ln ln cp T01 P01 P01 P02 s exp 1 P01 R Was derived earlier 30 Other Important Equations p RT Eq. of state V2 h0 e0 pv e0 h 2 cp cP cv R = cv 1 / p T2 P2 T1 P1 P2 T1 or P1 1 / T2 T CP 1 / Enthalpy def . Kinetic theory or T CP 1 / Adiabatic eq. of state if s 0 31