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Chapter 15
Fluid Mechanics
2
15.1 States of Matter

Solid


Liquid


Has a definite volume and shape
Has a definite volume but not a definite
shape
Gas – unconfined

Has neither a definite volume nor shape
3
States of Matter, cont


All of the previous definitions are
somewhat artificial
More generally, the time it takes a
particular substance to change its
shape in response to an external force
determines whether the substance is
treated as a solid, liquid or gas
4
Fluids


A fluid is a collection of molecules that
are randomly arranged and held
together by weak cohesive forces and
by forces exerted by the walls of a
container
Both liquids and gases are fluids
5
Forces in Fluids

A simplification model will be used


The fluids will be non viscous
The fluids do no sustain shearing forces



The fluid cannot be modeled as a rigid object
The only type of force that can exist in a fluid
is one that is perpendicular to a surface
The forces arise from the collisions of the fluid
molecules with the surface

Impulse-momentum theorem and Newton’s Third
Law show the force exerted
6
Pressure

The pressure, P, of
the fluid at the level
to which the device
has been
submerged is the
ratio of the force to
the area
Fig 15.1
7
Pressure, cont

Pressure is a scalar quantity


Pressure compared to force


Because it is proportional to the magnitude
of the force
A large force can exert a small pressure if
the area is very large
Units of pressure are Pascals (Pa)
N
1 Pa  1 2
m
8
Pressure vs. Force


Pressure is a scalar and force is a
vector
The direction of the force producing a
pressure is perpendicular to the area of
interest
9
Atmospheric Pressure


The atmosphere exerts a pressure on
the surface of the Earth and all objects
at the surface
Atmospheric pressure is generally taken
to be 1.00 atm = 1.013 x 105 Pa = Po
10
Measuring Pressure



The spring is
calibrated by a
known force
The force due to the
fluid presses on the
top of the piston and
compresses the
spring
The force the fluid
exerts on the piston
is then measured
Fig 15.2
11
Fig 15.3
12
15.2 Variation of Pressure with
Depth



Fluids have pressure that vary with
depth
If a fluid is at rest in a container, all
portions of the fluid must be in static
equilibrium
All points at the same depth must be at
the same pressure

Otherwise, the fluid would not be in
equilibrium
13
Pressure and Depth

Examine the darker
region, assumed to
be a fluid



It has a crosssectional area A
Extends to a depth h
below the surface
Three external
forces act on the
region
Fig 1415.4
Pressure and Depth, 2

The liquid has a density of r



Assume the density is the same throughout the
fluid
This means it is an incompressible liquid
The three forces are



Downward force on the top, PoA
Upward on the bottom, PA
Gravity acting downward,


The mass can be found from the density:
m = rV = rAh
15
Density Table
16
Pressure and Depth, 3

Since the fluid is in equilibrium,



SFy = 0 gives PA – PoA – mg = 0
Solving for the pressure gives
 P = Po + rgh
The pressure P at a depth h below a
point in the liquid at which the pressure
is Po is greater by an amount rgh
17
Pressure and Depth, final


If the liquid is open to the atmosphere,
and Po is the pressure at the surface of
the liquid, then Po is atmospheric
pressure
The pressure is the same at all points
having the same depth, independent of
the shape of the container
18
Pascal’s Law



The pressure in a fluid depends on
depth and on the value of Po
A change in pressure at the surface
must be transmitted to every other point
in the fluid.
This is the basis of Pascal’s Law
19
Pascal’s Law, cont


Named for French scientist Blaise
Pascal
A change in the pressure applied to a
fluid is transmitted to every point of
the fluid and to the walls of the
container
P1  P2
F1
F2

A1 A 2
20
Pascal’s Law, Example



This is a hydraulic
press
A large output force
can be applied by
means of a small
input force
The volume of liquid
pushed down on the
left must equal the
volume pushed up on
the right
Fig 15.5(a)
21
Fig 15.5(b)
22
Pascal’s Law, Example cont.

Since the volumes are equal,


A1 Dx1 = A2 Dx2
Combining the equations,


F1 Dx1 = F2 Dx2 which means W1 = W2
This is a consequence of Conservation of
Energy
23
Pascal’s Law, Other
Applications




Hydraulic brakes
Car lifts
Hydraulic jacks
Forklifts
24
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Fig 15.2
30
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15.3 Pressure Measurements:
Barometer


Invented by Torricelli
A long closed tube is filled
with mercury and inverted in
a dish of mercury



The closed end is nearly a
vacuum
Measures atmospheric
pressure as Po = rHggh
One 1 atm = 0.760 m (of Hg)
Fig 15.7
33
Pressure Measurements:
Manometer




A device for measuring the
pressure of a gas
contained in a vessel
One end of the U-shaped
tube is open to the
atmosphere
The other end is
connected to the pressure
to be measured
Pressure at B is Po+ rgh
Fig 15.7
34
Absolute vs. Gauge Pressure



P = Po + rgh
P is the absolute pressure
The gauge pressure is P – Po
 This also rgh

This is what you measure in your tires
35
15.4 Buoyant Force



The buoyant force is the upward force
exerted by a fluid on any immersed
object
The object is in equilibrium
There must be an upward force to
balance the downward force
36
Buoyant Force, cont



The upward force must equal (in
magnitude) the downward gravitational
force
The upward force is called the buoyant
force
The buoyant force is the resultant force
due to all forces applied by the fluid
surrounding the object
37
Archimedes





ca 289 – 212 BC
Greek mathematician,
physicist and engineer
Computed the ratio of a
circle’s circumference to
its diameter
Calculated the areas
and volumes of various
geometric shapes
Famous for buoyant
force studies
38
Archimedes’ Principle


Any object completely or partially
submerged in a fluid experiences an
upward buoyant force whose magnitude
is equal to the weight of the fluid
displaced by the object
This is called Archimedes’ Principle
39
Archimedes’ Principle, cont



The pressure at the
top of the cube
causes a downward
force of PtopA
The pressure at the
bottom of the cube
causes an upward
force of Pbottom A
B = (Pbottom – Ptop) A
= mg
Fig 15.8
40
Archimedes's Principle:
Totally Submerged Object

An object is totally submerged in a fluid of
density rf

The upward buoyant force is B=rfgVf = rfgVo
The downward gravitational force is
w=mg=rogVo

The net force is B-w=(rf-ro)gVoj

41
Archimedes’ Principle: Totally
Submerged Object, cont



If the density of the object is less
than the density of the fluid, the
unsupported object accelerates
upward
If the density of the object is more
than the density of the fluid, the
unsupported object sinks
The motion of an object in a fluid
is determined by the densities of
the fluid and the object
Fig 15.9
42
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15.9
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43
Archimedes’ Principle:
Floating Object



The object is in static equilibrium
The upward buoyant force is balanced
by the downward force of gravity
Volume of the fluid displaced
corresponds to the volume of the object
beneath the fluid level
44
Archimedes’ Principle:
Floating Object, cont

The fraction of the
volume of a floating
object that is below
the fluid surface is
equal to the ratio of
the density of the
object to that of the
fluid
Fig 15.10
45
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15.10
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46
47
Archimedes’ Principle, Crown
Example




Archimedes was (supposedly) asked,
“Is the crown gold?”
Weight in air = 7.84 N
Weight in water (submerged) = 6.84 N
Buoyant force will equal the apparent
weight loss

Difference in scale readings will be the
buoyant force
48
Archimedes’ Principle, Crown
Example, cont.


SF = B + T2 - Fg = 0
B = Fg – T2



Weight in air – “weight”
submerged
Archimedes’ Principle
says B = rgV
Then to find the
material of the crown,
rcrown = mcrown in air / V
Fig 15.11
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Fig 15.12
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15.5 Types of Fluid Flow –
Laminar

Laminar flow




Steady flow
Each particle of the fluid follows a smooth
path
The paths of the different particles never
cross each other
The path taken by the particles is called a
streamline
62
Fig 15.13
63
Types of Fluid Flow –
Turbulent


An irregular flow characterized by small
whirlpool like regions
Turbulent flow occurs when the particles
go above some critical speed
64
Viscosity



Characterizes the degree of internal
friction in the fluid
This internal friction, viscous force, is
associated with the resistance that two
adjacent layers of fluid have to moving
relative to each other
It causes part of the kinetic energy of a
fluid to be converted to internal energy
65
Ideal Fluid Flow



There are four simplifying assumptions
made to the complex flow of fluids to
make the analysis easier
The fluid is nonviscous – internal
friction is neglected
The fluid is incompressible – the
density remains constant
66
Ideal Fluid Flow, cont




The flow is steady – the velocity of
each point remains constant
The flow is irrotational – the fluid has
no angular momentum about any point
The first two assumptions are properties
of the ideal fluid
The last two assumptions are
descriptions of the way the fluid flows
67
Fig 15.14
68
15.6 Streamlines



The path the particle
takes in steady flow
is a streamline
The velocity of the
particle is tangent to
the streamline
No two streamlines
can cross
Fig 15.15
69
Equation of Continuity



Consider a fluid moving
through a pipe of
nonuniform size
(diameter)
The particles move
along streamlines in
steady flow
The mass that crosses
A1 in some time interval
is the same as the
mass that crosses A2 in
that same time interval
Fig 15.16
70
Equation of Continuity, cont



Analyze the motion using the nonisolated
system in a steady-state model
Since the fluid is incompressible, the volume
is a constant
A1v1 = A2v2


This is called the equation of continuity for fluids
The product of the area and the fluid speed at all
points along a pipe is constant for an
incompressible fluid
71
Equation of Continuity,
Implications


The speed is high where the tube is
constricted (small A)
The speed is low where the tube is wide
(large A)
72
A water hose 2.50cm in diameter is used by a
gardener to fill a 30.0-L bucket. The gardener notes
that it takes1.00 min to fill the bucket. A nozzle
with an opening of cross-sectional area 0.500cm2 is
then attached to the hose. The nozzle is held so that
water is projected horizontally from a point 1.00m
above the ground. Over what horizontal distance
can the water be projected?
73
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15.7 Daniel Bernoulli




1700 – 1782
Swiss
mathematician and
physicist
Made important
discoveries involving
fluid dynamics
Also worked with
gases
78
Bernoulli’s Equation


As a fluid moves through a region
where its speed and/or elevation above
the Earth’s surface changes, the
pressure in the fluid varies with these
changes
The relationship between fluid speed,
pressure and elevation was first derived
by Daniel Bernoulli
79
Bernoulli’s Equation, 2




Consider the two
shaded segments
The volumes of both
segments are equal
The net work done on
the segment is W=(P1 –
P2) V
Part of the work goes
into changing the kinetic
energy and some to
changing the
gravitational potential
energy
Fig 15.17
80
Bernoulli’s Equation, 3

The change in kinetic energy:



DK = 1/2 m v22 - 1/2 m v12
There is no change in the kinetic energy of
the unshaded portion since we are
assuming streamline flow
The masses are the same since the
volumes are the same
81
Bernoulli’s Equation, 3



The change in gravitational potential energy:
 DU = mgy2 – mgy1
The work also equals the change in energy
Combining:
W = (P1 – P2)V=1/2 m v22 - 1/2 m v12 +
mgy2 – mgy1
82
Bernoulli’s Equation, 4



Rearranging and expressing in terms of density:
P1 + 1/2 r v12 + m g y1 = P2 + 1/2 r v22 + m g y2
This is Bernoulli’s Equation and is often
expressed as
P + 1/2 r v2 + m g y = constant
When the fluid is at rest, this becomes P1 – P2 =
rgh which is consistent with the pressure
variation with depth we found earlier
83
Bernoulli’s Equation, Final

The general behavior of pressure with
speed is true even for gases

As the speed increases, the pressure
decreases
84
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Fig 15.18
88
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15.8 Applications of Fluid
Dynamics




Streamline flow around
a moving airplane wing
Lift is the upward force
on the wing from the air
Drag is the resistance
The lift depends on the
speed of the airplane,
the area of the wing, its
curvature, the angle
between the wing and
the horizontal
Fig 15.19
95
Lift – General


In general, an object moving through a fluid
experiences lift as a result of any effect that
causes the fluid to change its direction as it
flows past the object
Some factors that influence lift are




The shape of the object
Its orientation with respect to the fluid flow
Any spinning of the object
The texture of its surface
96
Atomizer





A stream of air passes over
one end of an open tube
The other end is immersed
in a liquid
The moving air reduces the
pressure above the tube
The fluid rises into the air
stream
The liquid is dispersed into a
fine spray of droplets
Fig 15.20
97
Fig 15.21
98
15.9 Titanic


As she was leaving Southampton, she was
drawn close to another ship, the New York
This was the result of the Bernoulli effect




As ships move through the water, the water is
pushed around the sides of the ships
The water between the ships moves at a higher
velocity than the water on the opposite sides of
the ships
The rapidly moving water exerts less pressure on
the sides of the ships
A net force pushing the ships toward each other
results
99