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1.
In this paper, a method using the mean velocity profiles for the buffer layer was developed for the estimation of the virtual origin over a riblets surface in an open channel flow. First, the standardized profiles of the mixing length were estimated from the velocity measurement in the inner layer, and the location of the edge of the viscous layer was obtained. Then, the virtual origins were estimated by the best match between the measured velocity profile and the equations of the velocity profile derived from the mixing length profiles. It was made clear that the virtual origin and the thickness of the viscous layer are the function of the roughness Reynolds number. The drag variation coincided well with other results.Nomenclature f r skin friction coefficient - f ro skin friction coefficient in smooth channel at the same flow quantity and the same energy slope - g gravity acceleration - H water depth from virtual origin to water surface - H + u*H/ - H false water depth from top of riblets to water surface - H + u*H/ - I e streamwise energy slope - I b bed slope - k riblet height - k + u*k/ - l mixing length - l s standardized mixing length - Q flow quantity - Re Reynolds number volume flow/unit width/v - s riblet spacing - u mean velocity - u* friction velocity = - u* false friction velocity = - y distance from virtual origin - y distance from top of riblet - y 0 distance from top of riblet to virtual origin - y v distance from top of riblet to edge of viscous layer - y + u*y/ - y + u*y/ - y 0 + u*y 0/ - u + u*y/ - shifting coefficient for standardization - thickness of viscous layer=y 0+y - + u*/ - + u*/ - eddy viscosity - ridge angle - v kinematic viscosity - density - shear stress  相似文献   

2.
This paper reports the investigation of mean and turbulent flow characteristics of a two-dimensional plane diffuser. Both experimental and theoretical details are considered. The experimental investigation consists of the measurement of mean velocity profiles, wall static pressure and turbulence stresses. Theoretical study involves the prediction of downstream velocity profiles and the distribution of turbulence kinetic energy using a well tested finite difference procedure. Two models, viz., Prandtl's mixing length hypothesis and k- model of turbulence, have been used and compared. The nondimensional static pressure distribution, the longitudinal pressure gradient, the pressure recovery coefficient, percentage recovery of static pressure, the variation of U max/U bar along the length of the diffuser and the blockage factor have been valuated from the predicted results and compared with the experimental data. Further, the predicted and the measured value of kinetic energy of turbulence have also been compared. It is seen that for the prediction of mean flow characteristics and to evaluate the performance of the diffuser, a simple turbulence model like Prandtl's mixing length hypothesis is quite adequate.List of symbols C 1 , C 2 ,C turbulence model constants - F x body force - k kinetic energy of turbulence - l m mixing length - L length of the diffuser - u, v, w rms value of the fluctuating velocity - u, v, w turbulent component of the velocity - mean velocity in the x direction - A average velocity at inlet - U bar average velocity in any cross section - U max maximum velocity in any cross section - V mean velocity in the y direction - W local width of the diffuser at any cross section - x, y coordinates - dissipation rate of turbulence - m eddy diffusivity - Von Karman constant - mixing length constant - l laminar viscosity - eff effective viscosity - v kinematic viscosity - density - k effective Schmidt number for k - effective Schmidt number for - stream function - non dimensional stream function  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this article is to describe an optical technique based on differential interferometry with strongly phase-shifted beams using a white light source and a Wollaston prism. This technique is recommonded particularly for measuring very small index variations. It has been used for analyzing hypersonic flows around slender axisymmetrical bodies. The radial gas density distributions obtained in the shock layers were compared with the analytical solutions developed by Merlen and Andriamanalina (1992) and with Jones' tabulated computations (1969).List of Symbols m exponent of the obstacle's power law - R, R radii of the shock and of the obstacle, respectively - R c radius of curvature of the spherical mirror - r radial coordinate - L obstacle length - L m distance from model to spherical mirror - x, y cartesian coordinates with origin at obstacle nose - geometric angle of incidence - birefringence angle of the Wollaston prism, =() - wavelength - relative thickness of the obstacle - c cone apex semi-angle - Y distance between the two partial beams at the level of the test section - n refractive index of the medium - E optical thickness - e test section width - y light deviation along the y axis - h length of the path traveled by one of the two beams through the shock layer - gas density - s gas density under standard conditions - freestream gas density - min minimum detectable phase difference  相似文献   

4.
We consider the equation a(y)uxx+divy(b(y)yu)+c(y)u=g(y, u) in the cylinder (–l,l)×, being elliptic where b(y)>0 and hyperbolic where b(y)<0. We construct self-adjoint realizations in L2() of the operatorAu= (1/a) divy(byu)+(c/a) in the case ofb changing sign. This leads to the abstract problem uxx+Au=g(u), whereA has a spectrum extending to + as well as to –. For l= it is shown that all sufficiently small solutions lie on an infinite-dimensional center manifold and behave like those of a hyperbolic problem. Anx-independent cross-sectional integral E=E(u, ux) is derived showing that all solutions on the center manifold remain bounded forx ±. For finitel, all small solutionsu are close to a solution on the center manifold such that u(x)-(x) Ce -(1-|x|) for allx, whereC and are independent ofu. Hence, the solutions are dominated by hyperbolic properties, except close to the terminal ends {±1}×, where boundary layers of elliptic type appear.  相似文献   

5.
Stochastic subsurface transport theories either disregard local dispersion or take it to be constant. We offer an alternative Eulerian-Lagrangian formalism to account for both local dispersion and first-order mass removal (due to radioactive decay or biodegradation). It rests on a decomposition of the velocityv into a field-scale componentv , which is defined on the scale of measurement support, and a zero mean sub-field-scale componentv s , which fluctuates randomly on scales smaller than. Without loss of generality, we work formally with unconditional statistics ofv s and conditional statistics ofv . We then require that, within this (or other selected) working framework,v s andv be mutually uncorrelated. This holds whenever the correlation scale ofv is large in comparison to that ofv s . The formalism leads to an integro-differential equation for the conditional mean total concentration c which includes two dispersion terms, one field-scale and one sub-field-scale. It also leads to explicit expressions for conditional second moments of concentration cc. We solve the former, and evaluate the latter, for mildly fluctuatingv by means of an analytical-numerical method developed earlier by Zhang and Neuman. We present results in two-dimensional flow fields of unconditional (prior) mean uniformv . These show that the relative effect of local dispersion on first and second moments of concentration dies out locally as the corresponding dispersion tensor tends to zero. The effect also diminishes with time and source size. Our results thus do not support claims in the literature that local dispersion must always be accounted for, no matter how small it is. First-order decay reduces dispersion. This effect increases with time. However, these concentration moments c and cc of total concentrationc, which are associated with the scale below, cannot be used to estimate the field-scale concentrationc directly. To do so, a spatial average over the field measurement scale is needed. Nevertheless, our numerical results show that differences between the ensemble moments ofc and those ofc are negligible, especially for nonpoint sources, because the ensemble moments ofc are already smooth enough.  相似文献   

6.
The similarity solution of the radial turbulent jet with weak swirl is discussed and a new solution of the radial turbulent jet with swirl is proposed without restrictions assumed in the weak swirl solution.Nomenclature e swirl parameter - k experimental constant - l non-negative constant - M, M , N, P integral invariants - q velocity component in -direction - q max maximum velocity component in -direction - u radial velocity component - u max maximum radial velocity component - v axial velocity component - w peripheral velocity component - w max maximum peripheral velocity component - x radial coordinate - y transverse coordinate - angle introduced in (28) - characteristic width of a jet - (x, y) similarity variable (scaled x and y coordinate) - molecular kinematic viscosity - T eddy kinematic viscosity - tangential coordinate - fluid density - turbulent shear stress in -direction - xy , y components of turbulent shear stress tensor - (x, y) stream function  相似文献   

7.
Summary The problem of flow development from an initially flat velocity profile in the plane Poiseuille and Couette flow geometry is investigated for a viscous fluid. The basic governing momentum and continuity equations are expressed in finite difference form and solved numerically on a high speed digital computer for a mesh network superimposed on the flow field. Results are obtained for the variations of velocity, pressure and resistance coefficient throughout the development region. A characteristic development length is defined and evaluated for both types of flow.Nomenclature h width of channel - L ratio of development length to channel width - p fluid pressure - p 0 pressure at channel mouth - P dimensionless pressure, p/ 2 - P 0 dimensionless pressure at channel mouth - P pressure defect, P 0P - (P)0 pressure defect neglecting inertia - Re Reynolds number, uh/ - u fluid velocity in x-direction - mean u velocity across channel - u 0 wall velocity - U dimensionles u velocity u/ - U c dimensionless centreline velocity - U 0 dimensionless wall velocity - v fluid velocity in y-direction - V dimensionless v velocity, hv/ - x coordinate along channel - X dimensionless x-coordinate, x/h 2 - y coordinate across channel - Y dimensionless y-coordinate, y/h - resistance coefficient, - 0 resistance coefficient neglecting inertia - fluid density - fluid viscosity  相似文献   

8.
Summary As part of a study on the hydrodynamics of a cyclone separator, a theoretical investigation of the flow pattern in a flat box cyclone (vortex chamber) has been carried out. Expressions have been derived for the tangential velocity profile as influenced by internal friction (eddy viscosity) and wall friction. The most important parameter controlling the tangential velocity profile is = –u 0 R/(v+ ), where u 0 is the radial velocity at the outer radius R of the cyclone, the kinematic liquid viscosity and is the kinematic eddy viscosity. For values of greater than about 10 the tangential velocity profile is nearly hyperbolic, for smaller than 1 the tangential velocity even decreases towards the centre. It is shown how and also the wall friction coefficient may be obtained from experimental velocity profiles with the aid of suitable graphs. Because of the close relation between eddy viscosity and eddy diffusion, measurements of velocity profiles in flat box cyclones will also provide information on the eddy motion of particles in a cyclone, a motion reducing its separation efficiency.List of symbols A cross-sectional area of cyclone inlet - h height of cyclone - p static pressure in cyclone - p static pressure difference in cyclone between two points on different radius - r radius in cyclone - r 1 radius of cyclone outlet - R radius of cyclone circumference - u radial velocity in cyclone - u 0 radial velocity at circumference of flat box cyclone - v tangential velocity - v 0 tangential velocity at circumference of flat box cyclone - w axial velocity - z axial co-ordinate in cyclone - friction coefficient in flat box cyclone (for definition see § 5) - 1 value of friction coefficient for 1<< 2 - 2 value of friction coefficient for 2<<1 - = - 1 value of for 1<< 2 - 2 value of for 2<<1 - thickness of laminar boundary layer - =/h - turbulent kinematic viscosity - ratio of z to h - k ratio of height of cyclone to radius R of cyclone - parameter describing velocity profile in cyclone =–u 0 R/(+) - kinematic viscosity of fluid - density of fluid - ratio of r to R - 1 value of at outlet of cyclone - 2 value of at inner radius of cyclone inlet - w shear stress at cyclone wall - angular momentum in cyclone/angular momentum in cyclone inlet - 1 value of at = 1 - 2 value of at = 2  相似文献   

9.
In this paper we consider the free convection from a horizontal line source of heat which is embedded in an unbounded porous medium saturated with a fluid at rest under gravity. The convective fluid and the porous medium are in local thermal equilibrium.
Eine exakte Lösung der nicht-darcy'schen freien Konvektion von einer horizontalen, linienförmigen Wärmequelle
Zusammenfassung In dem Aufsatz wird die freie Konvektion von einer horizontalen, linienförmigen Wärmequelle untersucht, die in ein unbegrenztes poröses Medium eingebettet ist. Die Poren des porösen Mediums sind mit einem Fluid gefüllt, das unter Schwerkrafteinfluß ruht. Das strömende Fluid und das poröse Medium sind örtlich im thermischen Gleichgewicht.

Nomenclature c p specific heat of convective fluid - F o parameter,=/(vl>g - g acceleration due to gravity - k thermal conductivity of the saturated porous medium - l typical length scale of body - Q heat flux per unit length of a line source - Ra Rayleigh number, =gQl/2cp - Ra x local Rayleigh number, =xg Qx/ a2cp - T temperature - T temperature of ambient fluid - u, x andy components of velocity - x, y coordinates vertically upwards and normal to axis of plume - X, Y non-dimensional coordinates vertically upwards and normal to axis of plume Greek symbols equivalent themal diffusivity - coefficient of thermal expansion - similarity variable - non-dimensional temperature - x permeability of porous medium - viscosity of convective fluid - v kinematic viscosity of convective fluid - density of convective fluid - stream function - non-dimensional stream function - the Forchheimer's coefficient  相似文献   

10.
In dynamic rheological experiments melt behavior is usually expressed in terms of complex viscosity * () or complex modulusG * (). In contrast, we attempted to use the complex fluidity * () = 1/µ * () to represent this behavior. The main interest is to simplify the complex-plane diagram and to simplify the determination of fundamental parameters such as the Newtonian viscosity or the parameter of relaxation-time distribution when a Cole-Cole type distribution can be applied. * () complex shear viscosity - () real part of the complex viscosity - () imaginary part of the complex viscosity - G * () complex shear modulus - G() storage modulus in shear - G() loss modulus in shear - J * () complex shear compliance - J() storage compliance in shear - J() loss compliance in shear - shear strain - rate of strain - angular frequency (rad/s) - shear stress - loss angle - * () complex shear fluidity - () real part of the complex fluidity - () imaginary part of the complex fluidity - 0 zero-viscosity - 0 average relaxation time - h parameter of relaxation-time distribution  相似文献   

11.
In this paper the flow is studied of an incompressible viscous fluid through a helically coiled annulus, the torsion of its centre line taken into account. It has been shown that the torsion affects the secondary flow and contributes to the azimuthal component of velocity around the centre line. The symmetry of the secondary flow streamlines in the absence of torsion, is destroyed in its presence. Some stream lines penetrate from the upper half to the lower half, and if is further increased, a complete circulation around the centre line is obtained at low values of for all Reynolds numbers for which the analysis of this paper is valid, being the ratio of the torsion of the centre line to its curvature.Nomenclature A =constant - a outer radius of the annulus - b unit binormal vector to C - C helical centre line of the pipe - D rL - g 1000 - K Dean number=Re2 - L 1+r sin - M (L 2+ 2 r 2)1/2 - n unit normal vector to C - P, P pressure and nondimensional pressure - p 0, p pressures of O(1) and O() - Re Reynolds number=aW 0/ - (r, , s), (r, , s) coordinates and nondimensional coordinates - nonorthogonal unit vectors along the coordinate directions - r 0 radius of the projection of C - t unit tangent vector to C - V r, V , V s velocity components along the nonorthogonal directions - Vr, V, V s nondimensional velocity components along - W 0 average velocity in a straight annulus Greek symbols , curvature and nondimensional curvature of C - U, V, W lowest order terms for small in the velocity components along the orthogonal directions t - r, , s first approximations to V r , V, V s for small - =/=/ - kinematic viscosity - density of the fluid - , torsion and nondimensional torsion of C - , stream function and nondimensional stream function - nondimensional streamfunction for U, V - a inner radius of the annulus After this paper was accepted for publication, a paper entitled On the low-Reynolds number flow in a helical pipe, by C.Y. Wang, has appeared in J. Fluid. Mech., Vol 108, 1981, pp. 185–194. The results in Wangs paper are particular cases of this paper for =0, and are also contained in [9].  相似文献   

12.
Two thermodynamical models of pseudoelastic behaviour of shape memory alloys have been formulated. The first corresponds to the ideal reversible case. The second takes into account the hysteresis loop characteristic of this shape memory alloys.Two totally independent techniques are used during a loading-unloading tensile test to determine the whole set of model parameters, namely resistivity and infrared thermography measurements. In the ideal case, there is no difficulty in identifying parameters.Infrared thermography measurements are well adapted for observing the phase transformation thermal effects.Notations 1 austenite 2 martensite - () Macroscopic infinitesimal strain tensor of phase - (2) f Traceless strain tensor associated with the formation of martensite phase - Macroscopic infiniesimal strain tensor - Macroscopic infinitesimal strain tensor deviator - f Trace - Equivalent strain - pe Macroscopic pseudoelastic strain tensor - x Distortion due to parent (austenite =1)product (martensite =2) phase transformation (traceless symmetric second order tensor) - M Total mass of a system - M() Total mass of phase - V Total volume of a system - V() Total volume of phase - z=M(2)/M Weight fraction of martensite - 1-z=M(1)/M Weight fraction of austenite - u 0 * () Specific internal energy of phase (=1,2) - s 0 * () Specific internal entropy of phase - Specific configurational energy - Specific configurational entropy - 0 f (T) Driving force for temperature-induced martensitic transformation at stress free state ( 0 f T) = T *Ts *) - Kirchhoff stress tensor - Kirchhoff stress tensor deviator - Equivalent stress - Cauchy stress tensor - Mass density - K Bulk moduli (K 0=K) - L Elastic moduli tensor (order 4) - E Young modulus - Energetic shear (0 = ) - Poisson coefficient - M s o (M F o ) Martensite start (finish) temperature at stress free state - A s o (A F o ) Austenite start (finish) temperature at stress free state - C v Specific heat at constant volume - k Conductivity - Pseudoelastic strain obtained in tensile test after complete phase transformation (AM) (unidimensional test) - 0 Thermal expansion tensor - r Resistivity - 1MPa 106 N/m 2 - () Specific free energy of phase - n Specific free energy at non equilibrium (R model) - n eq Specific free energy at equilibrium (R model) - n v Volumic part of eq - Specific free energy at non equilibrium (R L model) - conf Specific coherency energy (R L model) - c Specific free energy at constrained equilibria (R L model) - it (T) Coherency term (R L model)  相似文献   

13.
A nonequilibrium theory of a slurry is developed and its practical use is illustrated by a simple stability analysis. Here a slurry is defined as a deformable continuum consisting of a liquid phase containing in suspension a large number of small solid particles which have formed by solidification from the liquid. The liquid is assumed to consist of two components and the solid to contain only one of the two. Consequently, the process of change of phase requires redistribution of material on the scale of the solid particles. This process is assumed to take a finite amount of time, requiring a nonequilibrium macroscopic theory. This theory contains four thermodynamic variables, three to represent the equilibrium state of the binary system and a fourth measuring the departure from thermodynamic equilibrium. The process of microscale diffusion of material is parameterized in the macroscale theory, leading to a Landau-type relaxation term in the equation of evolution of the fourth variable. The theory is simplified to yield a Boussinesq-like set of governing equations. Their practical use is illustrated by analyzing the stability of a simple steady solution of the equations and the effects of a non-zero relaxation time are discussed. A novel instability mechanism involving sedimentation of particles, previously found to occur in the equilibrium case, is found to persist in nonequilibrium, but disappears in the limit of no change of phase.Key to symbols a, b, c thermodynamic coefficients; see (3.36)–(3.38) - sedimentation coefficient; see (5.18) - C p specific heat; see (3.24) - C p de specific heat of the slurry; see (3.28) and (3.30) - c radius of solid particle (in §4) - D, D diffusive coefficients; see (3.40) and (3.41) - material diffusivity in liquid phase - D * modified diffusion coefficient; see (5.15) - d thermodynamic coefficient; see (3.39) - E specific internal energy - f, g, h thermodynamic coefficients; see (3.36)–(3.38) - g acceleration of gravity - reduced gravity; see (5.10) - i total diffusive flux vector of constituent 1 - i diffusive flux vector of constituent 1 in the liquid phase - j diffusive flux vector of solid phase - k thermal conductivity - k entropy flux vector - k T, kT thermodiffusion coefficients; see (3.40) and (3.41) - L latent heat of solidification per unit mass; see (3.7) and (3.24) - m wave number - m s rate of creation of mass of solid per unit volume through solidification - m 1 s rate of creation of mass of solid constituent 1 per unit volume through solidification - mass rate of freezing per unit area per unit time - N number of solid particles per unit volume - p pressure - p H hydrostatic component of pressure - p m mechanical pressure - p 1 dynamic component of pressure - q heat flux vector - Q D rate of regeneration of heat through diffusive fluxes - Q M rate of regeneration of heat through phase-change processes - Q v rate of regeneration of heat through viscosity - Q vector defined by (3.16) - r heat externally supplied per unit mass (in §3); spherical radial coordinate (in §4) - S specific entropy of slurry - change of specific entropy with mass fraction of constituent 1; also change of chemical potential of liquid phase with temperature barring change of phase - change of chemical potential of liquid phase with temperature in phase equilibrium; see (3.28) and (3.30) - T temperature - t time - t 0 relaxation time; see (5.30) - u barycentric velocity - u H horizontal perturbation velocity - V sedimentation speed - w a upward speed of simple state; see (6.5) and (6.12) - z upward vertical coordinate - upward unit vector - thermal expansion coefficient barring change of phase; see (3.23) - > * thermal expansion coefficient in phase equilibrium; see (3.27) and (3.30) - modified thermal expansion coefficient; see (5.1) and (5.4) - isothermal compressibility of slurry barring change of phase; see (3.23) - * isothermal compressibility of slurry in phase equilibrium; see (3.27) and (3.30) - dimensionless measure of departure from liquidus equilibrium; see (5.2) - a deviation from phase equilibrium in simple state; see (6.6) and (6.13) - vertical wave number - volume expansion per unit mass upon melting; see (3.6) - change of chemical potential of liquid phase with pressure; see (3.25) - change of chemical potential of liquid phase with pressure for slurry; see (3.29) and (3.30) - compositional gradient in the static state; see (6.15) - vector defined by (3.35) - constant of integration; see (6.7) and (6.8) - coefficient defined by (6.23) - nonequilibrium expansion coefficient; see (5.1) and (5.4) - thermal diffusivity; =k/C p - modified thermal diffusivity; see (5.33) - relaxation rate to phase equilibrium; see (2.2) - 1 relaxation rate to solid-composition equilibrium; see (2.3) - sedimentation coefficient; see (4.29) - horizontal wave number vector - sedimentation coefficient; see (4.30) - L , s chemical potential of constituent 1 relative to constituent 2 in liquid and solid phase per unit mass; see (2.6) - change of chemical potential of liquid with liquid composition; see (3.8) - coefficient defined by (3.10) - kinematic shear viscosity - total mass fraction of constituent 1 (i.e., solute) - L, s mass fraction of constituent 1 in liquid and solid phases - density of slurry - s density of solid phase - - - , growth rate of disturbance - stress tensor - deviatoric stress tensor - dimensionless temperature; see (5,3) - a constant of integration; see (6.7) - mass fraction of solid phase in slurry - b vertical gradient of mass fraction of solid; see (6.1) - dimensionless measure of b; see (6.22) - c temporal gradient of mass fraction of solid; see (6.1) - specific Gibbs free energy; see (3.13) - L,s specific Gibbs free energy of liquid and solid phases; see (2.12) - measure of departure from liquidus equilibrium; see (2.14) - measure of departure from solidus equilibrium; see (2.5) - spherical polar coordinate (in §4); see (4.20); wave angle (in §6); see (6.38)  相似文献   

14.
In this work we consider transport in ordered and disordered porous media using singlephase flow in rigid porous mediaas an example. We defineorder anddisorder in terms of geometrical integrals that arise naturally in the method of volume averaging, and we show that dependent variables for ordered media must generally be defined in terms of thecellular average. The cellular average can be constructed by means of a weighting function, thus transport processes in both ordered and disordered media can be treated with a single theory based on weighted averages. Part I provides some basic ideas associated with ordered and disordered media, weighted averages, and the theory of distributions. In Part II a generalized averaging procedure is presented and in Part III the closure problem is developed and the theory is compared with experiment. Parts IV and V provide some geometrical results for computer generated porous media.Roman Letters A interfacial area of the- interface contained within the macroscopic region, m2 - Ae area of entrances and exits for the-phase contained within the macroscopic system, m2 - g gravity vector, m/s2 - I unit tensor - K traditional Darcy's law permeability tensor, m2 - L general characteristic length for volume averaged quantities, m - characteristic length (pore scale) for the-phase - (y) weighting function - m(–y) (y), convolution product weighting function - v special weighting function associated with the traditional averaging volume - N unit normal vector pointing from the-phase toward the-phase - p pressure in the-phase, N/m2 - p0 reference pressure in the-phase, N/m2 - p traditional intrinsic volume averaged pressure, N/m2 - r0 radius of a spherical averaging volume, m - r position vector, m - r position vector locating points in the-phase, m - averaging volume, m3 - V volume of the-phase contained in the averaging volume, m3 - V cell volume of a unit cell, m3 - v velocity vector in the-phase, m/s - v traditional superficial volume averaged velocity, m/s - x position vector locating the centroid of the averaging volume or the convolution product weighting function, m - y position vector relative to the centroid, m - y position vector locating points in the-phase relative to the centroid, m Greek Letters indicator function for the-phase - Dirac distribution associated with the- interface - V/V, volume average porosity - mass density of the-phase, kg/m3 - viscosity of the-phase, Ns/m2  相似文献   

15.
General expressions for evaluating the asymptotic Nusselt number for a Newtonian flow through a parallel-plate channel with recycle at the ends have been derived. Numerical results with the ratio of thicknesses as a parameter for various recycle ratios are obtained. A regression analysis shows that the results can be expressed by log Nur0.83=0.3589 (log)2 -0.2925 (log) + 0.3348 forR 3, 0.1 0.9; logNu=0.5982(log)2 +0.3755 × 10–2 (log) +0.8342 forR 10–2, 0.1 0.9.
Asymptotische Nusselt-Zahlen für die Newtonsche Strömung durch einen Kanal aus parallelen Platten mit Rückführung
Zusammenfassung In dieser Untersuchung wurden allgemeine Ausdrücke hergeleitet um die asymptotische Nusselt-Zahl für eine Newtonsche Strömung durch einen Kanal aus parallelen Platten mit Rückführung an den Enden berechnen zu können. Es wurden numerische Ergebnisse mit den Dicken-Verhältnissen, als Parameter für verschiedene Rückführungs-verhältnisse, erhalten. Eine Regressionsanalyse zeigt, daß die Ergebnisse wie folgt ausgedrückt werden können: log Nur0,83=0,3589 (log)2 -0,2925 (log) + 0,3348 fürR 3, 0,1 0,9; logNu=0,5982(log)2 +0,3755 × 10–2 (log) + 0,8342 fürR 10–2, 0,1 0,9.

Nomenclature A1 shooting value,d(0)/d - A2 shooting value,d(1)/d - B channel width - Gz Graetz number, UbW2/L - h m logarithmic average convective heat transfer coefficient - h x average local convective heat transfer coefficient - k thermal conductivity - L channel length - Nu average local Nusselt number, 2 hxW/k - Nu m logarithmic average Nusselt number, 2hmW/k - R recycle ratio, reverse volume flow rate divided by input volume flow rate - T temperature of fluid - T m bulk temperature, Eq. (8) - T 0 temperature of feed stream - T s wall temperature - U velocity distribution - U b reference velocity,V/BW - V input volume flow rate - v dimensionless velocity distribution, U/Ub - W channel thickness - x longitudinal coordinate - y transversal coordinate - Z1-z6 functions defined in Eq. (A1) - thermal diffusivity - least squares error, Eq. (A7) - weight, Eqs. (A8), (A9) - dimensionless coordinate,y/W - dimensionless coordinate,x/GzL - function, Eq. (7)  相似文献   

16.
The theory of a vibrating-rod viscometer   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The paper presents a complete theory for a viscometer based upon the principle of a circular-section rod, immersed in a fluid, performing transverse oscillations perpendicular to its axis. The theory is established as a result of a detailed analysis of the fluid flow around the rod and is subject to a number of criteria which subsequently constrain the design of an instrument. Using water as an example it is shown that a practical instrument can be designed so as to enable viscosity measurement with an accuracy of ±0.1%, although it is noted that many earlier instruments failed to satisfy one or more of the newly-established constraints.Nomenclature A, D constants in equation (46) - A m , B m , C m , D m constants in equations (50) and (51) - A j , B j constants in equation (14) - a j + , a j wavenumbers given by equation (15) - C f drag coefficient defined in equation (53) - c speed of sound - D b drag force of fluid b - D 0 coefficient of internal damping - E extensional modulus - f(z) initial deformation of rod - f(), F m () functions of defined in equation (41) - F force in the rod - force per unit length near t=0 - F dimensionless force per unit length near t=0 - g m amplitude of transient force - G modulus of rigidity - h, h* functions defined by equations (71) and (72) - H functions defined by equation (69) and (70) - I second moment of area - I 0,1, J 0,1, K 0,1 modified Bessel functions - k, k functions defined in equations (2) - L half-length of oscillator - Ma Mach number - m b added mass per unit length of fluid b - m s mass per unit length of solid - n j eigenvalue defined in equations (15) and (16) - R radius of rod - R c radius of container - r radial coordinate - T tension - T visc temperature rise due to heat generation by viscous dissipation - t time - v r , v radial and angular velocity components - y lateral displacement - y 0 initial lateral displacement - y 1, y 2 successive maximum lateral displacement - z axial coordinate - dimensionless tension - dimensionless mass of fluid - dimensionless drag of fluid - amplification factor - logarithmic decrement in a fluid - a , b logarithmic decrement in fluids a and b - 0 logarithmic decrement in vacuo - j logarithmic decrement in mode j in a fluid - spatial resolution of amplitude - v voltage resolution - r, , , s, , increments in R, , , s , , - dimensionless amplitude of oscillation - dimensionless axial coordinate - angular coordinate - f thermal conductivity of fluid - viscosity of fluid - viscosity of fluid calculated on assumption that * - a , b viscosity of fluids a and b - m constants in equation (10) - dimensionless displacement - j j the component of - density of fluid - a , b density of fluids a and b - s density of tube or rod material - dimensionless radial coordinate - * dimensionless radius of container - dimensionless times - spatial component of defined in equation (11) - j , tm jth, mth component of - dimensionless streamfunction - 0, 1 components of in series expansion in powers of - streamfunction - dimensionless frequency (based on ) - angular frequency - 0 angular frequency in absence of fluid and internal damping - j angular frequency in mode j in a fluid - a , b frequencies in fluids a and b  相似文献   

17.
Zusammenfassung Für die eingefrorene laminare Grenzschichtströmung eines teilweise dissoziierten binären Gemisches entlang einer stark gekühlten ebenen Platte wird eine analytische Näherungslösung angegeben. Danach läßt sich die Wandkonzentration als universelle Funktion der Damköhler-Zahl der Oberflächenreaktion angeben. Für das analytisch darstellbare Konzentrationsprofil stellt die Damköhler-Zahl den Formparameter dar. Die Wärmestromdichte an der Wand bestehend aus einem Wärmeleitungs- und einem Diffusionsanteil wird angegeben und diskutiert. Das Verhältnis beider Anteile läßt sich bei gegebenen Randbedingungen als Funktion der Damköhler-Zahl ausdrücken.
An analytical approximation for the frozen laminar boundary layer flow of a binary mixture
An analytical approximation is derived for the frozen laminar boundary layer flow of a partially dissociated binary mixture along a strongly cooled flat plate. The concentration at the wall is shown to be a universal function of the Damkohler-number for the wall reaction. The Damkohlernumber also serves as a parameter of shape for the concentration profile which is presented in analytical form. The heat transfer at the wall depending on a conduction and a diffusion flux is derived and discussed. The ratio of these fluxes is expressed as a function of the Damkohler-number if the boundary conditions are known.

Formelzeichen A Atom - A2 Molekül - C Konstante in Gl. (20) - c1=1/(2C) Konstante in Gl. (35) - cp spezifische Wärme bei konstantem Druck - D binärer Diffusionskoeffizient - Ec=u 2 /(2hf) Eckert-Zahl - h spezifische Enthalpie - ht=h+u2/2 totale spezifische Enthalpie - h A 0 spezifische Dissoziationsenthalpie - Kw Reaktionsgeschwindigkeitskonstante der heterogenen Wandreaktion - 1= /( ) Champman-Rubesin-Parameter - Le=Pr/Sc Lewis-Zahl - M Molmasse - p statischer Druck - Pr= cpf/ Prandtl-Zahl - qw Wärmestromdichte an der Wand - qcw, qdw Wärmeleitungsbzw. Diffusionsanteil der Wärmestromdichte an der Wand - universelle Gaskonstante - R=/(2Ma) individuelle Gaskonstante der molekularen Komponente - Rex= u x/ Reynolds-Zahl - Sc=/( D) Schmidt-Zahl - T absolute Temperatur - Td=h A 0 /R charakteristische Dissoziationstemperatur - u, v x- und y-Komponenten der Geschwindigkeit - U=u/u normierte x-Komponente der Geschwindigkeit - x, y Koordinaten parallel und senkrecht zur Platte Griechische Symbole - =A/ Dissoziationsgrad - Grenzschichtdicke - 2 Impulsverlustdicke - Damköhler-Zahl der Oberflächenreaktion - =T/T normierte Temperatur - =y/ normierter Wandabstand - Wärmeleitfähigkeit - dynamische Viskosität - , * Ähnlichkeitskoordinaten - Dichte - Schubspannung Indizes A auf ein Atom bezogen - M auf ein Molekül bezogen - f auf den eingefrorenen Zustand bezogen - w auf die Wand bezogen - auf den Außenrand der Grenzschicht bezogen  相似文献   

18.
In this paper we examine the generalized Buckley-Leverett equations governing threephase immiscible, incompressible flow in a porous medium, in the absence of gravitational and diffusive/dispersive effects. We consider the effect of the relative permeability models on the characteristic speeds in the flow. Using a simple idea from projective geometry, we show that under reasonable assumptions on the relative permeabilities there must be at least one point in the saturation triangle at which the characteristic speeds are equal. In general, there is a small region in the saturation triangle where the characteristic speeds are complex. This is demonstrated with the numerical results at the end of the paper.Symbols and Notation a, b, c, d entries of Jacobian matrix - A, B, C, D coefficients in Taylor expansion of t, v, a - det J determinant of matrix J - dev J deviator of matrix J - J Jacobian matrix - L linear term in Taylor expansion for J near (s v, sa) = (0, 1) - m slope of r + - p pressure - r± eigenvectors of Jacobian matrix - R real line - S intersection of saturation triangle with circle of radius centered at (1, 0) - S intersection of saturation triangle with circle of radius centered at (0, 1) - s l, sv, sa saturations of phases (liquid, vapor, aqua) - tr J trace of matrix J - v l , v v , v a phase flow rates (Darcy velocities) - v T total flow rate - X, Y, Z entries of dev J - smooth closed curve inside saturation triangle - saturation triangle - l, v, a phase density times gravitational acceleration times resevoir dip angle - K total permeability - l, v, a three-phase relative permeabilities - lv>, la liquid phase relative permeabilities from two-phase data - l, v, a mobilities of phases - T total mobility - l Corey mobility - l, v, a phase viscosities - ± eigenvalues of Jacobian matrix - porosity Supported in part by National Science Foundation grant No. DMS-8701348, by Air Force Office of Scientific Research grant No. AFOSR-87-0283, and by Army Research Office grant No. DAAL03-88-K-0080.This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under contract No. W-7405-Eng-48.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of MHD free convection and mass transfer are taken into account on the flow past oscillating infinite coaxial vertical circular cylinder. The analytical expressions for velocity, temperature and concentration of the fluid are obtained by using perturbation technique.
Einwirkungen von freier MHD-Konvektion und Stoffübertragung auf eine Strömung nach einem schwingenden unendlichen koaxialen vertikalen Zylinder
Zusammenfassung Die Einwirkungen der freien MHD-Konvektion und Stoffübertragung auf eine Strömung nach einem schwingenden, unendlichen, koaxialen, vertikalen Zylinder wurden untersucht. Die analytischen Ausdrücke der Geschwindigkeit, Temperatur und Fluidkonzentration sind durch die Perturbationstechnik erhalten worden.

Nomenclature C p Specific heat at constant temperature - C the species concentration near the circular cylinder - C w the species concentration of the circular cylinder - C the species concentration of the fluid at infinite - * dimensionless species concentration - D chemical molecular diffusivity - g acceleration due to gravity - Gr Grashof number - Gm modified Grashof number - K thermal conductivity - Pr Prandtl number - r a ,r b radius of inner and outer cylinder - a, b dimensionless inner and outer radius - r,r coordinate and dimensionless coordinate normal to the circular cylinder - Sc Schmidt number - t time - t dimensionless time - T temperature of the fluid near the circular cylinder - T w temperature of the circular cylinder - T temperature of the fluid at infinite - u velocity of the fluid - u dimensionless velocity of the fluid - U 0 reference velocity - z,z coordinate and dimensionless coordinate along the circular cylinder - coefficient of volume expansion - * coefficient of thermal expansion with concentration - dimensionless temperature - H 0 magnetic field intensity - coefficient of viscosity - e permeability (magnetic) - kinematic viscosity - electric conductivity - density - M Hartmann number - dimensionless skin-friction - frequency - dimensionless frequency  相似文献   

20.
Positively invariant regions for a problem in phase transitions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Positively invariant regions for the system v t + p(W) x = V xx , W t V x = W xx are constructed where p < 0, w < , w > , p(w) = 0, w , > 0. Such a choice of p is motivated by the Maxwell construction for a van der Waals fluid. The method of an analysis is a modification of earlier ideas of Chueh, Conley, & Smoller [1]. The results given here provide independent L bounds on the solution (w, v).Dedicated to Professor James Serrin on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday  相似文献   

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