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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.
Summary Two-dimensional stress singularities in wedges have already drawn attention since a long time. An inverse square-root stress singularity (in a 360° wedge) plays an important role in fracture mechanics.Recently some similar three-dimensional singularities in conical regions have been investigated, from which one may be also important in fracture mechanics.Spherical coordinates are r, , . The conical region occupied by the elastic homogeneous body (and possible anisotropic) has its vertex at r=0. The mantle of the cone is described by an arbitrary function f(, )=0. The displacement components be u. For special values of (eigenvalues) there exist states of displacements (eigenstates) % MathType!MTEF!2!1!+-% feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfeBSjuyZL2yd9gzLbvyNv2CaerbuLwBLn% hiov2DGi1BTfMBaeXafv3ySLgzGmvETj2BSbqef0uAJj3BZ9Mz0bYu% H52CGmvzYLMzaerbd9wDYLwzYbItLDharqqr1ngBPrgifHhDYfgasa% acOqpw0xe9v8qqaqFD0xXdHaVhbbf9v8qqaqFr0xc9pk0xbba9q8Wq% Ffea0-yr0RYxir-Jbba9q8aq0-yq-He9q8qqQ8frFve9Fve9Ff0dme% GabaqaaiGacaGaamqadaabaeaafiaakabbaaa6daaahjxzL5gapeqa% aiaadwhadaWgaaWcbaGaeqOVdGhabeaakiabg2da9iaadkhadaahaa% WcbeqaaiabeU7aSbaakiaadAgadaWgaaWcbaGaeqOVdGhabeaakiaa% cIcacqaH7oaBcaGGSaGaeqiUdeNaaiilaiabfA6agjaacMcaaaa!582B!\[u_\xi = r^\lambda f_\xi (\lambda ,\theta ,\Phi )\],which may satisfy rather arbitrary homogeneous boundary conditions along the generators.The paper brings a theorem which expresses that if is an eigenvalue, then also-1- is an eigenvalue. Though the theorem is related to a known theorem in Potential Theory (Kelvin's theorem), the proof has to be given along quite another line.
Zusammenfassung Zwei-dimensionale Spannungssingularitäten in keilförmigen Gebieten sind schon längere Zeit untersucht worden und neuerdings auch ähnliche drei-dimensionale Singularitäten in konischen Gebieten.Kugelkoordinaten sind r, , . Das konische Gebiet hat seine Spitze in r=0. Der Mantel des Kegels lässt sich beschreiben mittels einer willkürlichen Funktion f(, )=0. Die Verschiebungskomponenten seien u. Für spezielle Werte von (Eigenwerte) bestehen Verschiebunszustände % MathType!MTEF!2!1!+-% feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfeBSjuyZL2yd9gzLbvyNv2CaerbuLwBLn% hiov2DGi1BTfMBaeXafv3ySLgzGmvETj2BSbqef0uAJj3BZ9Mz0bYu% H52CGmvzYLMzaerbd9wDYLwzYbItLDharqqr1ngBPrgifHhDYfgasa% acOqpw0xe9v8qqaqFD0xXdHaVhbbf9v8qqaqFr0xc9pk0xbba9q8Wq% Ffea0-yr0RYxir-Jbba9q8aq0-yq-He9q8qqQ8frFve9Fve9Ff0dme% GabaqaaiGacaGaamqadaabaeaafiaakabbaaa6daaahjxzL5gapeqa% aiaadwhadaWgaaWcbaGaeqOVdGhabeaakiabg2da9iaadkhadaahaa% WcbeqaaiabeU7aSbaakiaadAgadaWgaaWcbaGaeqOVdGhabeaakiaa% cIcacqaH7oaBcaGGSaGaeqiUdeNaaiilaiabfA6agjaacMcaaaa!582B!\[u_\xi = r^\lambda f_\xi (\lambda ,\theta ,\Phi )\],welche homogene Randwerte der Beschreibenden des Kegels entlang genügen.Das Bericht bringt ein Theorem, welches aussagt, das und =–1– beide Eigenwerte sind.
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3.
The wedge subjected to tractions: a paradox resolved   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The classical two-dimensional solution provided by Lévy for the stress distribution in an elastic wedge, loaded by a uniform pressure on one face, becomes infinite when the opening angle 2 of the wedge satisfies the equation tan 2 = 2. Such pathological behavior prompted the investigation in this paper of the stresses and displacements that are induced by tractions of O(r ) as r0. The key point is to choose an Airy stress function which generates stresses capable of accommodating unrestricted loading. Fortunately conditions can be derived which pre-determine the form of the necessary Airy stress function. The results show that inhomogeneous boundary conditions can induce stresses of O(r ), O(r ln r), or O(r ln2 r) as r0, depending on which conditions are satisfied. The stress function used by Williams is sufficient only if the induced stress and displacement behavior is of the power type. The wedge loaded by uniform antisymmetric shear tractions is shown in this paper to exhibit stresses of O(ln r) as r0 for the half-plane or crack geometry. At the critical opening angle 2, uniform antisymmetric normal and symmetric shear tractions also induce the above type of stress singularity. No anticipating such stresses, Lévy used an insufficiently general Airy stress function that led to the observed pathological behavior at 2.  相似文献   

4.
In a previous derivation of Darcy's law, the closure problem was presented in terms of an integro-differential equation for a second-order tensor. In this paper, we show that the closure problem can be transformed to a set of Stokes-like equations and we compare solutions of these equations with experimental data. The computational advantages of the transformed closure problem are considerable.Roman Letters A interfacial area of the- interface contained within the macroscopic system, m2 - A e area of entrances and exits for the-phase contained within the macroscopic system, m2 - A interfacial area of the- interface contained within the averaging volume, m2 - A e area of entrances and exits for the-phase contained within the averaging volume, m2 - B second-order tensor used to respresent the velocity deviation - b vector used to represent the pressure deviation, m–1 - C second-order tensor related to the permeability tensor, m–2 - D second-order tensor used to represent the velocity deviation, m2 - d vector used to represent the pressure deviation, m - g gravity vector, m/s2 - I unit tensor - K C –1,–D, Darcy's law permeability tensor, m2 - L characteristic length scale for volume averaged quantities, m - characteristic length scale for the-phase, m - l i i=1, 2, 3, lattice vectors, m - n unit normal vector pointing from the-phase toward the-phase - n e outwardly directed unit normal vector at the entrances and exits of the-phase - p pressure in the-phase, N/m 2 - p intrinsic phase average pressure, N/m2 - p p , spatial deviation of the pressure in the-phase, N/m2 - r position vector locating points in the-phase, m - r 0 radius of the averaging volume, m - t time, s - v velocity vector in the-phase, m/s - v intrinsic phase average velocity in the-phase, m/s - v phase average or Darcy velocity in the \-phase, m/s - v v , spatial deviation of the velocity in the-phase m/s - V averaging volume, m3 - V volume of the-phase contained in the averaging volume, m3 Greek Letters V /V volume fraction of the-phase - mass density of the-phase, kg/m3 - viscosity of the-phase, Nt/m2  相似文献   

5.
A three-dimensional, time-resolved, laser-induced fluorescence (3D-LIF) technique was developed to measure the turbulent (liquid-liquid) mixing of a conserved passive scalar in the wake of an injector inserted perpendicularly into a tubular reactor with Re=4,000. In this technique, a horizontal laser sheet was traversed in its normal direction through the measurement section. Three-dimensional scalar fields were reconstructed from the 2D images captured at consecutive, closely spaced levels by means of a high-speed CCD camera. The ultimate goal of the measurements was to assess the downstream development of the 3D scalar fields (in terms of the full scalar gradient vector field and its associated scalar energy dissipation rate) in an industrial flow with significant advection velocity. As a result of this advection velocity, the measured 3D scalar field is artificially skewed during a scan period. A method to correct for this skewing was developed, tested and applied. Analysis of the results show consistent physical behaviour.List of symbols  A  Deformation tensor - Dt, Df  Reactor and injector diameter - Lx, Ly, Lz  Dimensions of the 3D-LIF measurement volume - Nx, Ny, Nz  Number of data samples per measurement volume - Rem  Reynolds number based on mean velocity - Sc  Schmidt number - f  Focal length - fc,lens, fc,array  Cut-off frequency for camera lens and sensor array - f, f  Marginal probability density function for and - f  Joint probability density function of and -  Temporal separation of the 2D data planes -  Temporal resolution of the measurement volume -  Spatial resolution of the measurement volume - ,  Deformation angle and deformation, where =tan -  Fluid energy dissipation rate - ,  Strain limited vorticity and scalar diffusion layers -  Scalar concentration - , B Kolmogorov and Batchelor length scale - ,  Spherical angles of the scalar gradient vector, -  Kinematic viscosity - e–2 Half-thickness (1/e2) of the laser sheet - , a Kolmogorov and Kolmogorov advection time scales -  Scalar energy dissipation rate -  Scalar diffusivity - 2D, 3D Two- and three-dimensional - DNS Direct numerical simulation - LIF Laser-induced fluorescence - SED Scalar energy dissipation rate - TR Tubular reactor
E. Van VlietEmail:
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6.
The behavior of supersonic mixing layers under three conditions has been examined by schlieren photography and laser Doppler velocimetry. In the schlieren photographs, some large-scale, repetitive patterns were observed within the mixing layer; however, these structures do not appear to dominate the mixing layer character under the present flow conditions. It was found that higher levels of secondary freestream turbulence did not increase the peak turbulence intensity observed within the mixing layer, but slightly increased the growth rate. Higher levels of freestream turbulence also reduced the axial distance required for development of the mean velocity. At higher convective Mach numbers, the mixing layer growth rate was found to be smaller than that of an incompressible mixing layer at the same velocity and freestream density ratio. The increase in convective Mach number also caused a decrease in the turbulence intensity ( u/U).List of symbols a speed of sound - b total mixing layer thickness between U 1 – 0.1 U and U 2 + 0.1 U - f normalized third moment of u-velocity, f u3/(U)3 - g normalized triple product of u2 , g u2/(U)3 - h normalized triple product of u 2, h u 2/(U)3 - l u axial distance for similarity in the mean velocity - l u axial distance for similarity in the turbulence intensity - M Mach number - M c convective Mach number (for 1 = 2), M c (U 1U 2)/(a 1 + a 2) - P static pressure - r freestream velocity ratio, r U 2/U 1 - Re unit Reynolds number, Re U/ - s freestream density ratio, s 2/1 - T t total temperature - u instantaneous streamwise velocity - u deviation of u-velocity, uuU - U local mean streamwise velocity - U 1 primary freestream velocity - U 2 secondary freestream velocity - average of freestream velocities, (U 1 + U 2)/2 - U freestream velocity difference, U U 1U 2 - instantaneous transverse velocity - v deviation of -velocity, V - V local mean transverse velocity - x streamwise coordinate - y transverse coordinate - y 0 transverse location of the mixing layer centerline - ensemble average - ratio of specific heats - boundary layer thickness (y-location at 99.5% of free-stream velocity) - similarity coordinate, (yy 0)/b - compressible boundary layer momentum thickness - viscosity - density - standard deviation - dimensionless velocity, (UU 2)/U - 1 primary stream - 2 secondary stream A version of this paper was presented at the 11th Symposium on Turbulence, October 17–19, 1988, University of Missouri-Rolla  相似文献   

7.
A new method for describing the rheological properties of reactive polymer melts, which was presented in an earlier paper, is developed in more detail. In particular, a detailed derivation of the equation of a first-order rheometrical flow surface is given and a procedure for determining parameters and functions occurring in this equation is proposed. The experimental verification of the presented approach was carried out using our data for polyamide-6.Notation E Dimensionless reduced viscosity, eq. (34) - E 0 Newtonian asymptote of the function (36) - E power-law asymptote of the function (36) - E = 1 the value ofE at = 1 - k degradation reaction rate constant, s–1 - k 1 rate constant of function (t), eq. (26), s–1 - k 2 rate constant of function (t), eq. (29), s–1 - K(t) residence-time-dependent consistency factor, eq. (22) - M w weight-average molecular weight - M x x-th moment of the molecular weight distribution - R gas constant - S x M x /M w - t residence time in molten state, s - t j thej-th value oft, s - T temperature, K - % MathType!MTEF!2!1!+-% feaafiart1ev1aaatCvAUfeBSjuyZL2yd9gzLbvyNv2CaerbuLwBLn% hiov2DGi1BTfMBaeXatLxBI9gBaerbd9wDYLwzYbItLDharqqtubsr% 4rNCHbGeaGqiVu0Je9sqqrpepC0xbbL8F4rqqrFfpeea0xd9vqpe0x% c9q8qqaqFn0dXdir-xcvk9pIe9q8qqaq-xir-f0-yqaqVeLsFr0-vr% 0-vr0db8meaabaqaciGacaGaaeqabaWaaeaaeaaakeaaieGaceWFZo% Gbaiaaaaa!3B4E!\[\dot \gamma \] shear rate, s–1 - i thei-th value of , s–1 - r =1 the value of at = 1, s–1 - * reduced shear rate, eq. (44), s–1 - dimensionless reduced shear rate, eq. (35) - viscosity, Pa · s - shear-rate and residence-time dependent viscosity, Pa · s - zero-shear-rate degradation curve - degradation curve at - t0 (t) zero-residence-time flow curve - Newtonian asymptote of the RFS - instantaneous flow curve - power-law asymptote of the RFS - 0,0 zero-shear-rate and zero-residence-time viscosity, Pa · s - E=1 value of viscosity atE=1, Pa · s - * reduced viscosity, eq. (43), Pa · s - zero-residence-time rheological time constant, s - density, kg/m3 - (t),(t) residence time functions  相似文献   

8.
A mixed convection parameter=(Ra) 1/4/(Re)1/2, with=Pr/(1+Pr) and=Pr/(1 +Pr)1/2, is proposed to replace the conventional Richardson number, Gr/Re2, for combined forced and free convection flow on an isothermal vertical plate. This parameter can readily be reduced to the controlling parameters for the relative importance of the forced and the free convection,Ra 1/4/(Re 1/2 Pr 1/3) forPr 1, and (RaPr)1/2/(RePr 1/2 forPr 1. Furthermore, new coordinates and dependent variables are properly defined in terms of, so that the transformed nonsimilar boundary-layer equations give numerical solutions that are uniformly valid over the entire range of mixed convection intensity from forced convection limit to free convection limit for fluids of any Prandtl number from 0.001 to 10,000. The effects of mixed convection intensity and the Prandtl number on the velocity profiles, the temperature profiles, the wall friction, and the heat transfer rate are illustrated for both cases of buoyancy assisting and opposing flow conditions.
Mischkonvektion an einer vertikalen Platte für Fluide beliebiger Prandtl-Zahl
Zusammenfassung Für die kombinierte Zwangs- und freie Konvektion an einer isothermen senkrechten Platte wird ein Mischkonvektions-Parameter=( Ra) 1/4 (Re)1/2, mit=Pr/(1 +Pr) und=Pr/(1 +Pr)1/2 vorgeschlagen, den die gebräuchliche Richardson-Zahl, Gr/Re2, ersetzen soll. Dieser Parameter kann ohne weiteres auf die maßgebenden Kennzahlen für den relativen Einfluß der erzwungenen und der freien Konvektion reduziert werden,Ra 1/4/(Re 1/2 Pr 1/3) fürPr 1 und (RaPr)1/4/(RePr)1/2 fürPr 1. Weiterhin werden neue Koordinaten und abhängige Variablen als Funktion von definiert, so daß für die transformierten Grenzschichtgleichungen numerische Lösungen erstellt werden können, die über den gesamten Bereich der Mischkonvektion, von der freien Konvektion bis zur Zwangskonvektion, für Fluide jeglicher Prandtl-Zahl von 0.001 bis 10.000 gleichmäßig gültig sind. Der Einfluß der Intensität der Mischkonvektion und der Prandtl-Zahl auf die Geschwindigkeitsprofile, die Temperaturprofile, die Wandreibung und den Wärmeübergangskoeffizienten werden für die beiden Fälle der Strömung in und entgegengesetzt zur Schwerkraftrichtung dargestellt.

Nomenclature C f local friction coefficient - C p specific heat capacity - f reduced stream function - g gravitational acceleration - Gr local Grashoff number,g T w –T )x3/v2 - Nu local Nusselt number - Pr Prandtl number,v/ - Ra local Rayleigh number,g T w –T x 3/( v) - Re local Reynolds number,u x/v - Ri Richardson number,Gr/Re 2 - T fluid temperature - T w wall temperature - T free stream temperature - u velocity component in thex direction - u free stream velocity - v velocity component in they direction - x vertical coordinate measuring from the leading edge - y horizontal coordinate Greek symbols thermal diffusivity - thermal expansion coefficient - mixed convection parameter (Ra)1/4/Re)1/2 - pseudo-similarity variable,(y/x) - 0 conventional similarity variable,(y/x)Re 1/2 - dimensionless temperature, (T–T T W –T - unified mixed-flow parameter, [(Re) 1/2 + (Ra)1/4] - dynamic viscosity - kinematic viscosity - stretched streamwise coordinate or mixed convection parameter, [1 + (Re)1/2/(Ra) 1/4]–1=/(1 +) - density - Pr/(1 + Pr) w wall shear stress - stream function - Pr/(l+Pr)1/3 This research was supported by a grand from the National Science Council of ROC  相似文献   

9.
Summary A three-parameter model is introduced to describe the shear rate — shear stress relation for dilute aqueous solutions of polyacrylamide (Separan AP-30) or polyethylenoxide (Polyox WSR-301) in the concentration range 50 wppm – 10,000 wppm. Solutions of both polymers show for a similar rheological behaviour. This behaviour can be described by an equation having three parameters i.e. zero-shear viscosity 0, infinite-shear viscosity , and yield stress 0, each depending on the polymer concentration. A good agreement is found between the values calculated with this three-parameter model and the experimental results obtained with a cone-and-plate rheogoniometer and those determined with a capillary-tube rheometer.
Zusammenfassung Der Zusammenhang zwischen Schubspannung und Schergeschwindigkeit von strukturviskosen Flüssigkeiten wird durch ein Modell mit drei Parametern beschrieben. Mit verdünnten wäßrigen Polyacrylamid-(Separan AP-30) sowie Polyäthylenoxidlösungen (Polyox WSR-301) wird das Modell experimentell geprüft. Beide Polymerlösungen zeigen im untersuchten Schergeschwindigkeitsbereich von ein ähnliches rheologisches Verhalten. Dieses Verhalten kann mit drei konzentrationsabhängigen Größen, nämlich einer Null-Viskosität 0, einer Grenz-Viskosität und einer Fließgrenze 0 beschrieben werden. Die Ergebnisse von Experimenten mit einem Kegel-Platte-Rheogoniometer sowie einem Kapillarviskosimeter sind in guter Übereinstimmung mit den Werten, die mit dem Drei-Parameter-Modell berechnet worden sind.

a Pa–1 physical quantity defined by:a = {1 – ( / 0)}/ 0 - c l concentration (wppm) - D m capillary diameter - L m length of capillary tube - P Pa pressure drop - R m radius of capillary tube - u m s–1 average velocity - v r m s–1 local axial velocity at a distancer from the axis of the tube - shear rate (–dv r /dr) - local shear rate in capillary flow - s–1 wall shear rate in capillary flow - Pa s dynamic viscosity - a Pa s apparent viscosity defined by eq. [2] - ( a ) Pa s apparent viscosity in capillary tube at a distanceR from the axis - 0 Pa s zero-shear viscosity defined by eq. [4] - Pa s infinite-shear viscosity defined by eq. [5] - l ratior/R - kg m density - Pa shear stress - 0 Pa yield stress - r Pa local shear stress in capillary flow - R Pa wall shear stress in capillary flow R = (PR/2L) - v m3 s–1 volume rate of flow With 8 figures and 1 table  相似文献   

10.
The results of laboratory observations of the deformation of deep water gravity waves leading to wave breaking are reported. The specially developed visualization technique which was used is described. A preliminary analysis of the results has led to similar conclusions than recently developed theories. As a main fact, the observed wave breaking appears as the result of, first, a modulational instability which causes the local wave steepness to approach a maximum and, second, a rapidly growing instability leading directly to the breaking.List of symbols L total wave length - H total wave height - crest elevation above still water level - trough depression below still water level - wave steepness =H/L - crest steepness =/L - trough steepness =/L - F 1 forward horizontal length from zero-upcross point (A) to wave crest - F 2 backward horizontal length from wave crest to zero-downcross point (B) - crest front steepness =/F 1 - crest rear steepness =/F 2 - vertical asymmetry factor=F 2/F 1 (describing the wave asymmetry with respect to a vertical axis through the wave crest) - µ horizontal asymmetry factor=/H (describing the wave asymmetry with respect to a horizontal axis: SWL) - T 0 wavemaker period - L 0 theoretical wave length of a small amplitude sinusoïdal wave generated at T inf0 sup–1 frequency - 0 average wave height  相似文献   

11.
In this paper, the derivation of macroscopic transport equations for this cases of simultaneous heat and water, chemical and water or electrical and water fluxes in porous media is presented. Based on themicro-macro passage using the method of homogenization of periodic structures, it is shown that the resulting macroscopic equations reveal zero-valued cross-coupling effects for the case of heat and water transport as well as chemical and water transport. In the case of electrical and water transport, a nonsymmetrical coupling was found.Notations b mobility - c concentration of a chemical - D rate of deformation tensor - D molecular diffusion coefficient - D ij eff macroscopic (or effective) diffusion tensor - electric field - E 0 initial electric field - k ij molecular tensor - j, j *, current densities - K ij macroscopic permeability tensor - l characteristic length of the ERV or the periodic cell - L characteristic macroscopic length - L ijkl coupled flows coefficients - n i unit outward vector normal to - p pressure - q t ,q t + , heat fluxes - q c ,q c + , chemical fluxes - s specific entropy or the entropy density - S entropy per unit volume - t time variable - t ij local tensor - T absolute temperature - v i velocity - V 0 initial electric potential - V electric potential - x macroscopic (or slow) space variable - y microscopic (or fast) space variable - i local vectorial field - i local vectorial field - electric charge density on the solid surface - , bulk and shear viscosities of the fluid - ij local tensor - ij local tensor - i local vector - ij molecular conductivity tensor - ij eff effective conductivity tensor - homogenization parameter - fluid density - 0 ion-conductivity of fluid - ij dielectric tensor - i 1 , i 2 , i 3 local vectors - 4 local scalar - S solid volume in the periodic cell - L volume of pores in the periodic cell - boundary between S and L - s rate of entropy production per unit volume - total volume of the periodic cell - l volume of pores in the cell On leave from the Politechnika Gdanska; ul. Majakowskiego 11/12, 80-952, Gdask, Poland.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Incoherent phase transitions are more difficult to treat than their coherent counterparts. The interface, which appears as a single surface in the deformed configuration, is represented in its undeformed state by a separate surface in each phase. This leads to a rich but detailed kinematics, one in which defects such as vacancies and dislocations are generated by the moving interface. In this paper we develop a complete theory of incoherent phase transitions in the presence of deformation and mass transport, with phase interface structured by energy and stress. The final results are a complete set of interface conditions for an evolving incoherent interface.Frequently used symbols Ai,Ci generic subsurface of St - Bi undeformed phase-i region - C configurational bulk stress, Eshelby tensor - F deformation gradient - G inverse deformation gradient - H relative deformation gradient - J bulk Jacobian of the deformation - ¯K, Ki total (twice the mean) curvature of and Si - Lin (U, V) linear transformations from U into V - Lin+ linear transformations of 3 with positive determinant - Orth+ rotations of 3 - Qa external bulk mass supply of species a - ¯S bulk Cauchy stress tensor - S bulk Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor - Si undeformed phase i interface - Ui relative velocity of Si - Unim+ linear transformations of 3 with unit determinant - ¯V, Vi normal velocity of and Si - intrinsic edge velocity of S and A i S - Wi volume flow across the phase-i interface - X material point - b external body force - e internal bulk configurational force - fi external interfacial force (configurational) - ¯g external interfacial force (deformational) - grad, div spatial gradient and divergence - gradient and divergence on - h relative deformation - ha, diffusive mass flux of species a and list of mass fluxes - ¯m outward unit normal to a spatial control volume - ¯n, ni unit normal to and Si - n subspace of 3 orthogonal to n - ¯qa external interfacial mass supply of species a - s ......... - ¯v, vi compatible velocity fields of and Si - ¯w, wi compatible edge velocity fields for and Ai - x spatial point - yi deformation or motion of phase i - y. material velocity - generic subsurfaces of - , i deformed body and deformed phase-i region - () energy supplied to by mass transport - symmetry group of the lattice - i, surface jacobians - lattice - () power expended on - spatial control volume - S deformed phase interface - lattice point density - interfacial power density - , A total surface stress - C configurational surface stress for phase 1 (material) - ¯Ci configurational surface stress (spatial) - Fi tangential deformation gradient - Gi inverse tangential deformation gradient - H incoherency tensor - ¯1(x), 1i(X) inclusions of ¯n(x) and n i (X) into 3 - K configurational surface stress for phase 2 (material) - ¯L, li curvature tensor of and Si - ¯P(x), Pi(X) projections of 3 onto ¯n(x) and ni (X) - ¯S, S deformational surface stress (spatial and material) - ¯a, a normal part of total surface stress - c normal part of configurational surface stress for phase 1 (material) - ei internal interfacial configurational force - ¯v, vi unit normal to and A i - (x),i(X) projections of 3 onto ¯n(x) and n i (X) - i normal internal force (material) - bulk free energy - slip velocity - i=(–1)i i ......... - a, chemical potential of species a and list of potentials - a, bulk molar density of species a and list of molar densities - i normal internal force (spatial) - surface tension - , i effective shear - referential-to-spatial transform of field - interfacial energy - grand canonical potential - l unit tensor in 3 - x, vector and tensor product in 3 - (...)., t(...) material and spatial time derivative - , Div material gradient and divergence - gradient and divergence on Si - (...), (...) normal time derivative following and Si - (...) limit of a bulk field asx ,xi - [...],...> jump and average of a bulk field across the interface - (...)ext extension of a surface tensor to 3 - tangential part of a vector (tensor) on and Si  相似文献   

14.
This paper presents a new formulation for the laminar free convection from an arbitrarily inclined isothermal plate to fluids of any Prandtl number between 0.001 and infinity. A novel inclination parameter is proposed such that all cases of the horizontal, inclined and vertical plates can be described by a single set of transformed equations. Moreover, the self-similar equations for the limiting cases of the horizontal and vertical plates are recovered from the transformed equations by setting=0 and=1, respectively. Heated upward-facing plates with positive and negative inclination angles are investigated. A very accurate correlation equation of the local Nusselt number is developed for arbitrary inclination angle and for 0.001 Pr .
Wärmeübertragung bei freier Konvektion an einer isothermen Platte mit beliebiger Neigung
Zusammenfasssung Diese Untersuchung stellt eine neue Formulierung der laminaren freien Konvektion von Flüssigkeiten mit einer Prandtl-Zahl zwischen 0,001 und unendlich an einer beliebig schräggestellten isothermen Platte dar. Ein neuer Neigungsparameter wird eingeführt, so daß alle Fälle der horizontalen, geneigten oder vertikalen Platte von einem einzigen Satz transformierter Gleichungen beschrieben werden können. Die unabhängigen Gleichungen für die beiden Fälle der horizontalen and vertikalen Platte wurden für=0 und=1 aus den transformierten Gleichungen wieder abgeleitet. Es wurden erwärmte aufwärtsgerichtete Platten mit positiven und negativen Neigungswinkeln untersucht. Eine sehr genaue Gleichung wurde für die lokale Nusselt-Zahl bei beliebigen Neigungswinkeln und für 0,001 Pr entwickelt.

Nomenclature C p specific heat - f reduced stream function - g gravitational acceleration - Gr local Grashof number,g(T w T w ) x3/v2 - h local heat transfer coefficient - k thermal conductivity - n constant exponent - Nu local Nusselt number,hx/k - p pressure - Pr Prandtl number, v/ - Ra local Rayleigh number,g(T w T )J x3/v - T fluid temperature - T w wall temperature - T temperature of ambient fluid - u velocity component in x-direction - v velocity component in y-direction - x coordinate parallel to the plate - y coordinate normal to the plate Greek symbols thermal diffusivity - thermal expansion coefficient - (Ra¦sin¦)1/4/( Ra cos()1/5 - pseudo-similarity variable, (y/) - dimensionless temperature, (TT )/(T wT ) - ( Ra cos)1/5+(Rasin)1/4 - v kinematic viscosity - 1/[1 +(Ra cos)1/5/( Ra¦sin)1/4] - density of fluid - Pr/(1+Pr) - w wall shear stress - angle of plate inclination measured from the horizontal - stream function - dimensionless dynamic pressure  相似文献   

15.
Summary TheCross equation describes the flow of pseudoplastic liquids in terms of an upper and a lower Newtonian viscosity corresponding to infinite and zero shear, and 0, and of a third material constant related to the mechanism of rupture of linkages between particles in the intermediate, non-Newtonian flow regime, Calculation of of bulk polymers is important, since it cannot be determined experimentally. The equation was applied to the melt flow data of two low density polyethylenes at three temperatures.Using data in the non-Newtonian region covering 3 decades of shear rate to extrapolate to the zero-shear viscosity resulted in errors amounting to about onethird of the measured 0 values. The extrapolated upper Newtonian viscosity was found to be independent of temperature within the precision of the data, indicating that it has a small activation energy.The 0 values were from 100 to 1,400 times larger than the values at the corresponding temperatures.The values of were large compared to the values found for colloidal dispersions and polymer solutions, but decreased with increasing temperature. This shows that shear is the main factor in reducing chain entanglements, but that the contribution of Brownian motion becomes greater at higher temperatures.
Zusammenfassung Die Gleichung vonCross beschreibt das Fließverhalten von pseudoplastischen Flüssigkeiten durch drei Konstante: Die obereNewtonsche Viskosität (bei sehr hohen Schergeschwindigkeiten), die untereNewtonsche Viskosität 0 (bei Scherspannung Null), und eine Materialkonstante, die vom Brechen der Bindungen zwischen Partikeln im nicht-Newtonschen Fließbereich abhängt. Die Berechnung von ist wichtig für unverdünnte Polymere, wo man sie nicht messen kann.Die Gleichung wurde auf das Fließverhalten der Schmelzen von zwei handelsüblichen Hochdruckpolyäthylenen bei drei Temperaturen angewandt. Die Werte von 0, durch Extrapolation von gemessenen scheinbaren Viskositäten im Schergeschwindigkeitsbereich von 10 bis 4000 sec–1 errechnet, wichen bis 30% von den gemessenen 0-Werten ab. Die Aktivierungsenergie der war so klein, daß die-Werte bei den drei Temperaturen innerhalb der Genauigkeit der Extrapolation anscheinend gleich waren. Die 0-Werte waren 100 bis 1400 mal größer als die-Werte.Im Verhältnis zu kolloidalen Dispersionen und verdünnten Polymerlösungen war das der Schmelzen groß, nahm aber mit steigender Temperatur ab. Deshalb wird die Verhakung der Molekülketten hauptsächlich durch Scherbeanspruchung vermindert, aber der Beitrag derBrownschen Bewegung nimmt mit steigender Temperatur zu.
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16.
A laser Rayleigh correlation probe was constructed, which allows the application of low cost, low power (milliwatt) laser sources. It was tested for basic mixing studies in isothermal binary gas flows. Here, it can be used for the time and space resolved measurement of the concentration mean value and of all important statistical quantities, which give information on the distribution around the concentration mean value (rms, skewness, kurtosis) and on the relation of adjecent fluctuations in time or space (autocorrelation function, power spectral density).List of symbols c concentration (mole fraction) of investigated gas species - c time averagered mean concentration - c instantaneous fluctuating concentration - rms concentration - D Rayleigh intensity difference of two gas species (I R1I R2) - d width of the rectangular channels (x-direction), see Fig. 3 - f frequency - G() Rayleigh autocorrelation function (ACF) - I 0 intensity of irradiated laser light - I Ri intensity of Rayleigh signal of gas species i - K, k calibration constant of Rayleigh probe - l lenght of observed scattering volume - n(t) temporally fluctuating number density of gas molecules - R() normalized ACF - S Rayleigh intensity of gas components 2 in a binary mixture (I R2) - T gas temperature - t time - u exit velocity - skewness of the concentration distribution around the mean value - kurtosis of the concentration distribution around the mean value - (d/d)eff effective scattering cross section of the binary gas mixture - solid angle of collection optics - delay time - sample time  相似文献   

17.
The paper reports the outcome of a numerical study of fully developed flow through a plane channel composed of ribleted surfaces adopting a two-equation turbulence model to describe turbulent mixing. Three families of riblets have been examined: idealized blade-type, V-groove and a novel U-form that, according to computations, achieves a superior performance to that of the commercial V-groove configuration. The maximum drag reduction attained for any particular geometry is broadly in accord with experiment though this optimum occurs for considerably larger riblet heights than measurements indicate. Further explorations bring out a substantial sensitivity in the level of drag reduction to the channel Reynolds number below values of 15 000 as well as to the thickness of the blade riblet. The latter is in accord with the trends of very recent, independent experimental studies.Possible shortcomings in the model of turbulence are discussed particularly with reference to the absence of any turbulence-driven secondary motions when an isotropic turbulent viscosity is adopted. For illustration, results are obtained for the case where a stress transport turbulence model is adopted above the riblet crests, an elaboration that leads to the formation of a plausible secondary motion sweeping high momentum fluid towards the wall close to the riblet and thereby raising momentum transport.Nomenclature c f Skin friction coefficient - c f Skin friction coefficient in smooth channel at the same Reynolds number - k Turbulent kinetic energy - K + k/ w - h Riblet height - S Riblet width - H Half height of channel - Re Reynolds number = volume flow/unit width/ - Modified turbulent Reynolds number - R t turbulent Reynolds numberk 2/ - P k Shear production rate ofk, t (U i /x j + U j /x i ) U i /x j - dP/dz Streamwise static pressure gradient - U i Mean velocity vector (tensor notation) - U Friction velocity, w/ where w=–H dP/dz - W Mean velocity - W b Bulk mean velocity through channel - y + yU /v. Unless otherwise stated, origin is at wall on trough plane of symmetry - Kinematic viscosity - t Turbulent kinematic viscosity - Turbulence energy dissipation rate - Modified dissipation rate – 2(k 1/2/x j )2 - Density - k , Effective turbulent Prandtl numbers for diffusion ofk and   相似文献   

18.
It is proposed to investigate the stability of a plane axisymmetric flow with an angular velocity profile (r) such that the angular velocity is constant when r < rO – L and r > rO + L but varies monotonically from 1 to 2 near the point rO, the thickness of the transition zone being small L rO, whereas the change in velocity is not small ¦21¦ 2, 1. Obviously, as L O short-wave disturbances with respect to the azimuthal coordinate (k=m/rO 1/rO) will be unstable with a growth rate-close to the Kelvin—Helmholtz growth rate. In the case L=O (i.e., for a profile with a shear-discontinuity) we find the instability growth rate O and show that where the thickness of the discontinuity L is finite (but small) the growth rate does not differ from O up to terms proportional to kL 1 and 1/m 1. Using this example it is possible to investigate the effect of rotation on the flow stability. It is important to note that stabilization (or destabilization) of the flow in question by rotation occurs only for three-dimensional or axisymmetric perturbations.Translated from Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No. 1, pp. 111–114, January–February, 1985.  相似文献   

19.
The injection moulding of thermoplastics involves, during mould filling, flows of hot polymer melts into mould networks, the walls of which are so cold that frozen layers form on them. An analytical study of such flows is presented here for the case when the Graetz and Nahme numbers are large and the Pearson number is small. Thus the flows are developing and temperature differences due to heat generation by viscous dissipation are sufficiently large to cause significant variations in viscosity (but the difference between the entry temperature of the polymer to a specific part of the mould network and the melting temperature of the polymer is not). Br Brinkman number - Gz Graetz number - h half-height of channel or disc - h * half-height of polymer melt region in channel or disc - L length of channel or pipe - m viscosity shear-rate exponent - Na Nahme number - p pressure - P pressure drop - Pe Péclet number - Pn Pearson number - Q volumetric flowrate - r radial coordinate in pipe or disc - R radius of pipe - Re Reynolds number - R i inner radius of disc - R o outer radius of disc - R * radius of polymer melt region in pipe - T temperature - T ad adiabatic temperature rise - T e entry polymer melt temperature - T m melting temperature of polymer - T max maximum temperature - T 0 reference temperature - T w wall temperature - flow-average temperature rise - u r radial velocity in pipe or disc - u x axial velocity in channel - u y transverse velocity in channel or disc - u z axial velocity in pipe - w width of channel - x axial coordinate in channel or modified radial coordinate in disc - y transverse coordinate in channel or disc - z axial coordinate in pipe - thermal conductivity of molten polymer - thermal conductivity of frozen polymer - scaled dimensionless axial coordinate in channel or pipe or radial coordinate in disc - 0 undetermined integration constant - heat capacity of molten polymer - viscosity temperature exponent - dimensionless transverse coordinate in channel or disc - * dimensionless half-height of polymer melt region in channel or disc - H * scaled dimensionless half-height of polymer melt region in channel or disc or radius of polymer melt region in pipe - dimensionless temperature - * dimensionless wall temperature - scaled dimensionless temperature - numerical constant - µ viscosity of molten polymer - µ 0 consistency of molten polymer - dimensionless pressure gradient - scaled dimensionless pressure gradient - density of molten polymer - dimensionless radial coordinate in pipe or disc - i dimensionless inner radius of disc - * dimensionless radius of polymer melt region in pipe - dimensionless streamfunction - scaled dimensionless streamfunction - dummy variable - streamfunction - similarity variable - similarity variable  相似文献   

20.
Linear and nonlinear viscoelastic properties were examined for a 50 wt% suspension of spherical silica particles (with radius of 40 nm) in a viscous medium, 2.27/1 (wt/wt) ethylene glycol/glycerol mixture. The effective volume fraction of the particles evaluated from zero-shear viscosities of the suspension and medium was 0.53. At a quiescent state the particles had a liquid-like, isotropic spatial distribution in the medium. Dynamic moduli G* obtained for small oscillatory strain (in the linear viscoelastic regime) exhibited a relaxation process that reflected the equilibrium Brownian motion of those particles. In the stress relaxation experiments, the linear relaxation modulus G(t) was obtained for small step strain (0.2) while the nonlinear relaxation modulus G(t, ) characterizing strong stress damping behavior was obtained for large (>0.2). G(t, ) obeyed the time-strain separability at long time scales, and the damping function h() (–G(t, )/G(t)) was determined. Steady flow measurements revealed shear-thinning of the steady state viscosity () for small shear rates (< –1; = linear viscoelastic relaxation time) and shear-thickening for larger (>–1). Corresponding changes were observed also for the viscosity growth and decay functions on start up and cessation of flow, + (t, ) and (t, ). In the shear-thinning regime, the and dependence of +(t,) and (t,) as well as the dependence of () were well described by a BKZ-type constitutive equation using the G(t) and h() data. On the other hand, this equation completely failed in describing the behavior in the shear-thickening regime. These applicabilities of the BKZ equation were utilized to discuss the shearthinning and shear-thickening mechanisms in relation to shear effects on the structure (spatial distribution) and motion of the suspended particles.Dedicated to the memory of Prof. Dale S. Parson  相似文献   

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