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1.
The paper presents solutions to the problems of plane Couette flow, axial flow in an annulus between two infinite cylinders, and flow between two rotating cylinders. Taking into account energy dissipation and the temperature dependence of viscosity, as given by Reynolds's relation =0 exp (–T) (0, =const). Two types of boundary conditions are considered: a) the two surfaces are held at constant (but in general not equal) temperatures; b) one surface is held at a constant temperature, the other surface is insulated.Nonisothermal steady flow in simple conduits with dissipation of energy and temperature-dependent viscosity has been studied by several authors [1–11]. In most of these papers [1–6] viscosity was assumed to be a hyperbolic function of temperature, viz. =m 1/1+2(T–Tm.Under this assumption the energy equation is linear in temperature and can he easily integrated. Couette flow with an exponential viscosity-temperature relation. =0 e T (0, =const), (0.1) was studied in [7, 8]. Couette flow with a general (T) relation was studied in (9).Forced flow in a plane conduit and in a circular tube with a general (T) relation was studied in [10]. In particular, it has been shown in [10] that in the case of sufficiently strong dependence of viscosity on temperature there can exist a critical value of the pressure gradient, such that a steady flow is possible only for pressure gradients below this critical value.In a previous work [11] the authors studied Polseuille flow in a circular tube with an exponential (T) relation. This thermohydrodynamic problem was reduced to the problem of a thermal explosion in a cylindrical domain, which led to the existence of a critical regime. The critical conditions for the hydrodynamic thermal explosion and the temperature and velocity profiles were calculated.In this paper we treat the problems of Couette flow, pressureless axial flow in an annulus, and flow between two rotating cylinders taking into account dissipation and the variation of viscosity with temperature according to Reynolds's law (0.1). The treatment of the Couette flow problem differs from that given in [8] in that the constants of integration are found by elementary methods, whereas in [8] this step involved considerable difficulties. The solution to the two other problems is then based on the Couette problem.  相似文献   

2.
We consider the parametrized family of equations tt ,u- xx u-au+u 2 2 u=O,x(0,L), with Dirichlet boundary conditions. This equation has finite-dimensional invariant manifolds of solutions. Studying the reduced equation to a four-dimensional manifold, we prove the existence of transversal homoclinic orbits to periodic solutions and of invariant sets with chaotic dynamics, provided that =2, 3, 4,.... For =1 we prove the existence of infinitely many first integrals pairwise in involution.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Summary A new and very general expression is proposed for correlation of data for the effective viscosity of pseudoplastic and dilatant fluids as a function of the shear stress. Most of the models which have been proposed previously are shown to be special cases of this expression. A straightforward procedure is outlined for evaluation of the arbitrary constants.
Zusammenfassung Eine neue und sehr allgemeine Formel wird für die Korrelation der Werte der effektiven Viskosität von strukturviskosen und dilatanten Flüssigkeiten in Abhängigkeit von der Schubspannung vorgeschlagen. Die meisten schon früher vorgeschlagenen Methoden werden hier als Spezialfälle dieser Gleichung gezeigt. Ein einfaches Verfahren für die Auswertung der willkürlichen Konstanten wird beschrieben.

Nomenclature b arbitrary constant inSisko model (eq. [5]) - n arbitrary exponent in eq. [1] - x independent variable - y(x) dependent variable - y 0(x) limiting behavior of dependent variable asx 0 - y(x) limiting behavior of dependent variable asx - z original dependent variable - arbitrary constant inSisko model (eq. [5]) andBird-Sisko model (eq. [6]) - arbitrary exponent in eqs. [2] and [8] - effective viscosity = shear stress/rate of shear - A effective viscosity at = A - B empirical constant in eqs. [2] and [8] - 0 limiting value of effective viscosity as 0 - 0() limiting behavior of effective viscosity as 0 - limiting value of effective viscosity as - () limiting behavior of effective viscosity as - rate of shear - arbitrary constant inBird-Sisko model (eq.[6]) - shear stress - A arbitrary constant in eqs. [2] and [8] - 0 shear stress at inBingham model - 1/2 shear stress at = ( 0 + )/2 With 8 figures  相似文献   

5.
Some results are presented of experimental studies of the equilibrium temperature and heat transfer of a sphere in a supersonic rarefied air flow.The notations D sphere diameter - u, , T,,l, freestream parameters (u is velocity, density, T the thermodynamic temperature,l the molecular mean free path, the viscosity coefficient, the thermal conductivity) - T0 temperature of the adiabatically stagnated stream - Te mean equilibrium temperature of the sphere - Tw surface temperature of the cold sphere (Twe) - mean heat transfer coefficient - e air thermal conductivity at the temperature Te - P Prandtl number - M Mach number  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
This paper presents a theoretical and numerical investigation of the natural convection boundary-layer along a vertical surface, which is embedded in a porous medium, when the surface heat flux varies as (1 +x 2)), where is a constant andx is the distance along the surface. It is shown that for > -1/2 the solution develops from a similarity solution which is valid for small values ofx to one which is valid for large values ofx. However, when -1/2 no similarity solutions exist for large values ofx and it is found that there are two cases to consider, namely < -1/2 and = -1/2. The wall temperature and the velocity at large distances along the plate are determined for a range of values of .Notation g Gravitational acceleration - k Thermal conductivity of the saturated porous medium - K Permeability of the porous medium - l Typical streamwise length - q w Uniform heat flux on the wall - Ra Rayleigh number, =gK(q w /k)l/(v) - T Temperature - Too Temperature far from the plate - u, v Components of seepage velocity in the x and y directions - x, y Cartesian coordinates - Thermal diffusivity of the fluid saturated porous medium - The coefficient of thermal expansion - An undetermined constant - Porosity of the porous medium - Similarity variable, =y(1+x ) /3/x 1/3 - A preassigned constant - Kinematic viscosity - Nondimensional temperature, =(T – T )Ra1/3 k/qw - Similarity variable, = =y(loge x)1/3/x 2/3 - Similarity variable, =y/x 2/3 - Stream function  相似文献   

8.
Conclusions We have investigated solutions of equation (3) when 2 is an eigenvalue of the linearized operator (13) and when it is not. In Section 4 we have shown that for 0 and 2 = i 2 we have exactly two nontrivial solutions which bifurcate to the right of i 2 ; these solutions are shown to exist in an interval ( i 2 , i 2 + 0). The method of Section 3 may then be used to extend these two solutions to the right of i 2 + 0 providing that 2= i 2 + 0 is not an eigenvalue of the linear operator (13) evaluated at = ± 1. Either a solution can be uniquely extended, or there exists a value of 2where the bifurcation method must be applied again3.While the method used here gives the exact number of solutions bifurcating from i 2 , other problems remain open; for example, it is still not proven that the two bifurcating branches have i zeros, as is the case for Hammerstein operators with oscillation kernels [4]. The conjecture of Odeh and Tadjbakhsh that there are exactly 2(i+1) nontrivial solutions in the interval i 2 < i +1/2 remains un-answered, although it would be proven if one could show that there is no secondary bifurcation as in the cases of Kolodner [7] and Coffman [8].  相似文献   

9.
Consider a Hamiltonian system with parameters, such that there exists an involution which reverses this Hamiltonian system. Let us assume the linear part L at =0 has only nonzero purely imaginary eigen-values ±ib1,..., ±ibn. In this paper, we classify the typical bifurcations of families of symmetric periodic solutions of this system at resonance if bi/bj=±1, ±2, or ±1/2 and the number of parameters needed is one or two. First, one puts the Hamiltonians into a convenient normal form. Next, applying a Lyapunov-Schmidt reduction and making further manipulations, one can geta reduced bifurcation equation which can possess certain symmetry. Finally, by using elementary methods from singularity theory or isotopy methods, one obtains the desired bifurcation diagrams.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
Diffusion in anisotropic porous media   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
An experimental system was constructed in order to measure the two distinct components of the effective diffusivity tensor in transversely isotropic, unconsolidated porous media. Measurements were made for porous media consisting of glass spheres, mica particles, and disks made from mylar sheets. Both the particle geometry and the void fraction of the porous media were determined experimentally, and theoretical calculations for the two components of the effective diffusivity tensor were carried out. The comparison between theory and experiment clearly indicates that the void fraction and particle geometry are insufficient to characterize the process of diffusion in anisotropic porous media. Roman Letters A interfacial area between - and -phases for the macroscopic system, m2 - A e area of entrances and exits of the -phase for the macroscopic system, m2 - A interfacial area contained within the averaging volume, m2 - a characteristic length of a particle, m - b average thickness of a particle, m - c A concentration of species A, moles/m3 - c o reference concentration of species A, moles/m3 - c A intrinsic phase average concentration of species A, moles/m3 - c a c Ac A, spatial deviation concentration of species A, moles/m3 - C c A/c 0, dimensionless concentration of species A - binary molecular diffusion coefficient, m2/s - D eff effective diffusivity tensor, m2/s - D xx component of the effective diffusivity tensor associated with diffusion parallel to the bedding plane, m2/s - D yy component of the effective diffusivity tensor associated with diffusion perpendicular to the bedding plane, m2/s - D eff effective diffusivity for isotropic systems, m2/s - f vector field that maps c A on to c a , m - h depth of the mixing chamber, m  相似文献   

14.
An experimental study was done to quantify the effects of a variety of background particulates on the delayed laminar-turbulent transition of a thermally stabilized boundary layer in water. A Laser-Doppler Velocimeter system was used to measure the location of boundary layer transition on a 50 mm diameter, 9:1 fineness ratio ellipsoid. The ellipsoid had a 0.15 m RMS surface finish. Boundary layer transition locations were determined for length Reynolds numbers ranging from 3.0 × 106 to 7.5 × 106. The ellipsoid was tested in three different heating conditions in water seeded with particles of four distinct size ranges. For each level of boundary layer heating, measurements of transition were made for clean water and subsequently, water seeded with 12.5 m, 38.9 m, 85.5 m and 123.2 m particles, alternately. The three surface heating conditions tested were no heating, T = 10°C and T = 15°C where T is the difference between the inlet model heating water temperature, T i, and free stream water temperature, T . The effects of particle concentration were studied for 85.5 m and 123.2 m particulates.The results of the study can be summarized as follows. The 12.5 m and 38.9 m particles has no measurable effect on transition for any of the test conditions. However, transition was significantly affected by the 85.5 m and 123.2 m particles. Above a length Reynolds number of 4 × 106 the boundary layer transition location moved forward on the body due to the effect of the 85.5 m particles for all heating conditions. The largest percentage changes in transition location from clean water, were observed for 85.5 m particles seeded water.Transition measurements made with varied concentrations of background particulates indicated that the effect of the 85.5 m particles on the transition of the model reached a plateau between 2.65 particulates/ml concentration and 4.2 particles/ml. Measurements made with 123.3 m particles at concentrations up to 0.3 part/ml indicated no similar plateau.  相似文献   

15.
A finite element method is used to solve the full Navier-Stokes and energy equations for the problems of laminar combined convection from three isothermal heat horizontal cylinders in staggered tube-bank and four isothermal heat horizontal cylinders in in-line tube-bank. The variations of surface shear stress, pressure and Nusselt number are obtained over the entire cylinder surface including the zone beyond the separation point. The predicted values of total, pressure and friction drag coefficients, average Nusselt number and the plots of velocity flow fields and isotherms are also presented.
Die Finite-Elemente-Lösung von laminarer Strömung und kombinierter Konvektion von Luft in einer versetzten oder fluchtenden Rohranordnung
Zusammenfassung Eine Methode der finiten Elemente wird zur Lösung der vollständigen Navier-Stokes- und der Energiegleichung für die Probleme der laminaren kombinierten Konvektion an drei isothermen geheizten horizontalen Zylindern in versetzter Rohranordnung sowie für vier isotherme geheizte horizontale Zylinder in fluchtender Anordnung verwendet.Die Veränderung der Wandschubspannung, des Druckes und der Nusselt-Zahl werden für die gesamte Zylinderoberfläche, einschließlich des Bereiches nach dem Ablösepunkt, bestimmt. Die Werte des gesamten Widerstandsbeiwertes aufgrund von Druck und Reibung, die durchschnittliche Nusselt-Zahl und die Diagramme des Geschwindigkeitsfeldes und der Isothermen werden ebenfalls aufgezeigt.

Nomenclature C specifie heat - C D total drag coefficient - C f friction drag coefficient - C p pressure drag coefficient - D diameter of cylinder,L=2R 0 - G, g gravitational acceleration - Gr Grashof number, g(TwT )D 3/v 2 - h local heat transfer coefficient - K thermal conductivity - L spacing between the centers of cylinder - M l shape function - N i shape function - Nu, local and average Nusselt numbers - P dimensionless pressure, p*/u 2 - p *,p pressure, free stream pressure - Pe Peclet number,RePr - Pr Prandtl number, c/K - Ra Rayleigh number,Gr Pr - Re Reynolds number,Du /v - R 0 radius of cylinder - T temperature - T w temperature on cylinder surface with fixed value - T free stream temperature - v dimensionless x-direction component of velocity,v */u - u * x-direction component of velocity - u free stream velocity - v dimensionless Y-direction component of velocity,v */u - v * Y-direction component of velocity - X x-direction axis - x dimensionless x-direction coordinate,x */D - x* x-direction coordinate - Y Y-direction axis - y dimensionless Y-direction coordinate,y */D - y * Y-direction coordinate Greek symbols coefficient of volumetric thermal expansion - plane angle - dynamic viscosity - kinematic viscosity, / - density of fluid - w dimensionless surface shear stress, * w /u 2 - skw/* surface shear stress - dimensionless temperature,   相似文献   

16.
The harmonic content of the nonlinear dynamic behaviour of 1% polyacrylamide in 50% glycerol/water was studied using a standard Model R 18 Weissenberg Rheogoniometer. The Fourier analysis of the Oscillation Input and Torsion Head motions was performed using a Digital Transfer Function Analyser.In the absence of fluid inertia effects and when the amplitude of the (fundamental) Oscillation Input motion I is much greater than the amplitudes of the Fourier components of the Torsion Head motion Tn empirical nonlinear dynamic rheological propertiesG n (, 0),G n (, 0) and/or n (, 0), n (, 0) may be evaluated without a-priori-knowledge of a rheological constitutive equation. A detailed derivation of the basic equations involved is presented.Cone and plate data for the third harmonic storage modulus (dynamic rigidity)G 3 (, 0), loss modulusG 3 (, 0) and loss angle 3 (, 0) are presented for the frequency range 3.14 × 10–2 1.25 × 102 rad/s at two strain amplitudes, CP 0 = 2.27 and 4.03. Composite cone and plate and parallel plates data for both the third and fifth harmonic dynamic viscosities 3 (, 0), S (, 0) and dynamic rigiditiesG 3 (, 0),G 5 (, 0) are presented for strain amplitudes in the ranges 1.10 CP 0 4.03 and 1.80 PP 0 36 for a single frequency, = 3.14 × 10–1 rad/s. Good agreement was obtained between the results from both geometries and the absence of significant fluid inertia effects was confirmed by the superposition of the data for different gap widths.  相似文献   

17.
Steady and unsteady local concentration has been determined analytically for two- und three-dimensional sources and is presented for various boundary-concentrations, volumetric flows and diffusion coefficients. The steady cases have been evaluated numerically. In addition an unsteady two-dimensional mass transport has been evaluated.
Stofftransport in Quellströmungen
Zusammenfassung Es wurden die stationäre und instationäre örtliche Konzentration von einer zwei- und drei-dimensionalen Quellströmung als Funktion verschiedener Randkonzentrationen, verschiedener Stromvolumen und Diffusionskoeffizienten analytisch bestimmt. Die stationären Fälle wurden numerisch ausgewertet. Außerdem wurde ein zwei-dimensionaler instationärer Stofftransport behandelt.

Nomenclature a inner radius of circle (2-dimensional case), inner radius of sphere (three-dimensional case) - b } >a outer radius of circle (2-dimensional case), outer radius of sphere (three-dimensional case) - c concentration - c 1,c 2 given concentration at the boundariesr=a andb resp - c i initial concentration at the timet=0 - D diffusion coefficient - I n +1/2 modified spherical Bessel function - J v ,Y v Bessel function ofv-th order and first and second kind resp - k =b/a} > 1 diameter ratio - P n o () Legendre polynomials - ¯ r, polar coordinates - r, , spherical coordinates - t time - u velocity in radial direction - V 0 volumetric flow - 0 V/4D flow parameter for two-dimensional flow - 0 V 0/8 D flow parameter for three-dimensional flow - mn eigenvalues - mn te] 2 =n 2 + 0 2 ,=cos =r/a roots of determinant (28)  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 two-dimensional interaction of a single vortex with a thin symmetrical airfoil and its vortex wake has been investigated in a low turbulence wind tunnel having velocity of about 2 m/s in the measuring section. The flow Reynolds number based on the airfoil chord length was 4.5 × 103. The investigation was carried out using a smoke-wire visualization technique with some support of standard hot-wire measurements. The experiment has proved that under certain conditions the vortex-airfoil-wake interaction leads to the formation of new vortices from the part of the wake positioned closely to the vortex. After the formation, the vortices rotate in the direction opposite to that of the incident vortex.List of symbols c test airfoil chord - C vortex generator airfoil chord - TA test airfoil - TE test airfoil trailing edge - TE G vortex generator airfoil trailing edge - t dimensionless time-interval measured from the vortex passage by the test airfoil trailing edge: gDt=(T-T- TEU/c - T time-interval measured from the start of VGA rotation - U free stream velocity - U vortex induced velocity fluctuation - VGA vortex generator airfoil - y distance in which the vortex passes the test airfoil - Z vortex circulation coefficient: Z=/(U · c/2) - vortex generator airfoil inclination angle - vortex circulation - vortex strength: =/2  相似文献   

20.
A computerized infrared (IR) scanning radiometer is employed to characterize the boundary layer development over a model wing, having a Göttingen 797 cross-section, by measuring the temperature distribution over its heated surface. The Reynolds analogy is used to relate heat transfer measurements to skin friction. The results show that IR thermography is capable of rapidly detecting location and extent of transition and separation regions of the boundary layer over the whole surface of the tested model wing. Thus, the IR technique appears to be a suitable and effective diagnostic tool for aerodynamic research in wind tunnels.List of symbols c airfoil chord - c f local skin friction coefficient = 2/( V 2) - c p specific heat coefficient at constant pressure - h local convective heat transfer coefficient - Nu Nusselt number = h x/ - Nu c Nusselt number based on airfoil chord = h c/ - Pr Prandtl number c p / - Q j wall heat flux due to Joule heating - Q l heat flux loss - Re Reynolds number V x/ - Re c Reynolds number based on airfoil chord = V c/ - St Stanton number = h/c p V - T w wall temperature - T aw adiabatic wall temperature - V velocity of the free stream - x chordwise spatial coordinate - angle of attack - thermal conductivity coefficient - dynamic viscosity coefficient - mass density - wall shear stress  相似文献   

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