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1.
For many solid materials the stress relaxation process obeys the universal relationF = – (d/d lnt)max = (0.1 ± 0.01) ( 0 i ), regardless of the structure of the material. Here denotes the stress,t the time, 0 the initial stress of the experiment and i the internal stress. A cooperative model accounting for the similarity in relaxation behaviour between different materials was developed earlier. Since this model has a spectral character, the concepts of linear viscoelasticity are used here to evaluate the corresponding prediction of the dynamic mechanical properties, i.e. the frequency dependence of the storageE () and lossE () moduli. Useful numerical approximations ofE () andE () are also evaluated. It is noted that the universal relation in stress relaxation had a counterpart in the frequency dependence ofE (). The theoretical prediction of the loss factor for high-density polyethylene is compared with experimental results. The agreement is good.  相似文献   

2.
An analysis is presented for laminar source flow between parallel stationary porous disks with suction at one of the disks and equal injection at the other. The solution is in the form of an infinite series expansion about the solution at infinite radius, and is valid for all suction and injection rates. Expressions for the velocity, pressure, and shear stress are presented and the effect of the cross flow is discussed.Nomenclature a distance between disks - A, B, ..., J functions of R w only - F static pressure - p dimensionless static pressure, p(a 2/ 2) - Q volumetric flow rate of the source - r radial coordinate - r dimensionless radial coordinate, r/a - R radial coordinate of a point in the flow region - R dimensionless radial coordinate of a point in the flow region, R - Re source Reynolds number, Q/2a - R w wall Reynolds number, Va/ - reduced Reynolds number, Re/r 2 - critical Reynolds number - velocity component in radial direction - u dimensionless velocity component in radial direction, a/ - average radial velocity, Q/2a - u dimensionless average radial velocity, Re/r - ratio of radial velocity to average radial velocity, u/u - velocity component in axial direction - v dimensionless velocity component in axial direction, v - V magnitude of suction or injection velocity - z axial coordinate - z dimensionless axial coordinate, z a - viscosity - density - kinematic viscosity, / - shear stress at lower disk - shear stress at upper disk - 0 dimensionless shear stress at lower disk, - 1 dimensionless shear stress at upper disk, - dimensionless stream function  相似文献   

3.
A cold gas is injected from a slot into a free stream of hot gas. In a simple model this leads to a two-fluid free boundary problem with the jump relation |u-|2–|u+|2 = ( constant) on the free boundary {u=0}, where u is the stream function. We prove that for any (–1, ) there exists a unique solution (Q, u) where Q is the flux of the injected fluid. Various properties of the solution u and of the free boundary are established.  相似文献   

4.
The unsteady laminar boundary layer flow is investigated for a semi-infinite flat plate subjected to impulsive motion. An approximate solution is obtained by utilizing Meksyn's method. These results vary smoothly from Rayleigh's unsteady solution to the steady state solution of Blasius. Results are compared to those of Lam and Crocco.Nomenclature A expansion coefficient, see eq. (13) - a expansion coefficient, see eq. (10) - B expansion coefficient, see eq. (14) - b expansion coefficient, see eq. (12) - G function defined by eq. (6) - U free stream velocity - u velocity in x direction - v velocity in y direction - x coordinate along plate - y coordinate normal to plate Greek symbols (l, ) incomplete gamma function - function defined by eq. (15) - y(U/x) 1/2 - kinematic viscosity - x/Ut - (Uvx)1/2 f(, )  相似文献   

5.
Übersicht Es werden verschiedene Bedingungen aufgestellt, die es erlauben, die durch die beiden (Systeme von) nichtlinearen DifferentialgleichungenA (u, ) = q, B (u, ) = und Randbedingungen zusammen mit den nichtlinearen algebraischen Relationenq = C(u, ), = D(u, ) beschriebene Aufgabe durch äquivalente Variationsprobleme zu ersetzen. Dabei zeigt sich ein enger Zusammenhang mit den in der Festkörpermechanik wohlbekannten Prinzipien der virtuellen Verschiebungen und der virtuellen Kräfte. Die auf systematischem Weg konstruierten Variationsfunktionale enthalten viele in der Physik bekannte Funktionale als Sonderfälle, insbesondere jene, die in der Elastomechanik nach Green, Castigliano, Hellinger, Reißner, Hu und Washizu benannt werden.
Summary In this paper there are established various conditions which allow a variational formulation of the problem described by the two (systems of) nonlinear differential equationsA(u, ) = q, B(u, ) = and boundary conditions together with the nonlinear algebraic relationsq = C(u, ), = D(u, ). Besides a close relationship is revealed to the principles of virtual displacements and virtual forces which are wellknown in solid mechanics. The systematically constructed variational functional contain many functionals in physics as special cases, mainly those of Green, Castigliano, Hellinger, Reißner, Hu and Washizu in elastomechanics.
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6.
The present paper is devoted to the theoretical study of the secondary flow induced around a sphere in an oscillating stream of an elastico-viscous liquid. The boundary layer equations are derived following Wang's method and solved by the method of successive approximations. The effect of elasticity of the liquid is to produce a reverse flow in the region close to the surface of the sphere and to shift the entire flow pattern towards the main flow. The resistance on the surface of the sphere and the steady secondary inflow increase with the elasticity of the liquid.Nomenclature a radius of the sphere - b ik contravariant components of a tensor - e contravariant components of the rate of strain tensor - F() see (47) - G total nondimensional resistance on the surface of the sphere - g ik covariant components of the metric tensor - f, g, h secondary flow components introduced in (34) - k 0 measure of relaxation time minus retardation time (elastico-viscous parameter) - K =k 0 2/V 0 2 , nondimensional parameter characterizing the elasticity of the liquid - n measure of the ratio of the boundary layer thickness and the oscillation amplitude - N, T defined in (44) - p arbitrary isotropic pressure - p ik covariant components of the stress tensor - p ik contravariant components of the stress tensor associated with the change of shape of the material - R =V 0 a/v, the Reynolds number - S =a/V 0, the Strouhall number - r, , spherical polar coordinates - u, v, w r, , component of velocity - t time - V(, t) potential velocity distribution around the sphere - V 0 characteristic velocity - u, v, t, y, P nondimensional quantities defined in (15) - reciprocal of s - density - defined in (32) - defined in (42) - 0 limiting viscosity for very small changes in deformation velocity - complex conjugate of - oscillation frequency - = 0/, the kinematic coefficient of viscosity - , defined in (52) - (, y) stream function defined in (45) - =(NT/2n)1/2 y - /t convective time derivative (1) ik   相似文献   

7.
For a smooth, bounded domain R, n 3, and a real, positive parameter, we consider the hyperbolic equationu tt +u t u=–f(u)g in with Dirichlet boundary conditions. Under certain conditions onf, this equation has a global attractorA inH 0 1 () ×L 2(). For=0, the parabolic equation also has a global attractor which can be naturally embedded into a compact setA 0 inH 0 1 () ×L 2(). If all of the equilibrium points of the parabolic equation are hyperbolic, it is shown that the setsA are lower semicontinuous at=0. Moreover, we give an estimate of the symmetric distance betweenA 0 andA .  相似文献   

8.
Let D R N be a cone with vertex at the origin i.e., D = (0, )x where S N–1 and x D if and only if x = (r, ) with r=¦x¦, . We consider the initial boundary value problem: u t = u+u p in D×(0, T), u=0 on Dx(0, T) with u(x, 0)=u 0(x) 0. Let 1 denote the smallest Dirichlet eigenvalue for the Laplace-Beltrami operator on and let + denote the positive root of (+N–2) = 1. Let p * = 1 + 2/(N + +). If 1 < p < p *, no positive global solution exists. If p>p *, positive global solutions do exist. Extensions are given to the same problem for u t=+¦x¦ u p .This research was supported in part by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Grant # AFOSR 88-0031 and in part by NSF Grant DMS-8 822 788. The United States Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for governmental purposes not withstanding any copyright notation therein.  相似文献   

9.
Mathematical results are derived for the schlieren and shadowgraph contrast variation due to the refraction of light rays passing through two-dimensional compressible vortices with viscous cores. Both standard and small-disturbance solutions are obtained. It is shown that schlieren and shadowgraph produce substantially different contrast profiles. Further, the shadowgraph contrast variation is shown to be very sensitive to the vortex velocity profile and is also dependent on the location of the peak peripheral velocity (viscous core radius). The computed results are compared to actual contrast measurements made for rotor tip vortices using the shadowgraph flow visualization technique. The work helps to clarify the relationships between the observed contrast and the structure of vortical structures in density gradient based flow visualization experiments.Nomenclature a Unobstructed height of schlieren light source in cutoff plane, m - c Blade chord, m - f Focal length of schlieren focusing mirror, m - C T Rotor thrust coefficient, T/( 2 R 4) - I Image screen illumination, Lm/m 2 - l Distance from vortex to shadowgraph screen, m - n b Number of blades - p Pressure,N/m 2 - p Ambient pressure, N/m 2 - r, , z Cylindrical coordinate system - r c Vortex core radius, m - Non-dimensional radial coordinate, (r/r c ) - R Rotor radius, m - Tangential velocity, m/s - Specific heat ratio of air - Circulation (strength of vortex), m 2/s - Non-dimensional quantity, 2 82p r c 2 - Refractive index of fluid medium - 0 Refractive index of fluid medium at reference conditions - Gladstone-Dale constant, m 3/kg - Density, kg/m 3 - Density at ambient conditions, kg/m 3 - Non-dimensional density, (/ ) - Rotor solidity, (n b c/ R) - Rotor rotational frequency, rad/s  相似文献   

10.
The problem of local simulation of stagnation point heat transfer to a blunt body is solved within the framework of boundary layer theory on the assumption that the simulation subsonic high-enthalpy flow is in equilibrium outside the boundary layer on the model, while the parameters of the natural flow are in equilibrium at the outer edge of the boundary layer on the body. The parameters of the simulating subsonic flow are expressed in terms of the total enthalpyH 0, the stagnation point pressurep w and the velocityV 1 for the natural free-stream flow in the form of universal functions of the dimensionless modeling coefficients=R m * /R b * ( .<1),=V 1/2H 0 ( .<1) whereR m * and R b * are the effective radii of the model and the body at their stagnation points. Approximate conditions for modeling the heat transfer from a high-enthalpy (including hypersonic) flow to the stagnation point on a blunt body by means of hyposonic (M1) flows, corresponding to the case 21, are obtained. The possibilities of complete local simulation of hypersonic nonequilibrium heat transfer to the stagnation point on a blunt body in the hyposonic dissociated air jets of a VGU-2 100-kilowatt induction plasma generator [4, 5] are analyzed.Translated from Izvestiya Rossiiskoi Akademii Nauk, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No.1, pp. 172–180, January–February, 1993.  相似文献   

11.
The flow of 3 to 100 wppm aqueous solutions of a polyethyleneoxide polymer,M w=6.2×;106, was studied in a 10.2 mm i.d. pipe lined with 0.15 mm V-groove riblets, at diametral Reynolds numbers from 300 to 150000. Measurements in the riblet pipe were accompanied by simultaneous measurements in a smooth pipe of the same diameter placed in tandem. The chosen conditions provided turbulent drag reductions from zero to the asymptotic maximum possible. The onset of polymer-induced drag reduction in the riblet pipe occurred at the same wall shear stress, * w =0.65 N/m2, as that in the smooth pipe. After onset, the polymer solutions in the riblet pipe initially exhibited linear segments on Prandtl-Karman coordinates, akin to those seen in the smooth pipe, with specific slope increment . The maximum drag reduction observed in the riblet pipe was independent of polymer concentration and well below the asymptotic maximum drag reduction observed in the smooth pipe. Polymer solution flows in the riblet pipe exhibited three regimes: (i) Hydraulically smooth, in which riblets induced no drag reduction, amid varying, and considerable, polymer-induced drag reduction; this regime extended to non-dimensional riblet heightsh +<5 in solvent andh +<10 in polymer solutions. (ii) Riblet drag reduction, in which riblet-induced flow enhancementR>0; this regime extended from 5<h +<22 in solvent and from 10<h +<30 in the 3 wppm polymer solution, with respective maximaR=0.6 ath +=14 andR=1.6 ath +=21. Riblet drag reduction decreased with increasing polymer concentration and increasing polymer-induced flow enhancement S. (iii) Riblet drag enhancement, whereinR<0; this regime extended for 22<h +<110 in solvent, withR;–2 forh +>70, and was observed in all polymer solutions at highh +, the more so as polymer-induced drag reduction increased, withR<0 for allS>8. The greatest drag enhancement in polymer solutions,R=–7±1 ath +=55 whereS=20, considerably exceeded that in solvent. Three-dimensional representations of riblet- and polymer-induced drag reductions versus turbulent flow parameters revealed a hitherto unknown dome region, 8<h +<31, 0<S<10, 0<R<1.5, containing a broad maximum at (h +,S,R) = (18, 5, 1.5). The existence of a dome was physically interpreted to suggest that riblets and polymers reduce drag by separate mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The results of investigations of inviscid flow over inverted cones with nose consisting of a spherical segment were published for the first time in Soviet literature in [1–4]. In the present paper, a numerical solution to this problem is obtained using the improved algorithms of [5, 6], which have proved themselves well in problems of exterior flow over surfaces with positive angles of inclination to the oncoming flow. It is shown that the Mach number 2 M , equilibrium and nonequilibrium physicochemical transformations in air (H = 60 km, V = 7.4 km/sec, R0 = 1 m), and the angle of attack 0 40° influence the investigated pressure distributions. A comparison of the results of the calculations with drainage experiments for M = 6, = 0-25° confirms the extended region of applicability of the developed numerical methods. Also proposed is a simple correlation of the dependence on the Mach number in the range 1.5 M of the shape of the shock wave near a sphere in a stream of ideal gas with adiabatic exponent = 1.4.Translated from Izvestiya Akademii Nauk SSSR, Mekhanika Zhidkosti i Gaza, No. 1, pp. 178–183, January–February, 1981.  相似文献   

14.
The theory of a vibrating-rod densimeter   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The paper presents a theory of a device for the accurate determination of the density of fluids over a wide range of thermodynamic states. The instrument is based upon the measurement of the characteristics of the resonance of a circular section tube, or rod, performing steady, transverse oscillations in the fluid. The theory developed accounts for the fluid motion external to the rod as well as the mechanical motion of the rod and is valid over a defined range of conditions. A complete set of working equations and corrections is obtained for the instrument which, together with the limits of the validity of the theory, prescribe the parameters of a practical design capable of high accuracy.Nomenclature A, B, C, D constants in equation (60) - A j , B j constants in equation (18) - a j + , a j wavenumbers given by equation (19) - C f drag coefficient defined in equation (64) - C f /0 , C f /1 components of C f in series expansion in powers of - c speed of sound - D b drag force of fluid b - D 0 coefficient of internal damping - E extensional modulus - force per unit length - F j + , F j constants in equation (24) - f, g functions of defined in equations (56) - G modulus of rigidity - I second moment of area - K constant in equation (90) - k, k constants defined in equations (9) - L half-length of oscillator - Ma Mach number - m a mass per unit length of fluid a - m b added mass per unit length of fluid b - m s mass per unit length of solid - n j eigenvalue defined in equation (17) - P power (energy per cycle) - P a , P b power in fluids a and b - p pressure - R radius of rod or outer radius of tube - R c radius of container - R i inner radius of tube - 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 - z axial coordinate - dimensionless tension - a dimensionless mass of fluid a - b dimensionless added mass of fluid b - b dimensionless drag of fluid b - dimensionless parameter associated with - 0 dimensionless coefficient of internal damping - dimensionless half-width of resonance curve - dimensionless frequency difference defined in equation (87) - spatial resolution of amplitude - R, , , s , increments in R, , , s , - dimensionless amplitude of oscillation - dimensionless axial coordinate - ratio of to - a , b ratios of to for fluids a and b - angular coordinate - parameter arising from distortion of initially plane cross-sections - f thermal conductivity of fluid - dimensionless parameter associated with - viscosity of fluid - a , b viscosity of fluids a and b - dimensionless displacement - j jth component of - density of fluid - a , b density of fluids a and b - s density of tube or rod material - density of fluid calculated on assumption that * - dimensionless radial coordinate - * dimensionless radius of container - dimensionless times - rr rr, r radial normal and shear stress components - spatial component of defined in equation (13) - j jth component of - dimensionless streamfunction - 0, 1 components of in series expansion in powers of - phase angle - r phase difference - ra , rb phase difference for fluids a and b - streamfunction - j jth component defined in equation (22) - dimensionless frequency (based on ) - a , b dimensionless frequency in fluids a and b - s dimensionless frequency (based on s ) - angular frequency - 0 resonant frequency in absence of fluid and internal damping - r resonant frequency in absence of internal fluid - ra , rb resonant frequencies in fluids a and b - dimensionless frequency - dimensionless frequency when a vanishes - dimensionless frequencies when a vanishes in fluids a and b - dimensionless resonant frequency when a , b, b and 0 vanish - dimensionless resonant frequency when a , b and b vanish - dimensionless resonant frequency when b and b vanish - dimensionless frequencies at which amplitude is half that at resonance  相似文献   

15.
A one-equation low-Reynolds number turbulence model has been applied successfully to the flow and heat transfer over a circular cylinder in turbulent cross flow. The turbulence length-scale was found to be equal 3.7y up to a distance 0.05 and then constant equal to 0.185 up to the edge of the boundary layer (wherey is the distance from the surface and is the boundary layer thickness).The model predictions for heat transfer coefficient, skin friction factor, velocity and kinetic energy profiles were in good agreement with the data. The model was applied for Re 250,000 and Tu0.07.Nomenclature µ,C D Constants in the turbulence kinetic energy equation - C 1,C 2 Constants in the turbulence length-scale equation - Skin friction coefficient atx - D Cylinder diameter - F Dimensionless flow streamwise velocityu/u e - k Turbulence kinetic energy =1/2 the sum of the squared three fluctuating velocities - K Dimensionless turbulence kinetic energyk/u e /2 - I Dimensionless temperature (T–T w )/(T T w ) - l Turbulence length-scale - l e Turbulence length-scale at outer region - Nu D Nusselt number - p Pressure - Pr Prandtl number - Pr t Turbulent Prandtl number - Pr k Constant in the turbulence kinetic energy equation - R Cylinder radius - Re D Reynolds number u D - Re x Reynolds number u x - R K Reynolds number of turbulence - T Mean temperature - T Mean temperature at ambient - T s Mean temperature at surface - Tu Cross flow turbulence intensity, - u Mean flow streamwise velocity - u Fluctuating streamwise velocity - u e Mean flow velocity at far field distance - u Mean flow velocity at ambient - u* Friction velocity - v Mean velocity normal to surface - V Dimensionless mean velocity normal to surface - x,x 1 Distance along the surface - y Distance normal to surface - Dimensionless pressure gradient parameter - Boundary layer thickness atu=0.9995u e - Transformed coordinate iny direction - Fluid molecular viscosity - t Turbulent viscosity - eff + t - µ Fluid molecular viscosity at ambient - Kinematic viscosity/ - Density - Density at ambient - w Wall shear stress - w,0 Wall shear stress at zero free stream turbulence  相似文献   

16.
On laminar flow through a uniformly porous pipe   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Numerous investigations ([1] and [4–9]) have been made of laminar flow in a uniformly porous circular pipe with constant suction or injection applied at the wall. The object of this paper is to give a complete analysis of the numerical and theoretical solutions of this problem. It is shown that two solutions exist for all values of injection as well as the dual solutions for suction which had been noted by previous investigators. Analytical solutions are derived for large suction and injection; for large suction a viscous layer occurs at the wall while for large injection one solution has a viscous layer at the centre of the channel and the other has no viscous layer anywhere. Approximate analytic solutions are also given for small values of suction and injection.

Nomenclature

General r distance measured radially - z distance measured along axis of pipe - u velocity component in direction of z increasing - v velocity component in direction of r increasing - p pressure - density - coefficient of kinematic viscosity - a radius of pipe - V velocity of suction at the wall - r 2/a 2 - R wall or suction Reynolds number, Va/ - f() similarity function defined in (6) - u 0() eigensolution - U(0) a velocity at z=0 - K an arbitrary constant - B K Bernoulli numbers Particular Section 5 perturbation parameter, –2/R - 2 a constant, –K - x / - g(x) f()/ Section 6 perturbation parameter, –R/2 - 2 a constant, –K - g() f() - g c ()=g() near centre of pipe - * point where g()=0 Section 7 2/R - 2 K - t (1–)/ - w(t, ) [1–f(t)]/ - 0, 1 constants - g() f()– 0 - 0/ - 0 a constant - * point where f()=0  相似文献   

17.
A method for solving the problem of design of an intellectual structure formulated for the pair optimal position of actuators, optimal control of actuators is developed. In the method proposed, physical and logical objects are treated as equivalent.  相似文献   

18.
For maps equivariant under the action of a finite group on n, the possible symmetries of fixed points are known and correspond to the isotropy subgroups. This paper investigates the possible symmetries of arbitrary, possibly chaotic, attractors and finds that the necessary conditions of Melbourne, Dellnitz & Golubitsky [15] are sufficient, at least for continuous maps.This result shows that the reflection hyperplanes are important in determining those groups which are admissible; more precisely, a subgroup of is admissible as the symmetry group of an attractor if there exists a with / cyclic such that fixes a connected component of the complement of the set of reflection hyperplanes of reflections in but not in . For finite reflection groups this condition on reduces to the condition that is an isotropy subgroup. Our results are illustrated for finite subgroups of O(3).  相似文献   

19.
Summary The problem of heat transfer in a two-dimensional porous channel has been discussed by Terrill [6] for small suction at the walls. In [6] the heat transfer problem of a discontinuous change in wall temperature was solved. In the present paper the solution of Terrill for small suction at the walls is revised and the whole problem is extended to the cases of large suction and large injection at the walls. It is found that, for all values of the Reynolds number R, the limiting Nusselt number Nu increases with increasing R.Nomenclature stream function - 2h channel width - x, y distances measured parallel and perpendicular to the channel walls respectively - U velocity of fluid at x=0 - V constant velocity of fluid at the wall - =y/h nondimensional distance perpendicular to the channel walls - f() function defined in equation (1) - coefficient of kinematic viscosity - R=Vh/ suction Reynolds number - density of fluid - C p specific heat at constant pressure - K thermal conductivity - T temperature - x=x 0 position where temperature of walls changes - T 0, T 1 temperature of walls for x<x 0, x>x 0 respectively - = (TT 1)/T 0T 1) nondimensional temperature - =x/h nondimensional distance along channel - R * = Uh/v channel Reynolds number - Pr = C p/K Prandtl number - n eigenvalues - B n() eigenfunctions - B n (0) , () eigenfunctions for R=0 - B 0 (i) , B 0 (ii) ... change in eigenfunctions when R0 and small - K n constants given by equation (13) - h heat transfer coefficient - Nu Nusselt number - m mean temperature - C n constants given by equation (18) - perturbation parameter - B 0i () perturbation approximations to B 0() - Q = B 0/ 0 derivative of eigenfunction with respect to eigenvalue - z nondimensional distance perpendicular to the channel walls - F(z) function defined by (54)  相似文献   

20.
Laminar mixed convection over a horizontal plate with uniform wall temperature or uniform wall heat flux is analyzed by introducing proper buoyancy parameters and transformation variables for fluids of any Prandtl number between 0.001 and 10,000. Both cases of buoyancy assisting and opposing flow conditions are investigated. For the buoyancy-assisting case, the obtained numerical results are very accurate over the entire range of mixed convection intensity from pure forced convection limit to pure free convection limit. For the buoyancy-opposing case, solutions are obtained from the forced convection limit to the point of breakdown.
Mischkonvektion an einer horizontalen Platte für Fluide mit beliebiger Prandtl-Zahl
Zusammenfassung Es wurde laminare Mischkonvektion an einer horizontalen Platte mit einheitlicher Wandtemperatur oder einheitlicher Wandwärmestromdichte bei Einführung zweckmäßiger Auftriebsparameter und Transformationsvariablen für Fluide mit beliebiger Prandtl-Zahl zwischen 0,001 und 10 000 untersucht. Es wurden die Fälle der Strömung entgegen und in Richtung der Auftriebskraft untersucht. Für den Fall der Strömung in Richtung der Auftriebskraft wurden sehr genaue numerische Ergebnisse für den gesamten Bereich der gemischten Konvektion von rein erzwungener Konvektion bis zu rein freier Konvektion erhalten. Für den Fall der Strömung entgegen der Auftriebsrichtung wurden Lösungen für erzwungene Konvektion bis zum Umkehrpunkt erhalten.

Nomenclature C f local friction coefficient - f reduced stream function - g gravitational acceleration - Gr local Grashof number for UWT,g (T w T )x 3/ 2 - Gr* local Grashof number for UHF,g q w x 4/k 2 - m =10 for UWT; and =6 for UHF - n =5 for UWT; and =3 for UHF - Nu local Nusselt number - p pressure - Pr Prandtl number,/ - q w wall heat flux - Ra local Rayleigh number for UWT,Gr Pr - Ra* local Rayleigh number for UHF,Gr*Pr - Re local Reynolds number,u x/ - T fluid temperature - T w wall temperature - T free-stream temperature - u velocity component inx-direction - u free-stream velocity - v velocity component iny-direction - x coordinate parallel to the plate - y coordinate normal to the plate Greek symbols thermal diffusivity - thermal expansion coefficient - =0 for UWT; and =1 for UHF - buoyancy parameter, =( Ra)1/5/( Re)1/2 for UWT; and =( Ra*)1/6/( Re)1/2 for UHF - pseudo-similarity variable, (y/x) - dimensionless temperature, =(TT )/(T w T ) for UWT; and =(TT )/(q w x/k) for UHF - =[( Re)1/2+( Ra)1/5] for UWT; and =[( Re)1/2+( Ra*)1/6] for UHF - dynamic viscosity - kinematic viscosity - /(1+) - dimensionless pressure - density - Pr/(1+Pr) - w wall shear stress,(u/y) y=0 - stream function - Pr/(1+Pr)1/3  相似文献   

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