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1.
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   

2.
T. Dabak  O. Yucel 《Rheologica Acta》1986,25(5):527-533
A method is proposed for determining the shear viscosity behavior of highly concentrated suspensions at low and high shear-rates through the use of a formulation that is a function of three parameters signifying the effects of particle size distribution. These parameters are the intrinsic viscosity [], a parametern that reflects the level of particle association at the initiation of motion and the maximum packing concentration m. The formulation reduces to the modified Eilers equation withn = 2 for high shear rates. An analytical method was used for the calculation of maximum packing concentration which was subsequently correlated with the experimental values to account for the surface induced interaction of particles with the fluid. The calculated values of viscosities at low and high shear-rates were found to be in good agreement with various experimental data reported in literature. A brief discussion is also offered on the reliability of the methods of measuring the maximum packing concentration. r = /0 relative viscosity of the suspension - volumetric concentration of solids - k n coefficient which characterizes a specific effect of particle interactions - m maximum packing concentration - r,0 relative viscosity at low shear-rates - [] intrinsic viscosity - n, n parameter that reflects the level of particle interactions at low and high shear-rates, respectively - r, relative viscosity at high shear-rates - (m)s, (m)i, (m)l packing factors for small, intermediate and large diameter classes - v s, vi, vl volume fractions of small, intermediate and large diameter classes, respectively - si, sl coefficient to be used in relating a smaller to an intermediate and larger particle group, respectively - is, il coefficient to be used in relating an intermediate to a smaller and larger particle group, respectively - ls, li coefficient to be used in relating a larger to a smaller and intermediate particle group, respectively - m0 maximum packing concentration for binary mixtures - m,e measured maximum packing concentration - m,c calculated maximum packing concentration  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Summary The effects of superposing streamwise vorticity, periodic in the lateral direction, upon two-dimensional asymptotic suction flow are analyzed. Such vorticity, generated by prescribing a spanwise variation in the suction velocity, is known to play an important role in unstable and turbulent boundary layers. The flow induced by the variation has been obtained for a freestream velocity which (i) is steady, (ii) oscillates periodically in time, (iii) changes impulsively from rest. For the oscillatory case it is shown that a frequency can exist which maximizes the induced, unsteady wall shear stress for a given spanwise period. For steady flow the heat transfer to, or from a wall at constant temperature has also been computed.Nomenclature (x, y, z) spatial coordinates - (u, v, w) corresponding components of velocity - (, , ) corresponding components of vorticity - t time - stream function for v and w - v w mean wall suction velocity - nondimensional amplitude of variation in wall suction velocity - characteristic wavenumber for variation in direction of z - T temperature - P pressure - density - coefficient of kinematic viscosity - coefficient of thermal diffusivity - (/v w)2 - frequency of oscillation of freestream velocity - nondimensional amplitude of freestream oscillation - /v w 2 - z z - yv w y/ - v w 2 t/4 - /v w - U 0 characteristic freestream velocity - u/U 0 - coefficient of viscosity - w wall shear stress - Prandtl number (/) - q heat transfer to wall - T w wall temperature - T (T wT)/(T w–)  相似文献   

5.
In this paper, we show that the maximum principle holds for quasilinear elliptic equations with quadratic growth under general structure conditions.Two typical particular cases of our results are the following. On one hand, we prove that the equation (1) {ie77-01} where {ie77-02} and {ie77-03} satisfies the maximum principle for solutions in H 1()L(), i.e., that two solutions u 1, u 2H1() L() of (1) such that u 1u2 on , satisfy u 1u2 in . This implies in particular the uniqueness of the solution of (1) in H 0 1 ()L().On the other hand, we prove that the equation (2) {ie77-04} where fH–1() and g(u)>0, g(0)=0, satisfies the maximum principle for solutions uH1() such that g(u)¦Du|{2L1(). Again this implies the uniqueness of the solution of (2) in the class uH 0 1 () with g(u)¦Du|{2L1().In both cases, the method of proof consists in making a certain change of function u=(v) in equation (1) or (2), and in proving that the transformed equation, which is of the form (3) {ie77-05}satisfies a certain structure condition, which using ((v1 -v 2)+)n for some n>0 as a test function, allows us to prove the maximum principle.  相似文献   

6.
Stokes flow in a deformable medium is considered in terms of an isotropic, linearly elastic solid matrix. The analysis is restricted to steady forms of the momentum equations and small deformation of the solid phase. Darcy's law can be used to determine the motion of the fluid phase; however, the determination of the Darcy's law permeability tensor represents part of the closure problem in which the position of the fluid-solid interface must be determined.Roman Letters A interfacial area of the- interface 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 macroscopic system, m2 - A * interfacial area of the- interface contained within a unit cell, m2 - A e * area of entrances and exits for the-phase contained within a unit cell, m2 - E Young's modulus for the-phase, N/m2 - e i unit base vectors (i = 1, 2, 3) - g gravity vector, m2/s - H height of elastic, porous bed, m - k unit base vector (=e 3) - characteristic length scale for the-phase, m - L characteristic length scale for volume-averaged quantities, m - n unit normal vector pointing from the-phase toward the-phase (n = -n ) - p pressure in the-phase, N/m2 - P p g·r, N/m2 - r 0 radius of the averaging volume, m - r position vector, m - t time, s - T total stress tensor in the-phase, N/m2 - T 0 hydrostatic stress tensor for the-phase, N/m2 - u displacement vector for the-phase, m - V averaging volume, m3 - V volume of the-phase contained within the averaging volume, m3 - v velocity vector for the-phase, m/s Greek Letters V /V, volume fraction of the-phase - mass density of the-phase, kg/m3 - shear coefficient of viscosity for the-phase, Nt/m2 - first Lamé coefficient for the-phase, N/m2 - second Lamé coefficient for the-phase, N/m2 - bulk coefficient of viscosity for the-phase, Nt/m2 - T T 0 , a deviatoric stress tensor for the-phase, N/m2  相似文献   

7.
The present investigation was concerned with the rheological behaviour of dilute suspensions of solid particles in a gas in a vertical cocurrent flow moving upwards. Starting from the experimentally determined dependence of the pressure drop on the concentration of solid particles and the Reynolds number of the carrier medium in the steady flow region, the rheological parameters were estimated using pseudo-shear diagrams. Air was the carrier medium and the dispersed phase was one of six fractions of polypropylene powder and five fractions of glass ballotini. The results show that the investigated two-phase systems have pseudoplastic character which becomes more pronounced with increases in concentration, equivalent diameter and density of solid particles in the flowing suspension. C d coefficient of particle resistance - d e equivalent diameter of particles - D column diameter - Fr Froude number - g gravitational acceleration - K rheological parameter - L length - n rheological parameter - p t pressure drop due to friction - p m total pressure drop - p ag pressure drop due to acceleration of the gas phase - p as pressure drop due to acceleration of the solid phase - p g hydrostatic pressure of the gas phase - p s specific effective weight of the dispersed phase - r radius - Re Reynolds number - Re p Reynolds number of a particle - Re G generalized Reynolds number - Re G1 generalized Reynolds number relating to the end of the laminar flow region - Re G2 generalized Reynolds number relating to the beginning of the turbulent flow region - w z axial component of velocity - u t steady free-fall velocity of a single particle - w average velocity - w g average velocity of the gas phase - w s average velocity of the dispersed phase of solid particles - relative mass fraction of solid particles - x s volume fraction of solid particles - g coefficient of pressure drop due to friction - µ dynamic viscosity - g density of the gas phase - m density of the suspension - s density of solid particles - ds density of the dispersed phase - w shear stress at the wall  相似文献   

8.
In this paper the flow is studied of an incompressible viscous fluid through a helically coiled annulus, the torsion of its centre line taken into account. It has been shown that the torsion affects the secondary flow and contributes to the azimuthal component of velocity around the centre line. The symmetry of the secondary flow streamlines in the absence of torsion, is destroyed in its presence. Some stream lines penetrate from the upper half to the lower half, and if is further increased, a complete circulation around the centre line is obtained at low values of for all Reynolds numbers for which the analysis of this paper is valid, being the ratio of the torsion of the centre line to its curvature.Nomenclature A =constant - a outer radius of the annulus - b unit binormal vector to C - C helical centre line of the pipe - D rL - g 1000 - K Dean number=Re2 - L 1+r sin - M (L 2+ 2 r 2)1/2 - n unit normal vector to C - P, P pressure and nondimensional pressure - p 0, p pressures of O(1) and O() - Re Reynolds number=aW 0/ - (r, , s), (r, , s) coordinates and nondimensional coordinates - nonorthogonal unit vectors along the coordinate directions - r 0 radius of the projection of C - t unit tangent vector to C - V r, V , V s velocity components along the nonorthogonal directions - Vr, V, V s nondimensional velocity components along - W 0 average velocity in a straight annulus Greek symbols , curvature and nondimensional curvature of C - U, V, W lowest order terms for small in the velocity components along the orthogonal directions t - r, , s first approximations to V r , V, V s for small - =/=/ - kinematic viscosity - density of the fluid - , torsion and nondimensional torsion of C - , stream function and nondimensional stream function - nondimensional streamfunction for U, V - a inner radius of the annulus After this paper was accepted for publication, a paper entitled On the low-Reynolds number flow in a helical pipe, by C.Y. Wang, has appeared in J. Fluid. Mech., Vol 108, 1981, pp. 185–194. The results in Wangs paper are particular cases of this paper for =0, and are also contained in [9].  相似文献   

9.
The effects of finite measuring volume length on laser velocimetry measurements of turbulent boundary layers were studied. Four different effective measuring volume lengths, ranging in spanwise extent from 7 to 44 viscous units, were used in a low Reynolds number (Re=1440) turbulent boundary layer with high data density. Reynolds shear stress profiles in the near-wall region show that u v strongly depends on the measuring volume length; at a given y-position, u v decreases with increasing measuring volume length. This dependence was attributed to simultaneous validations on the U and V channels of Doppler bursts coming from different particles within the measuring volume. Moments of the streamwise velocity showed a slight dependence on measuring volume length, indicating that spatial averaging effects well known for hot-films and hot-wires can occur in laser velocimetry measurements when the data density is high.List of symbols time-averaged quantity - u wall friction velocity, ( w /)1/2 - v kinematic viscosity - d p pinhole diameter - l eff spanwise extent of LDV measuring volume viewed by photomultiplier - l + non-dimensional length of measuring volume, l eff u /v - y + non-dimensional coordinate in spanwise direction, y u /v - z + non-dimensional coordinate in spanwise direction, z u /v - U + non-dimensional mean velocity, /u - u instantaneous streamwise velocity fluctuation, U &#x2329;U - v instantaneous normal velocity fluctuation, V–V - u RMS streamwise velocity fluctuation, u 21/2 - v RMS normal velocity fluctuation, v 21/2 - Re Reynolds number based on momentum thickness, U 0/v - R uv cross-correlation coefficient, u v/u v - R12(0, 0, z) two point correlation between u and v with z-separation, <u(0, 0, 0) v (0, 0, z)>/<u(0, 0, 0) v (0, 0, 0)> - N rate at which bursts are validated by counter processor - T Taylor time microscale, u (dv/dt2)–1/2  相似文献   

10.
Shear softening and thixotropic properties of wheat flour doughs are demonstrated in dynamic testing with a constant stress rheometer. This behaviour appears beyond the strictly linear domain (strain amplitude 0 0.2%),G,G and |*| decreasing with 0, the strain response to a sine stress wave yet retaining a sinusoidal shape. It is also shown thatG recovers progressively in function of rest time. In this domain, as well as in the strictly linear domain, the Cox-Merz rule did not apply but() and | *())| may be superimposed by using a shift factor, its value decreasing in the former domain when 0 increases. Beyond a strain amplitude of about 10–20%, the strain response is progressively distorted and the shear softening effects become irreversible following rest.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
We report non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of rigid and non-rigid dumbbell fluids to determine the contribution of internal degrees of freedom to strain-rate-dependent shear viscosity. The model adopted for non-rigid molecules is a modification of the finitely extensible nonlinear elastic (FENE) dumbbell commonly used in kinetic theories of polymer solutions. We consider model polymer melts — that is, fluids composed of rigid dumbbells and of FENE dumbbells. We report the steady-state stress tensor and the transient stress response to an applied Couerte strain field for several strain rates. We find that the rheological properties of the rigid and FENE dumbbells are qualitatively and quantitatively similar. (The only exception to this is the zero strain rate shear viscosity.) Except at high strain rates, the average conformation of the FENE dumbbells in a Couette strain field is found to be very similar to that of FENE dumbbells in the absence of strain. The theological properties of the two dumbbell fluids are compared to those of a corresponding fluid of spheres which is shown to be the most non-Newtonian of the three fluids considered.Symbol Definition b dimensionless time constant relating vibration to other forms of motion - F force on center of mass of dumbbell - F i force on bead i of dumbbell - F force between center of masses of dumbbells and - F ij force between beads i and j - h vector connecting bead to center of mass of dumbbell - H dimensionless spring constant for dumbbells, in units of / 2 - I moment of inertia of dumbbell - J general current induced by applied field - k B Boltzmann's constant - L angular momentum - m mass of bead, (= m/2) - M mass of dumbbell, g - N number of dumbbells in simulation cell - P translational momentum of center of mass of dumbbell - P pressure tensor - P xy xy component of pressure tensor - Q separation of beads in dumbbell - Q eq equilibrium extension of FENE dumbbell and fixed extension of rigid dumbbell - Q 0 maximum extension of dumbbell - r ij vector connecting beads i and j - r position vector of center of mass dumbbell - R vector connecting centers of mass of two dumbbells - t time - t * dimensionless time, in units of m/ - T * dimensionless temperature, in units of /k - u potential energy - u velocity vector of flow field - u x x component of velocity vector - V volume of simulation cell - X general applied field - strain rate, s–1 - * dimensionless shear rate, in units of /m 2 - general transport property - Lennard-Jones potential well depth - friction factor for Gaussian thermostat - shear viscosity, g/cms - * dimensionless shear viscosity, in units of m/ 2 - * dimensionless number density, in units of –3 - Lennard-Jones separation of minimum energy - relaxation time of a fluid - angular velocity of dumbbell - orientation angle of dumbbell   相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
An analytical solution is presented for the calculation of the flow field in a concentric cylinder viscometer of non-ideal Bingham-fluids, described by the Worrall-Tuliani rheological model. The obtained shear rate distribution is a function of the a priori unknown rheological parameters. It is shown that by applying an iterative procedure experimental data can be processed in order to obtain the proper shear rate correction and the four rheological parameters of the Worrall-Tuliani model as well as the yield surface radius. A comparison with Krieger's correction method is made. Rheometrical data for dense cohesive sediment suspensions have been reviewed in the light of this new method. For these suspensions velocity profiles over the gap are computed and the shear layer thicknesses were found to be comparable to visual observations. It can be concluded that at low rotation speeds the actually sheared layer is too narrow to fullfill the gap width requirement for granular suspensions and slip appears to be unavoidable, even when the material is sheared within itself. The only way to obtain meaningfull measurements in a concentric cylinder viscometer at low shear rates seems to be by increasing the radii of the viscometer. Some dimensioning criteria are presented.Notation A, B Integration constants - C Dimensionless rotation speed = µ/y - c = 2µ - d = 0 2–2cy - f() = (–0)2+2c(–y) - r Radius - r b Bob radius - r c Cup radius - r y Yield radius - r 0 Stationary surface radius - r Rotating Stationary radius - Y 0 Shear rate parameter = /µ Greek letters Shear rate - = (r y /r b )2– 1 - µ Bingham viscosity - µ0 Initial differential viscosity - µ µ0 - Rotation speed - Angular velocity - Shear stress - b Bob shear stress - B Bingham stress - y (True) yield stress - 0 Stress parameter = B Y 0 - B - y   相似文献   

15.
In this paper we develop the averaged form of the Stokes equations in terms of weighting functions. The analysis clearly indicates at what point one must choose a media-specific weighting function in order to achieve spatially smoothed transport equations. The form of the weighting function that produces the cellular average is derived, and some important geometrical theorems are presented.Roman Letters A interfacial area of the- interface associated with the local closure problem, m2 - A e area of entrances and exits for the-phase contained within the averaging system, m2 - A p surface area of a particle, m2 - d p 6V p/Ap, effective particle diameter, m - g gravity vector, m/s2 - I unit tensor - K m permeability tensor for the weighted average form of Darcy's law, m2 - L general characteristic length for volume averaged quantities, m - L p general characteristic length for volume averaged pressure, m - L characteristic length for the porosity, m - L v characteristic length for the volume averaged velocity, m - l characteristic length (pore scale) for the-phase - l i i=1, 2, 3 lattice vectors, m - (y) weighting function - m(–y) (y), convolution product weighting function - v special weighting function associated with the traditional averaging volume - m v special convolution product weighting function associated with the traditional averaging volume - m g general convolution product weighting function - m V unit cell convolution product weighting function - m C special convolution product weighting function for ordered media which produces the cellular average - m D special convolution product weighting function for disordered media - m M master convolution product weighting function for ordered and disordered media - n unit normal vector pointing from the-phase toward the-phase - p pressure in the-phase, N/m2 - pm superficial weighted average pressure, N/m2 - p m intrinsic weighted average pressure, N/m2 - p traditional intrinsic volume averaged pressure, N/m2 - p p p m , spatial deviation pressure, N/m2 - r 0 radius of a spherical averaging volume, m - r m support of the convolution product weighting function, m - r position vector, m - r position vector locating points in the-phase, m - V 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 - vm superficial weighted average velocity, m/s - v m intrinsic weighted average velocity, m/s - V volume of the-phase contained in the averaging volume, m3 - V p volume of a particle, m3 - v traditional superficial volume averaged velocity, m/s - v v p m spatial deviation 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 - m m * . weighted average porosity - mass density of the-phase, kg/m3 - viscosity of the-phase, Ns/m2 - V /V, volume fraction of the-phase  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
In this paper we consider the asymptotic behavior of solutions of the quasilinear equation of filtration as t. We prove that similar solutions of the equation u t = (u )xx asymptotically represent solutions of the Cauchy problem for the full equation u t = [(u)]xx if (u) is close to u for small u.  相似文献   

18.
Mixed model fatigue crack propagation is analyzed in this paper, using a centre cracked plate geometry, loaded under un-iaxial cyclic tension. Based on maximum principal stress criterion, a modified Paris expression of fatigue crack growth rate is derived in terms of ΔK and crack angle βα for an inclined crack. It is also shown that it is more convenient to express the Paris equation by means of crack length projected on the x -axis, αx rather than the actual length, α itself. The crack trajectory due to cyclic loading is predicted, β is varied from 29° to 90°. Experimental data on Type L3 aluminium agree fairly well with predicted values when βα exceeds 30°.  相似文献   

19.
Summary In this work, measurement of the flow field around a rotating sphere has been used to obtain the material parameters of a second-order Rivlin-Ericksen fluid. Experiments were carried out with a Laser-Doppler anemometer to obtain the velocity distribution and usingGiesekus' analysis, the material parameters for the second-order fluid were obtained.
Zusammenfassung In dieser Untersuchung wird die Ausmessung des Strömungsfeldes um eine rotierende Kugel dazu verwendet, um die Stoffparameter einer Rivlin-Ericksen-Flüssigkeit zweiter Ordnung zu erhalten. Die Experimente zur Bestimmung der Geschwindigkeitsverteilung werden mit einem Laser-Doppler-Anemometer durchgeführt, und zur Auswertung der Parameter der Flüssigkeit zweiter Ordnung wird eine Analyse vonGiesekus benutzt.

Notations A 1,A2 Rivlin-Ericksen tensor - A 2 Parameter used in eq. [12] - a Radius of the sphere - B Parameter used in eq. [12] - I Unit tensor - m 0(12)/a2, parameter used by ref. (8) - N 1,N2 First and second normal stress difference - p Isotropic pressure - Radial distance from the centre of the rotating body - S 1,S2 Stress tensor - v r,v,v Velocity components in a spherical coordinate system - 0,1,2 Material parameters used in eq. [2] - Shear rate - a Apparent voscosity - 0 Zero-shear viscosity - Angle measured from the axis of rotation - Fluid density - Stream function - Shear stress - Angular velocity With 3 figures  相似文献   

20.
Control of low-speed turbulent separated flow using jet vortex generators   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A parametric study has been performed with jet vortex generators to determine their effectiveness in controlling flow separation associated with low-speed turbulent flow over a two-dimensional rearward-facing ramp. Results indicate that flow-separation control can be accomplished, with the level of control achieved being a function of jet speed, jet orientation (with respect to the free-stream direction), and jet location (distance from the separation region in the free-stream direction). Compared to slot blowing, jet vortex generators can provide an equivalent level of flow control over a larger spanwise region (for constant jet flow area and speed).Nomenclature C p pressure coefficient, 2(P-P)/V 2 - C Q total flow coefficient, Q/ v - D 0 jet orifice diameter - Q total volumetric flow rate - R Reynolds number based on momentum thickness - u fluctuating velocity component in the free-stream (x) direction - V free-stream flow speed - VR ratio of jet speed to free-stream flow speed - x coordinate along the wall in the free-stream direction - jet inclination angle (angle between the jet axis and the wall) - jet azimuthal angle (angle between the jet axis and the free-stream direction in a horizontal plane) - boundary-layer thickness - momentum thickness - lateral distance between jet orifices A version of this paper was presented at the 12th Symposium on Turbulence, University of Missouri-Rolla, 24–26 Sept. 1990  相似文献   

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