B Tech Mechanical Questions
B Tech Mechanical Questions
in
DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
CE6451-FLUID MECHANICS AND MACHINERY
UNIT- I: FLUID PROPERTIES AND FLOW CHARACTERISTICS
PART-A
1. Find the surface tension in a soap bubble of 40 mm diameter when the inside pressure is
2.5 N/m2 above atmospheric pressure.
2. Determine the minimum size of glass tube that can be used to measure water level, if the
capillary rise in the tube is not to exceed 2 mm. Take surface tension of water in contact
with air as 0.073575 N/m.
3. A soap bubble is formed when the inside pressure is 5 N/m2 above the atmospheric
pressure. If surface tension in the soap bubble is 0.0125 N/m, find the diameter of the
bubble formed.
4. The converging pipe with inlet and outlet diameters of 200 mm and 150 mm carries the
oil whose specific gravity is 0.8. The velocity of oil at the entry is 2.5 m/s, find the
velocity at the exit of the pipe and oil flow rate in kg/sec.
5. Express 3m of water head in cm of mercury and pressure in kPa.
6. What is meant by vapor pressure of a fluid?
7. What are Non-Newtonian fluids? Give examples
8. What do you mean by absolute pressure and gauge pressure?
9. Define the term Kinematic Viscosity and give its dimensions.
10. What is specific gravity? How is it related to density?
11. What is meant by capillarity?
12. What is viscosity? What is the cause of it in liquids and in gases?
13. Differentiate between solids and liquids.
14. What is the variation of viscosity with temperature for fluids?
15. What is meant cavitations?
16. What are the assumption of the Bernoullis equations?
17. What is mean by continuum?
18. State the equation of continuity to three dimensional in compressible flow.
19. State assumption made in deriving continuity equations.
20. What are all types fluids?
PART B
1. The velocity distribution over a plate is given by u = (3/4)*y-y2 where u is velocity in m/s and
at a depth y in m above the plate. Determine the shear stress at a distance of 0.3 m from the top
of plate. Assume dynamic viscosity of the fluid is taken as 0.95N s/m2.
2. The space between two square flat parallel plates is filled with oil. Each side of the plate is 60
cm. The thickness of the oil film is 12.5 mm. The upper plate, which moves at 2.5 m/s
requires a force of 98.1 N to maintain the speed. Determine the dynamic viscosity of the oil and
the kinematic viscosity of the oil in stokes if the specific gravity of the oil is 0.95.
3. A pipe (1) 450 mm in diameter branches in to two pipes (2 and 3) of diameters 300 mm and
200 mm respectively. If the average velocity in 450 mm diameter pipe is 3m/s. Find (i)
Discharge through 450 mm diameter pipe; (ii) Velocity in 200 mm diameter pipe if the average
velocity in 300mm pipe is 2.5 m/s.
4. A 30 cm x 15 cm venturimeter is provided in a vertical pipe line carrying oil of specific
gravity 0.9, the flow being upwards. The difference in elevation of the throat section and
entrance section of the venturimeter is 30 cm. The differential U tube mercury manometer shows
a gauge deflection of 25 cm. Calculate: (i) the discharge of oil. (ii) The pressure difference
between the entrance section and the throat section. Take C d=0.98 and specific gravity of
mercury as 13.6.
5. A vertical venturimeter 40 cm x 20 cm is provided in a vertical pipe to measure a flow of oil of
relative density 0.8. The difference in elevations of the throat section and the entrance sections in
1 m, the direction of flow of oil being vertically upwards. The oil-mercury differential gauge
shows deflection of mercury equal to 40 cm. Determine the quantity of oil flowing the pipe.
Neglect losses.
6. A horizontal venturimeter with inlet and throat diameter 300 mm and 100 mm respectively is
used to measure the flow of water. The pressure intensity at inlet is 130 kN/m 2 while the vacuum
pressure head at throat is 350 mm of mercury. Assuming that 3% head lost between the inlet and
throat. Find the value of coefficient of discharge for the venturimeter and also determine the rate
of flow.
7. A 45o reducing bend is connected in a pipe line, the diameters at the inlet and outlet of the
bend being 600 mm and 300 mm respectively. Find the force exerted by water on the bend if the
intensity of pressure at inlet to bend is 8.829 N/cm2 and rate of flow of water is 600 liters/s.
8. A 300 mm diameter pipe carries water under a head of 20 m with a velocity of 3.5 m/s. if the axis
of the pipe turns through 45o, find the magnitude and direction of the resultant force at the
bend.
9. Derive Bernoulli equation from Eulers equation of motion and Derive continuity equation.
10. A drainage pipe is tapered in a section running with full of water. The pipe diameter sat the
inlet and exit are 1000 mm and 500 mm respectively. The water surface is 2m above the centre
of the inlet and exit is 3m above the free surface of the water. The pressure at the exit is250mm
of Hg vacuum. The friction loss betweentheinletandexitofthepipeis1/10ofthevelocityheadatthe
exit. Determine the discharge through the pipe.
kW motor is used to drive the pump. Find the manometric, mechanical and overall efficiencies of
the pump. Assume water enters the impeller vanes radially at inlet.
5. The impeller of a centrifugal pump having external and internal diameters 500 mm and 250 mm
respectively, width at outlet 50 mm and running at 1200 r.p.m. works against a head of 48
m. The velocity of flow through the impeller is constant and equal to 3.0 m/s. The vanes are set
back at an angle of 40at outlet. Find: (i) Inlet vane angle (i) Work done by the impeller on
water per second (iii) Manometric efficiency.
6. The diameter and stroke length of a single acting reciprocating pump are 150mm and 300mm
respectively, the pump runs at 50rpm and lifts 4.2 lps of water through a height of 25m. The
delivery pipe is 22m long and 100mm in diameter. Find (i) Theoretical power required to run the
pump (ii) % of slip and (iii) Acceleration head at the beginning and middle of the delivery stroke
7. The diameter and length of a suction pipe of a single acting reciprocating pump are 10Cm and
5m respectively. The pump has a plunger diameter of 15cm and a stroke length of 35cm. The
center of the pump is 3m above the water surface in the sump. The atm. Pressure head is 10.3m
of water and the pump runs at 50rpm. Find (i) pressure head due to Acceleration at the beginning
of the suction stroke. (ii) maximum pressure head due to Acceleration and (iii) pressure head in
the cylinder at the beginning and end of the suction stroke.
8. A double acting reciprocating pump running at 60 rpm is discharging 1.5 m3 of water per
minute. The pump has a stroke length of 400 mm. The diameter of the piston is 250 mm. The
delivery and suction heads are 20m and 5m respectively. Find the power required to drive the
pump and the slip of the pump.
9. A double acting reciprocating pump has a bore of 150 mm and stroke of 250 mm and runs at 35
rpm. The piston rod diameter is 20 mm. The suction head is 6.5 m and the delivery head is
14.5 m. The discharge of water was 4.7 l/s. Determine the slip and the power required
10. In a reciprocating pump delivering water the bore is 14 cm and the stroke is 21 cm. The
suction lift is 4 m and delivery head is 12 m. The suction and delivery pipe are both 10 cm
diameter, length of pipes are 9 m suction and 24 m delivery. Friction factor is 0.015. Determine
the theoretical power required. Slip is 8 percent. The pump speed is 36 rpm
UNIT V: TURBINES
PART-A
1. Classify turbines according to flow.
2. What are high head turbines? Give examples.
3. Define hydraulic efficiency of a turbine.
4.The mean velocity of the buckets of the Pelton wheel is 10 m/s. The jet supplies water at 0.7
m3/s at a head of 30 m. The jet is deflected through an angle of 160 by the bucket. Find the
hydraulic efficiency. Take Cv = 0.98.
5. Define specific speed.
6. What are the different types of draft tubes?
7. What are the functions of a draft tube?
8. What is a draft tube for Kaplan turbine?
9. Give an example for a low head turbine, a medium head turbine and a high head turbine.
10. What are reaction turbines? Give examples.
11. Differentiate the impulse and reaction turbine.
12. Draw velocity triangle diagram for Pelton Wheel turbine.
13. Give the comparison between impulse and reaction turbine.
14. Write a note on performance curves of turbine.
15. Write a short note on Governing of Turbines.
16. Give the expression for the efficiency of a draft tube.
17. Define unit speed of turbine.
18. Draw the velocity triangle diagram for pelton wheel turbine.
19. A shaft transmit 150kW at 600rpm. What is the torque in Nm?
20. Define flow ration of reaction radial flow turbine?
PART-B
1. Derive an expression for maximum hydraulic efficiency in an impulse turbine and Compare
radial flow and axial flow turbo machines.
2. A Pelton wheel, working under a head of 500 m develops 13 MW when running at a speed of 430
rpm. If the efficiency of the wheel is 85%, determine the rate of flow through the turbine, the
diameter of the wheel and the diameter of the nozzle. Take speed ratio as 0.46 and coefficient of
velocity for the nozzle as 0.98.
3. A Pelton wheel works under a gross head of 510 m. One third of gross head is lost in friction in
the penstock. The rate of flow through the nozzle is 2.2 m3/sec. The angel of deflection of jet is
165. Find the (i) power given by water to the runner (ii) hydraulic efficiency of Pelton wheel.
Take CV = 1.0 and speed ratio = 0.45
4. A Pelton turbine is required to develop 9000 KW when working under a head of 300 m the
impeller may rotate at 500 rpm. Assuming a jet ratio of 10 and an overall efficiency of 85%
calculate (i) Quantity of water required, (ii) Diameter of the wheel, (iii) No of jets, (iv) No and
size of the bucket vanes on the runner.
5. A pelton wheel turbine develops 3000kW power under a head of 300m. The overall efficiency of
the turbine is 83%. If the speed ratio = 0.46, Cv = 0.98 and specific speed is 16.5, then find
diameter of the turbine and diameter of the jet.
6. A pelton wheel has a mean bucket speed of 10m/s with a jet of water flowing at the rate of 700
lps under a head of 30m. The buckets deflect the jet through an angle of 160deg. Calculate the
power given by the water to the runner and the hydraulic efficiency of the turbine. Assume
coefficient of velocity as 0.98.
7. A reaction turbine works at 450 r.p.m. under a head of 120 m. Its diameter at inlet is 1.2 m and
the flow area is 0.4 m2. The angles made by absolute and relative velocities at inlet are 20 and
60respectively with the tangential velocity. Determine:(i)the volume rate of flow, (ii) the power
developed, and (iii) the hydraulic efficiency.
8. The velocity of whirl at inlet to the runner of an inward flow reaction turbine is
and the velocity of flow at inlet is 1.05 H
3.15 H m/s
H
m/s in the
same direction as at inlet and the velocity of flow at exit is 0.83 H m/s, where H is head of
water 30 m. The inner diameter of the runner is 0.6 times the outer diameter. Assuming hydraulic
efficiency of 80%, compute angles of the runner vanes at inlet and exit.
9. A hub diameter of a Kaplan turbine, working under a head of 12m, is 0.35 times the diameter of
the runner. The turbine is running at 100rpm. If the vane angle of the runner at outlet is 15deg.
And flow ratio 0.6, find (i) diameter of the runner, (ii) diameter of the boss, and (iii) Discharge
through the runner. Take the velocity of whirl at outlet as zero.
10. A Kaplan turbine develops 24647.6kW power at an average head of 39m. Assuming the
speed ratio of 2, flow ratio of 0.6, diameter of the boss equal to 0.35 times the diameter of the
runner and an overall efficiency of 90%, calculate the diameter, speed and specific speed of the
turbine.