Intro To Fluid
Intro To Fluid
Recommended Books:
Text Book:
Fluid Mechanics With Engineering Applications (10th
Edition)
by E. John Finnemore & Joseph B. Franzini
Reference Books:
A textbook of Hydraulics, Fluid Mechanics and Hydraulic
Machines (19th Edition) by R.S. Khurmi
Applied Fluid Mechanics (6th Edition) by Robert L. Mott
Fluid Mechanics by A.K Jain
Properties of Fluids
Lecture - 1
Fluid
A fluid is defined as:
“A substance that continually deforms (flows) under
an applied shear stress regardless of the magnitude
of the applied stress”.
It is a subset of the phases of matter and includes
liquids, gases, plasmas and, to some extent, plastic
solids.
Fluid
It can also be defined as a material in which movement occurs
continuously under the application of a tangential shear stress.
Example:
Solid Mechanics
Fluid Vs Solid Mechanics
Fluid mechanics:
“The study of the physics of materials which take the shape of
their container.” Or
“Branch of Engg. science that studies fluids and forces on
them.”
Solid Mechanics:
“The study of the physics of materials with a defined rest
shape.”
Fluid Mechanics can be further subdivided into fluid statics, the
study of fluids at rest, and kinematics, the study of fluids in motion
and fluid dynamics, the study of effect of forces on fluid motion.
In the modern discipline called Computational Fluid Dynamics
(CFD), computational approach is used to develop solutions to fluid
mechanics problems.
Distinction between a Solid and a Fluid
Solid Fluid
Definite Shape and definite Indefinite Shape and Indefinite
volume. volume & it assumes the shape
Does not flow easily. of the container which it
occupies.
Molecules are closer.
Flow Easily.
Attractive forces between the
molecules are large enough to Molecules are far apart.
retain its shape. Attractive forces between the
An ideal Elastic Solid deform molecules are smaller.
under load and comes back to Intermolecular cohesive forces
original position upon removal of in a fluid are not great enough to
load. hold the various elements of
Plastic Solid does not comes back fluid together. Hence Fluid will
to original position upon removal flow under the action of applied
of load, means permanent stress. The flow will be
deformation takes place. continuous as long as stress is
applied.
Distinction between a Gas and Liquid
SpecificVolume v 1 / r
Important Terms
Specific gravity:
It can be defined in either of two ways:
a. Specific gravity is the ratio of the density of a substance to
the density of water at 4°C.
b. Specific gravity is the ratio of the specific weight of a
substance to the specific weight of water at 4°C.
g l rl
s liquid
g w rw
Example
The specific wt. of water at ordinary temperature and
pressure is 62.4lb/ft3. The specific gravity of mercury is
13.56. Compute density of water, Specific wt. of mercury,
and density of mercury.
Solution:
1. Density ρ γ /g
ρ 16/9.81 16.631 kg/m 3
1. Density r g / g
r 78.6/32.2 2.44 slugs/ft 3
2. Specific gravity s g l / g w
s 78.6/62.4 1.260
so r 1.260x1000 kg/m 3
r 1260 Kg/m 3
3. Specific weight in kN/m 3
g r xg
g 9.81x1260 12.36 kN/m 3
Example
Calculate the specific weight, density, specific volume and
specific gravity of 1litre of petrol weights 7 N.
Solution:
Given Volume = 1 litre = 10-3 m3
Weight = 7 N
1. Specific weight,
w = Weight of Liquid/volume of Liquid
w = 7/ 10-3 = 7000 N/m3
2. Density, r = g /g
r = 7000/9.81 = 713.56 kg/m3
Solution (Cont.):
3. Specific Volume = 1/ r
1/713.56
=1.4x10-3 m3/kg
4. Specific Gravity = s =
Specific Weight of Liquid/Specific Weight of Water
= Density of Liquid/Density of Water
s = 713.56/1000 = 0.7136
Example
If the specific gravity of petrol is 0.70.Calculate its Density,
Specific Volume and Specific Weight.
Solution:
Given
Specific gravity = s = 0.70
1. Density of Liquid, r s x density of water
= 0.70x1000
= 700 kg/m3
2. Specific Volume = 1/ r
1/700
1.43 x 10-3
3. Specific Weight, = 700x9.81 = 6867 N/m3
Compressibility
It is defined as: “Change in Volume due to change in Pressure.”
The compressibility of a liquid is inversely proportional to Bulk Modulus (volume
modulus of elasticity).
Bulk modulus of a substance measures resistance of a substance to uniform
compression. dp
Ev
It is defined as the ratio between pressure increase and the (dv / v)
resulting decrease in a material's volume. v
It is equal to the change in pressure divided by the change Ev dp
dv
in volume divided by initial volume. The negative sign indicates that an
increase in pressure is accompanied by a decrease in volume.
Where; v is the specific volume and p is the pressure.
A large Bulk Modulus indicates a relative incompressible fluid.
Units: Psi, MPa , As v/dv is a dimensionless ratio, the units of E and p are
identical.
Example
At a depth of 8km in the ocean the pressure is 81.8Mpa. Assume
that the specific weight of sea water at the surface is 10.05 kN/m3
and that the average volume modulus is 2.34 x 103 N/m3 for that
pressure range.
(a) What will be the change in specific volume between that at the
surface ant at that depth?
(b) What will be the specific volume at that depth?
(c) What will be the specific weight at that depth?
Solution:
(a) v 1 1 / p1 g / g 1
Using Equation :
9.81 / 10050 0.000976 m 3 / kg
p
v 0.000976 (81 .8 x10 0) /(2.34 x10 )
6 9 Ev
( v / v )
-34.1x10 -6
m 3 / kg dv p
v Ev
(b) v 2 v1 v 0.000942 m 3 / kg v2 v1 p p
2 1
v1 Ev
u=120-5/6(12-y) 2 du/dy=5/3(12-y)
=m du/dy
y (in) 0 3 6 9 12
du/dy 20 15 10 5 0