Section Summary

Sections
Section Summary

Section Summary

12.1 Flow Rate and Its Relation to Velocity

  • Flow rate Q is defined to be the volume V flowing past a point in time t, or Q=Vt where V is volume and t is time.
  • The SI unit of volume is m3.
  • Another common unit is the liter (L), which is 103m3.
  • Flow rate and velocity are related by Q=Aˉv where A is the cross-sectional area of the flow and ˉv is its average velocity.
  • For incompressible fluids, flow rate at various points is constant; that is,
    Q1=Q2A1ˉv1=A2ˉv2n1A1ˉv1=n2A2ˉv2}.

12.2 Bernoulli’s Equation

  • Bernoulli's equation states that the sum on each side of the following equation is constant, or the same at any two points in an incompressible frictionless fluid.
    P1+12ρv21+ρgh1=P2+12ρv22+ρgh2
  • Bernoulli's principle is Bernoulli's equation applied to situations in which depth is constant. The terms involving depth (or height h ) subtract out, yielding
    P1+12ρv21=P2+12ρv22.
  • Bernoulli's principle has many applications, including entrainment, wings and sails, and velocity measurement.

12.3 The Most General Applications of Bernoulli’s Equation

  • Power in fluid flow is given by the equation (P1+12ρv2+ρgh)Q=power, where the first term is power associated with pressure, the second is power associated with velocity, and the third is power associated with height.

12.4 Viscosity and Laminar Flow: Poiseuille's Law

  • Laminar flow is characterized by smooth flow of the fluid in layers that do not mix.
  • Turbulence is characterized by eddies and swirls that mix layers of fluid together.
  • Fluid viscosity η is due to friction within a fluid. Representative values are given in Table 12.1. Viscosity has units of (N/m2)s or Pas.
  • Flow is proportional to pressure difference and inversely proportional to resistance.
    Q=P2P1R
  • For laminar flow in a tube, Poiseuille's law for resistance states that
    R=8ηlπr4.
  • Poiseuille's law for flow in a tube is
    Q=(P2P1)πr48ηl.
  • The pressure drop caused by flow and resistance is given by
    P2P1=RQ.

12.5 The Onset of Turbulence

  • The Reynolds number NR can reveal whether flow is laminar or turbulent. It is
    NR=2ρvrη.
  • For NR below about 2000, flow is laminar. For NR above about 3000, flow is turbulent. For values of NR between 2000 and 3000, it may be either or both.

12.6 Motion of an Object in a Viscous Fluid

  • When an object moves in a fluid, there is a different form of the Reynolds number NR=ρvLη(object in fluid), which indicates whether flow is laminar or turbulent.
  • For NR less than about one, flow is laminar.
  • For NR greater than 106, flow is entirely turbulent.

12.7 Molecular Transport Phenomena: Diffusion, Osmosis, and Related Processes

  • Diffusion is the movement of substances due to random thermal molecular motion.
  • The average distance xrms a molecule travels by diffusion in a given amount of time is given by
    xrms=2Dt,

    where D is the diffusion constant, representative values of which are found in Table 12.2.

  • Osmosis is the transport of water through a semipermeable membrane from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration.
  • Dialysis is the transport of any other molecule through a semipermeable membrane due to its concentration difference.
  • Both processes can be reversed by back pressure.
  • Active transport is a process in which a living membrane expends energy to move substances across it.