1 / 10

ES 202 Fluid and Thermal Systems Lecture 11: Pipe Flow (Major and Minor Losses) (1/7/2003)

ES 202 Fluid and Thermal Systems Lecture 11: Pipe Flow (Major and Minor Losses) (1/7/2003). Assignments. Reading: Cengel & Turner Section 12-6 Homework: 12-72, 12-79 in Cengel & Turner. Road Map of Lecture 11. Announcements Recap from Lecture 10 “modified” Bernoulli’s equation

felicity
Download Presentation

ES 202 Fluid and Thermal Systems Lecture 11: Pipe Flow (Major and Minor Losses) (1/7/2003)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ES 202Fluid and Thermal SystemsLecture 11:Pipe Flow (Major and Minor Losses)(1/7/2003)

  2. Assignments • Reading: • Cengel & Turner Section 12-6 • Homework: • 12-72, 12-79 in Cengel & Turner ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  3. Road Map of Lecture 11 • Announcements • Recap from Lecture 10 • “modified” Bernoulli’s equation • concept of viscosity • Major losses • friction factor • Moody diagram • flow chart to determine friction factor • non-circular ducts • Minor losses ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  4. Announcements • Lab 2 this week in Olin 110 from 7thto 9thperiod • Section 5 meets tomorrow • Section 6 meets on Friday • Post lab group schedule • 2 lab sessions over the 3 hour period • 1st session starts at 1:35 pm • 2nd session starts at 2:55 pm • Homework assigned on Monday and Tuesday will be due on Friday by 5 pm • Solutions to all homework sets are available at reserve library under Mayhew ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  5. Introducing the Friction Factor • Recall results from dimensional analysis of pipe flow • From hindsight, cast the above equation as • The friction factor (as defined) only depends • Reynolds number • relative roughness ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  6. How to find the friction factor? • Since the friction factor only depends on two independent p groups, it is simple to represent its variation with multiple contour lines on a 2D plane • Display and describe the Moody diagram • representation of two p groups • partition of different flow regimes • independent of surface roughness in laminar regime • insensitivity at high Reynolds number in turbulent regime • The whole problem of finding the pressure drop across piping system is reduced to finding the friction factor on the Moody diagram ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  7. Flow Chart • Find Reynolds number • fluid properties (r, m) • geometry (D) • flow speed (V) Turbulent (Re > 2300) Laminar (Re < 2300) Find relative roughness Look up Moody diagram ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  8. Example on Moody Diagram • Example: Water flows in a commercial steel pipe pipe diameter = 10 cm mean speed = 10 m/s pipe length = 3 m • Find the pressure drop between the entrance and exit of the pipe. • What will be the difference if water is replaced by oil? • What if the pipe/duct is not circular? • needs a representative length measure of the duct cross-section • notion of hydraulic diameter • example with a rectangular duct • extra factor of 4 recovers the diameter for a circular pipe ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  9. Alternative Method • The Moody Diagram is a handy way to represent data on friction factor. • If reading off the diagram does not seem appealing, the same amount of data can be curve-fitted to give an explicit functional relationship between friction factor, Reynolds number and relative roughness. • The Haaland formula offers another alternative ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

  10. 1 2 Friction Factor, Viscous Stress and Head Loss • Central question: is there a relationship between • friction factor, • viscous stress, • head loss? • Consider the following pipe flow problem: • Perform a mechanical energy balance for the above system • Perform a momentum balance for the above system • What can you conclude from the above analyses? • If the pipe is tilted at an angle of 30 deg with the horizontal, what will be the difference in your analysis? ES 202 Fluid & Thermal Systems

More Related