CEWB121 Exp 3 Full Report
CEWB121 Exp 3 Full Report
CEWB121 Exp 3 Full Report
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
EXP. NO
:3
: CE096508
SECTION
: 01
GROUP
: 02
Submitted Date
29 JUNE 2015
TABLE OF CONTENT
TITLE
PAGE
Objective
Theory
Anticipated Results
Apparatus
Procedure
6-8
Discussions
Conclusions
Critique
10
References
10
Appendix
11
OBJECTIVE
The purpose of the experiment is to identify the differences between laminar,
turbulent, and transitional fluid flow. The experiment is also to determine the Reynoldss
numbers for each of the flow. The design of the apparatus allowed studying the characteristic
of the flow of the fluid in the pipe, the behavior of the flow and also to calculate the range for
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the laminar and turbulent flow where the calculation is used to prove the Reynolds number is
dimensionless by using the Reynolds Number formula.
THEORY
Laminar and turbulent flow
Professor Osborne Reynolds (1842-1912) first realized that there was a critical velocity
at which the law relating loss of pressure energy and velocity in pipe flow changed. He first
demonstrated this with his famous Color Band (on the die-line) experiment. This consisted
of injecting a line jet of dye into the flow of water visible through a transparent pipe. At low
velocities the dye-line was unbroken, but as the velocity of the flow through the pipe was
increased, the dye-line broke up and eddies were seen to form. From this and further
experiments, he came to the conclusion that there are two distinct types of flow:1. Streamline or Laminar Flow (Latin lamina = layer of thin sheet). The fluid moves in
layers without irregular fluctuation in velocity. Laminar flow occurs at low Reynolds
Numbers. (The flow of oil in bearing is Laminar).
2. Turbulent flow. This results in the fluid particles moving in irregular patterns carrying
an exchange of momentum from one portion of the fluid to another.
Reynolds investigated these two different types of motion and concluded that the parameters
which were involved in the flow characteristics were
v
d
kg/m3
m/s
m
Ns/m2
ANTICIPATED RESULTS
In this experiment, the flow condition for theory result should be tally with the flow
condition for experiment.
If the experiment flow shows that the condition is Laminar, the calculated Reynolds Number
for theory should be more than 2000.
If the experiment flow shows that the condition is Transition, the calculated Reynolds
Number for theory should be between 2000 and 4000.
Lastly, if the experiment flow shows that the condition is Turbulent, the calculated Reynolds
Number for theory should be more than 4000.
APPARATUS
The apparatus that we used provides laminar, translational and turbulent flow as predicted by
Osborne Reynolds. Main components of the apparatus:
Acrylic tank with an adjustable constant head
Glass tube ID 12mm and length 720 mm with whiteboard background
Water is admitted at the bottom of the tank through a diffuser and stilling materials.
Water is discharged via a bell mouth transparent tube with a flow control valve at the
end
Dye reservoir 0.5 liter with control valve and injection needle
Measuring cup 2.0 liter
The apparatus must be used in conjunction with Hydraulics Bench
PROCEDURE.
1. The Hydraulics Bench to level position as Hydraulics Bench Manual.
2. The HB 024 Osborne Reynolds is placed on the table just outside the bench such that
discharge can still be made on the bench measuring tank. This is to eliminate any
disturbance on the stream line due to bench vibration. The screw at the base is
adjusted for level and water supply hose is connected from the Bench to the test
equipment.
3. The dye reservoir is put on the water tank and the needles is adjusted to center line of
the tube slightly protruding into the bell mouth
4. The dye valve is slightly opened for a small flow such that the stream lines of the dye
are sharp.
5. The water temperature is recorded as 30oC
6. By visual view, the test equipment discharged valve is slowly controlled to obtain
laminar, transition and turbulent flow and the flow rate is measured by measuring cup.
7. The calculated Re is compared and the flow condition is observed
8. The flow rate versus Re graph is plotted
9. The result is discussed.
Time
(s)
Flow Rate
(m3/s)
Kinematic
viscosity (m2/s)
Velocity
(m/s)
Re
Condition (flow)
Exp
Theor
100
08.68
1.15 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1018
1521.30
Laminar
Lamin
200
14.04
1.42 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1257
1878.46
Laminar
Lamin
300
22.05
1.36 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1204
1799.25
Laminar
Lamin
400
29.78
1.34 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1186
1772.35
Laminar
Lamin
500
37.54
1.33 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1177
1758.90
Laminar
Lamin
100
07.03
1.42 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1257
1878.46
Transition
Lamin
200
13.65
1.47 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1301
1944.21
Transition
Lamin
300
20.09
1.49 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1319
1971.11
Transition
Lamin
400
26.66
1.50 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1327
1983.06
Transition
Lamin
500
32.47
1.54 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.1363
2036.86
Transition
Transit
100
04.03
2.48 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.2195
3280.19
Turbulent
Transit
200
05.70
3.51 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.3106
4641.59
Turbulent
Turbul
300
08.96
3.35 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.2965
4430.88
Turbulent
Turbul
400
12.12
3.30 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.2920
4363.64
Turbulent
Turbul
500
14.68
3.41 x 10-5
8.03 x 10-7
0.3018
4510.09
Turbulent
Turbul
Graph
Calculations
The Flow Rate is calculated by the following formula:
Flow rate, Q : Volume (m3)
Time (sec)
Volume : 100 ml ; 0.0001m3
Q = 0.0001m3
08.68 s
= 1.15 x 10-5 m3/s
The Kinematic viscosity, is obtained by:
Referring to appendix A, the kinematic viscosity for water at temperature 30oC is
8.03x10-7 m2/s
The Velocity is calculated by the following formula:
V = Q/A
Where A = d2
4
A= (22/7) (0.012)2
4
= 1.13x10-4 m2
So, V = 1.15 x 10-5 m3/s
1.13x10-4 m2
= 0.1018 m/s
The Reynolds Number is calculated by the following formula:
Re = Vd /
= 0.1018 (0.012)
8.03x10-7
= 1521.3
Since 1521.3 is less than 2000, so it is laminar.
*(The other calculations are done using the same steps.)
DISCUSSION
By comparing the result that we get from the observed flow condition and the
calculated Reynolds Number, there are a bit different between the results collected. For the
laminar flow we managed to tally the condition from the first 100 ml until 500 ml of water.
When it comes to the transition part, even though we observe the flow is in transition
condition, however when we calculate the Reynolds Number the value that we get is fulfilled
the laminar condition and not transition condition. For the first 100 ml until 400 ml, the
values of Reynolds Number that we calculated are lesser than 2000 thus proved it to be in
laminar flow. For the 500 ml, again we managed to get tally the value for both experiment
and theory as we managed to get value between 2000 and 4000 (prove it to be transition
flow). As for turbulent flow, there is only slight difference between the experiment and the
theory. The first 100 ml we get the value for transition flow but for the next 200 ml until 500
ml, we managed to get the turbulent flow condition. The errors that occurred might be comes
from parallax error such as the position of eyes during taking the value of water volume and
the slow response when taking the value time. During the experiment there are several
precaution steps that need to be alert. The experiment should be done on a stable place. When
taking the water volume, one of our member just hold the measuring cup instead of put it on
the table. So this might contribute to error for this experiment. Other than that, to get
appropriate laminar smooth stream flow, the clip and the valve which control the purplish dye
must be regulate slow and carefully. The graph of Flow Rate versus Reynolds Number that
we plotted based on our result shows that as the water flow rate increase, the Reynolds
number calculated also increase.
.
CONCLUSION
As a conclusion, the initial objective are met because we are able to conduct the
experiment well and the result obtained is just slightly varies with the actual one. We
managed to calculate the flow rate, velocity and Reynolds Number effectively by calculate it
using the provided formula. We are also able to plot the graph of Flow rate versus Reynolds
Number. The result varies because there are some errors occurred during conducting the
experiment as stated in the discussion part.
CRITIQUE
We successfully conduct our experiment by referring the lab manual. The problem is
just that it is very hard to control the dye flow especially when to get a straight line for
laminar flow. Other than that, everything is fine.
REFERENCES
1. Mechanics of Fluid Laboratory CEWB121, Lab Manual, Experiment 3 :
HB 024 Osborn Reynold Apparatus
2. Reynolds Experiment video- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kq9UKD0iZ2Q
3. How Reynolds Apparatus works- http://theconstructor.org/practical-guide/reynoldsexperiment/2052/
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