Chapter 6-p1
Chapter 6-p1
Chapter 6-p1
Group report
Week 1
Môn học: Computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
Nhóm: 07
Hướng dẫn: Lê Thị Minh Nghĩa, Dương Đề Tài, Trần Tiến Anh
Objectives:
- Identify the various kinds of forces and moments acting on a control volume;
- Use control volume analysis to determine the forces associated with fluid flow;
- Use control volume analysis to determine the moments caused by fluid flow
and the torque transmitted.
where:
“The rate of change of the momentum of a body is equal to the net force acting on the
body”.
Force, acceleration, velocity, and momentum are vector quantities. The direction of
momentum is the direction of velocity.
33\* MERGEFORMAT
(6.)
where:
For a rigid body rotating about a fixed x-axis, the angular momentum equation is
written in scala form as
A control volume can be selected as any arbitrary region in space through which fluid
flows, and its bounding control surface can be fixed, moving, and deforming during
flow.
The boundaries of the control volume are well defined during an analysis. Also, the
flow rate of any quantity into or out of a control volume depends on the flow velocity
relative to the control surface, and thus it is essential to know if the control volume
remains at rest or if it moves.
Many flow systems involve stationary hardware firmly fixed to a station any surface,
and such systems are best analyzed using fixed control volumes.
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When analyzing flow systems that are moving or deforming, it is usually more
convenient to allow the control volume to move or deform.
If the airplane is cruising at 500 km/h to the left, and the velocity of the exhaust gases
is 800 km/h to the right relative to the ground, the velocity of the exhaust gases
relative to the nozzle exit is
where:
- : the fluid velocity expressed relative to a coordinate system moving with the
control volume;
- : the control volume in this case moves with velocity, which is identical to
the cruising velocity of the airplane relative to a fixed point on earth.
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6-3. Forces acting on a control volume
The forces acting on a control volume consist of body forces and surface forces:
- Body forces: act throughout the entire body of the control volume (gravity,
electric, and magnetic forces);
- Surface forces: act on the control surface (such as pressure and viscous forces
and reaction forces at points of contact).
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where:
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Tensor notation is convenient when working with with tensors but is usualy
resevered for graduate studies.
is defined as the stress (force per unit area) in the j-direction acting on a face
whose normal is in the i-direction. Note that i and j are merely indices of the tensor
When coordinate axes are rotated (a) to (b), the components of the surface force
change, even though the force itself remains the same; only two dimensions are shown
here.
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Total surface force acting on control surface:
1212\*
MERGEFORMAT (6.)
Total force:
We can also ignore the pressure forces at outlet sections where the fluid is discharged
at subsonic velocities to the atmosphere since the discharge pressures in such cases are
very near atmospheric pressure.
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Cross section through a faucet assembly, illustrating the importance of choosing a
control volume wisely; CV B (the red control volume) is much easier to work with
than CV A (the purple control volume).