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Fluid Mechanics 101

A Skeleton Guide

J. E. Shepherd
Aeronautics and Mechanical Engineering
California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA USA 91125

1995-present - Revised December 16, 2007


Foreword
This is guide is intended for students in Ae101 “Fluid Mechanics”, the class on the fundamentals of fluid
mechanics that all first year graduate students take in Aeronautics and Mechanical Engineering at Caltech.
It contains all the essential formulas grouped into sections roughly corresponding to the order in which the
material is taught when I give the course (I have done this now five times beginning in 1995). This is not a
text book on the subject or even a set of lecture notes. The document is incomplete as description of fluid
mechanics and entire subject areas such as free surface flows, buoyancy, turbulent flows, etc., are missing
(some of these elements are in Brad Sturtevant’s class notes which cover much of the same ground but are
more expository). It is simply a collection of what I view as essential formulas for most of the class. The
need for this typeset formulary grew out of my poor chalk board work and the many mistakes that happen
when I lecture. Several generations of students have chased the errors out but please bring any that remain
to my attention.

JES December 16, 2007


Contents
1 Fundamentals 1
1.1 Control Volume Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.2 Reynolds Transport Theorem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.3 Integral Equations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.3.1 Simple Control Volumes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.3.2 Steady Momentum Balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.4 Vector Calculus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.4.1 Vector Identities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.4.2 Curvilinear Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.4.3 Gauss’ Divergence Theorem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4.4 Stokes’ Theorem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4.5 Div, Grad and Curl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4.6 Specific Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.5 Differential Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.5.1 Conservation form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.6 Convective Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.7 Divergence of Viscous Stress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.8 Euler Equations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.9 Bernoulli Equation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.10 Vorticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
1.11 Dimensional Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

2 Thermodynamics 11
2.1 Thermodynamic potentials and fundamental relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2.2 Maxwell relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2.3 Various defined quantities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
2.4 v(P, s) relation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
2.5 Equation of State Construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

3 Compressible Flow 15
3.1 Steady Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.1.1 Streamlines and Total Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.2 Quasi-One Dimensional Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3.2.1 Isentropic Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
3.3 Heat and Friction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.3.1 Fanno Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.3.2 Rayleigh Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
3.4 Shock Jump Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3.4.1 Lab frame (moving shock) versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3.5 Perfect Gas Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
3.6 Reflected Shock Waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
3.7 Detonation Waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
3.8 Perfect-Gas, 2-γ Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
3.8.1 2-γ Solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
3.8.2 High-Explosives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
3.9 Weak shock waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
3.10 Acoustics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
3.11 Multipole Expansion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
3.12 Baffled (surface) source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
3.13 1-D Unsteady Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
3.14 2-D Steady Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
3.14.1 Oblique Shock Waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

i
3.14.2 Weak Oblique Waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
3.14.3 Prandtl-Meyer Expansion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
3.14.4 Inviscid Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
3.14.5 Potential Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
3.14.6 Natural Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
3.14.7 Method of Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

4 Incompressible, Inviscid Flow 34


4.1 Velocity Field Decomposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
4.2 Solutions of Laplace’s Equation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
4.3 Boundary Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
4.4 Streamfunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
4.4.1 2-D Cartesian Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
4.4.2 Cylindrical Polar Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
4.4.3 Spherical Polar Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
4.5 Simple Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
4.6 Vorticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
4.7 Key Ideas about Vorticity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
4.8 Unsteady Potential Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
4.9 Complex Variable Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
4.9.1 Mapping Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
4.10 Airfoil Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
4.11 Thin-Wing Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
4.11.1 Thickness Solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
4.11.2 Camber Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
4.12 Axisymmetric Slender Bodies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
4.13 Wing Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50

5 Viscous Flow 52
5.1 Scaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
5.2 Two-Dimensional Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
5.3 Parallel Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
5.3.1 Steady Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
5.3.2 Poiseuille Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
5.3.3 Rayleigh Problem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
5.4 Boundary Layers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
5.4.1 Blasius Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
5.4.2 Falkner-Skan Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
5.5 Kármán Integral Relations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
5.6 Thwaites’ Method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
5.7 Laminar Separation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
5.8 Compressible Boundary Layers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
5.8.1 Transformations and Approximations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
5.8.2 Energy Equation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
5.8.3 Moving Shock Waves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
5.8.4 Weak Shock Wave Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
5.9 Creeping Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66

A Famous Numbers 69

B Books on Fluid Mechanics 71

ii
1 FUNDAMENTALS 1

1 Fundamentals

1.1 Control Volume Statements


Ω is a material volume, V is an arbitrary control volume, ∂Ω indicates the surface of the volume.
mass conservation:
Z
d
ρ dV = 0 (1)
dt Ω
Momentum conservation:
Z
d
ρu dV = F (2)
dt Ω
Forces: Z Z
F= ρG dV + T dA (3)
Ω ∂Ω
Surface traction forces
T = −P n̂ + τ · n̂ = T · n̂ (4)
Stress tensor T
T = −P I + τ or Tik = −P δik + τik (5)
where I is the unit tensor, which in cartesian coordinates is

I = δik (6)

Viscous stress tensor, shear viscosity µ, bulk viscosity µv


 
1
τik = 2µ Dik − δik Djj + µv δik Djj implicit sum on j (7)
3

Deformation tensor  
1 ∂ui ∂uk 1
∇u + ∇uT

Dik = + or (8)
2 ∂xk ∂xi 2
Energy conservation:
|u|2
Z  
d
ρ e+ dV = Q̇ + Ẇ (9)
dt Ω 2
Work: Z Z
Ẇ = ρG · u dV + T · u dA (10)
Ω ∂Ω
Heat: Z
Q̇ = − q · n̂ dA (11)
∂Ω
heat flux q, thermal conductivity k and thermal radiation qr

q = −k∇T + qr (12)

Entropy inequality (2nd Law of Thermodynamics):

q · n̂
Z Z
d
ρs dV ≥ − dA (13)
dt Ω ∂Ω T
1 FUNDAMENTALS 2

1.2 Reynolds Transport Theorem


The multi-dimensional analog of Leibniz’s theorem:
Z Z Z
d ∂φ
φ(x, t) dV = dV + φuV · n̂ dA (14)
dt V (t) V (t) ∂t ∂V

The transport theorem proper. Material volume Ω, arbitrary volume V .


Z Z Z
d d
φ dV = φ dV + φ(u − uV ) · n̂ dA (15)
dt Ω dt V ∂V

1.3 Integral Equations


The equations of motions can be rewritten with Reynolds Transport Theorem to apply to an (almost) arbi-
trary moving control volume. Beware of noninertial reference frames and the apparent forces or accelerations
that such systems will introduce.
Moving control volume:
Z Z
d
ρdV + ρ (u − uV ) · n̂ dA = 0 (16)
dt V ∂V
Z Z Z Z
d
ρudV + ρu (u − uV ) · n̂ dA = ρG dV + T dA (17)
dt V ∂V V ∂V

|u|2 |u|2
Z   Z  
d
ρ e+ dV + ρ e+ (u − uV ) · n̂ dA =
dt V 2 ∂V 2
Z Z Z
ρG · u dV + T · u dA − q · n̂ dA (18)
V ∂V ∂V
Z Z Z
d q
ρsdV + ρs (u − uV ) · n̂ dA + · n̂ dA ≥ 0 (19)
dt V ∂V ∂V T
Stationary control volume:
Z Z
d
ρdV + ρu · n̂ dA = 0 (20)
dt V ∂V
Z Z Z Z
d
ρudV + ρuu · n̂ dA = ρG dV + T dA (21)
dt V ∂V V ∂V

|u|2 |u|2
Z   Z  
d
ρ e+ dV + ρ e+ u · n̂ dA =
dt V 2 ∂V 2
Z Z Z
ρG · u dV + T · u dA − q · n̂ dA (22)
V ∂V ∂V
Z Z Z
d q
ρsdV + ρsu · n̂ dA + · n̂ dA ≥ 0 (23)
dt V ∂V ∂V T
1 FUNDAMENTALS 3

1.3.1 Simple Control Volumes


Consider a stationary control volume V with i = 1, 2, . . ., I connections or openings through which there is
fluid flowing in and j = 1, 2, . . ., J connections through which the fluid is following out. At the inflow and
outflow stations, further suppose that we can define average or effective uniform properties hi , ρi , ui of the
fluid. Then the mass conservation equation is
Z I J
dM d X X
= ρdV = Ai ṁi − Aj ṁj (24)
dt dt V i=1 j=1

where Ai is the cross-sectional area of the ith connection and ṁi = ρi ui is the mass flow rate per unit area
through this connection. The energy equation for this same situation is
I
|u|2 |ui |2
Z    
dE d X
= ρ e+ + gz dV = Ai ṁi hi + + gzi
dt dt V 2 i=1
2
J
|uj |2
X  
− Aj ṁj hj + + gzj + Q̇ + Ẇ (25)
j=1
2

where Q̇ is the thermal energy (heat) transferred into the control volume and Ẇ is the mechanical work
done on the fluid inside the control volume.

1.3.2 Steady Momentum Balance


For a stationary control volume, the steady momentum equation can be written as
Z Z Z Z
ρuu · n̂ dA + P n̂ dA = ρG dV + τ · n̂ dA + Fext (26)
∂V ∂V V ∂V
where Fext are the external forces required to keep objects in contact with the flow in force equilibrium.
These reaction forces are only needed if the control volume includes stationary objects or surfaces. For a
control volume completely within the fluid, Fext = 0.

1.4 Vector Calculus


1.4.1 Vector Identities
If A and B are two differentiable vector fields A(x), B(x) and φ is a differentiable scalar field φ(x), then
the following identities hold:

∇ × (A × B) = (B · ∇)A − (A · ∇)B − (∇ · A)B + (∇ · B)A (27)


∇(A · B) = (B · ∇)A + (A · ∇)B + B × (∇ × A) + A × (∇ × B) (28)
∇ × (∇φ) = 0 (29)
∇ · (∇ × A) = 0 (30)
∇ × (∇ × A) = ∇(∇ · A) − ∇2 A (31)
∇ × (φA) = ∇φ × A + φ∇ × A (32)

1.4.2 Curvilinear Coordinates


Scale factors Consider an orthogonal curvilinear coordinate system (x1 , x2 , x3 ) defined by a triad of unit
vectors (e1 , e2 , e3 ), which satisfy the orthogonality condition:

ei · ek = δik (33)
1 FUNDAMENTALS 4

and form a right-handed coordinate system

e3 = e1 × e2 (34)

The scale factors hi are defined by

dr = h1 dx1 e1 + h2 dx2 e2 + h3 dx3 e3 (35)


or

∂r
hi ≡
(36)
∂xi
The unit of arc length in this coordinate system is ds2 = dr · dr:

ds2 = h21 dx21 + h22 dx22 + h23 dx23 (37)


The unit of differential volume is

dV = h1 h2 h3 dx1 dx2 dx3 (38)

1.4.3 Gauss’ Divergence Theorem


For a vector or tensor field F, the following relationship holds:
Z Z
∇ · F dV ≡ F · n̂ dA (39)
V ∂V

This leads to the simple interpretation of the divergence as the following limit
Z
1
∇ · F ≡ lim F · n̂ dA (40)
V →0 V ∂V

A useful variation on the divergence theorem is


Z Z
(∇ × F) dV ≡ n̂ × F dA (41)
V ∂V
This leads to the simple interpretation of the curl as
Z
1
∇ × F ≡ lim n̂ × F dA (42)
V →0 V ∂V

1.4.4 Stokes’ Theorem


For a vector or tensor field F, the following relationship holds on an open, two-sided surface S bounded by
a closed, non-intersecting curve ∂S:
Z Z
(∇ × F) · n̂ dA ≡ F · dr (43)
S ∂S

1.4.5 Div, Grad and Curl


The gradient operator ∇ or grad for a scalar field ψ is
1 ∂ψ 1 ∂ψ 1 ∂ψ
∇ψ = e1 + e2 + e3 (44)
h1 ∂x1 h2 ∂x2 h3 ∂x3
A simple interpretation of the gradient operator is in terms of the differential of a function in a direction â

dâ ψ = lim ψ(x + da) − ψ(x) = ∇ψ · da (45)


da→0
1 FUNDAMENTALS 5

The divergence operator ∇· or div is


 
1 ∂ ∂ ∂
∇·F= (h2 h3 F1 ) + (h3 h1 F2 ) + (h1 h2 F3 ) (46)
h1 h2 h3 ∂x1 ∂x2 ∂x3
The curl operator ∇× or curl is

h 1 e1 h 2 e2 h3 e3
1 ∂ ∂ ∂
∇×F=
∂x1 ∂x2 ∂x3
(47)
h1 h2 h3 h 1 F1 h 2 F2 h3 F3
The components of the curl are:

 
e1 ∂ ∂
∇×F = (h3 F3 ) − (h2 F2 )
h2 h3 ∂x2 ∂x3
 
e2 ∂ ∂
+ (h1 F1 ) − (h3 F3 )
h3 h1 ∂x3 ∂x1
 
e3 ∂ ∂
+ (h2 F2 ) − (h1 F1 ) (48)
h1 h2 ∂x1 ∂x2

The Laplacian operator ∇2 for a scalar field ψ is


 
2 1 ∂ h2 h3 ∂ψ ∂ h3 h1 ∂ψ ∂ h1 h2 ∂ψ
∇ ψ= ( )+ ( )+ ( ) (49)
h1 h2 h3 ∂x1 h1 ∂x1 ∂x2 h2 ∂x2 ∂x3 h3 ∂x3

1.4.6 Specific Coordinates


(x1 , x2 , x3 ) x y z h1 h2 h3

Cartesian
(x, y, z) x y z 1 1 1

Cylindrical
(r, θ, z) r sin θ r cos θ z 1 r 1

Spherical
(r, φ, θ) r sin φ cos θ r sin φ sin θ r cos φ 1 r r sin φ

Parabolic Cylindrical √
1
(u, v, z) 2
(u2 − v 2 ) uv z u2 + v 2 h1 1

Paraboloidal √
1
(u, v, φ) uv cos φ uv sin φ 2
(u2 − v2 ) u2 + v 2 h1 uv

Elliptic Cylindrical p
(u, v, z) a cosh u cos v a sinh u sin v z a sinh2 u + sin2 v h1 1

Prolate Spheroidal p
(ξ, η, φ) a sinh ξ sin η cos φ a sinh ξ sin η sin φ a cosh ξ cos η a sinh2 ξ + sin2 η h1 a sinh ξ sin η

1.5 Differential Relations


1.5.1 Conservation form
The equations are first written in conservation form

density + ∇ · flux = source (50)
∂t
1 FUNDAMENTALS 6

for a fixed (Eulerian) control volume in an inertial reference frame by using the divergence theorem.

∂ρ
+ ∇ · (ρu) = 0 (51)
∂t

(ρu) + ∇ · (ρuu − T) = ρG (52)
∂t
|u|2 |u|2
     

ρ e+ + ∇ · ρu e + −T·u+q = ρG · u (53)
∂t 2 2
∂  q
(ρs) + ∇ · ρus + ≥ 0 (54)
∂t T

1.6 Convective Form


This form uses the convective or material derivative
D ∂
= +u·∇ (55)
Dt ∂t


= −ρ∇ · u (56)
Dt
Du
ρ = −∇P + ∇ · τ + ρG (57)
Dt
|u|2

D
ρ e+ = ∇ · (T · u) − ∇ · q + ρG · u (58)
Dt 2
Ds q
ρ ≥ −∇ · (59)
Dt T
Alternate forms of the energy equation:

|u|2
 
D
ρ e+ = −∇ · (P u) + ∇ · (τ · u) − ∇ · q + ρG · u (60)
Dt 2
Formulation using enthalpy h = e + P/ρ

|u|2
 
D ∂P
ρ h+ = + ∇ · (τ · u) − ∇ · q + ρG · u (61)
Dt 2 ∂t

Mechanical energy equation

D |u|2
ρ = − (u · ∇) P + u · ∇ · τ + ρG · u (62)
Dt 2
Thermal energy equation
De Dv
= −P + vτ :∇u − v∇ · q (63)
Dt Dt
Dissipation
∂ui
Υ = τ :∇u = τik sum on i and k (64)
∂xk
Entropy
 2
Ds q Υ ∇T
ρ = −∇ · + +k (65)
Dt T T T
1 FUNDAMENTALS 7

1.7 Divergence of Viscous Stress


For a fluid with constant µ and µv , the divergence of the viscous stress in Cartesian coordinates can be
reduced to:
 
1
∇ · τ = µ∇2 u + µv + µ ∇(∇ · u) (66)
3

1.8 Euler Equations


Inviscid, no heat transfer, no body forces.


= −ρ∇ · u (67)
Dt
Du
ρ = −∇P (68)
Dt
|u|2

D ∂P
ρ h+ = (69)
Dt 2 ∂t
Ds
≥ 0 (70)
Dt

1.9 Bernoulli Equation


Consider the unsteady energy equation in the form

|u|2
 
D ∂P
ρ h+ = + ∇ · (τ · u) − ∇ · q + ρG · u (71)
Dt 2 ∂t
and further suppose that the external force field G is conservative and can be derived from a potential Φ as

G = −∇Φ (72)

then if Φ(x) only, we have

|u|2
 
D ∂P
ρ h+ +Φ = + ∇ · (τ · u) − ∇ · q (73)
Dt 2 ∂t

The Bernoulli constant is


|u|2
H =h+ +Φ (74)
2
In the absence of unsteadiness, viscous forces and heat transfer we have

|u|2
 
u·∇ h+ +Φ =0 (75)
2

Or
H◦ = constant on streamlines
For the ordinary case of isentropic flow of an incompressible fluid dh = dP/ρ◦ in a uniform gravitational
field Φ = g(z − z◦ ), we have the standard result

|u|2
P + ρ◦ + ρ◦ gz = constant (76)
2
1 FUNDAMENTALS 8

1.10 Vorticity
Vorticity is defined as
ω ≡∇×u (77)
and the vector identities can be used to obtain
|u|2
(u · ∇)u = ∇( ) − u × (∇ × u) (78)
2
The momentum equation can be reformulated to read:

|u|2
 
∂u ∇·τ
∇H = ∇ h + +Φ =− + u × ω + T ∇s + (79)
2 ∂t ρ
1 FUNDAMENTALS 9

1.11 Dimensional Analysis


Fundamental Dimensions
L length meter (m)
M mass kilogram (kg)
T time second (s)
θ temperature Kelvin (K)
I current Ampere (A)
Some derived dimensional units
force Newton (N) M LT −2
pressure Pascal (Pa) M L−1 T −2
bar = 105 Pa
energy Joule (J) M L2 T −2
frequency Hertz (Hz) T −1
power Watt (W) M L2 T −3
viscosity (µ) Poise (P) M L−1 T −1

Pi Theorem Given n dimensional variables X1 , X2 , . . ., Xn , and f independent fundamental dimensions


(at most 5) involved in the problem:

1. The number of dimensionally independent variables r is

r≤f

2. The number p = n - r of dimensionless variables Πi


Xi
Πi =
X1α1 X2α2
· · · Xrαr

that can be formed is


p≥n−f

Conventional Dimensionless Numbers


Reynolds Re ρU L/µ
Mach Ma U/c
Prandtl Pr µcP /k = ν/κ
Strouhal St L/U T
Knudsen Kn Λ/L
Peclet Pe U L/κ
Schmidt Sc ν/D
Lewis Le D/κ
Reference conditions: U , velocity; µ, vicosity; D, mass diffusivity; k, thermal conductivity; L, length scale;
T , time scale; c, sound speed; Λ, mean free path; cP , specific heat at constant pressure.

Parameters for Air and Water Values given for nominal standard conditions 20 C and 1 bar.
1 FUNDAMENTALS 10

Air Water
shear viscosity µ (kg/ms) 1.8×10−5 1.00×10−3
kinematic viscosity ν (m2 /s) 1.5×10−5 1.0×10−6
thermal conductivity k (W/mK) 2.54×10−2 0.589
thermal diffusivity κ (m2 /s) 2.1×10−5 1.4×10−7
specific heat cp (J/kgK) 1004. 4182.
sound speed c (m/s) 343.3 1484
density ρ (kg/m3 ) 1.2 998.
gas constant R (m2 /s2 K) 287 462.
thermal expansion α (K−1 ) 3.3×10−4 2.1×10−4
isentropic compressibility κs (Pa−1 ) 7.01×10−6 4.5×10−10

Prandtl number Pr .72 7.1


Fundamental derivative Γ 1.205 4.4
ratio of specific heats γ 1.4 1.007
Grüneisen coefficient G 0.40 0.11
2 THERMODYNAMICS 11

2 Thermodynamics
2.1 Thermodynamic potentials and fundamental relations

energy
e(s, v)
de = T ds − P dv (80)
enthalpy h(s, P ) = e + Pv
dh = T ds + v dP (81)
Helmholtz f (T, v) = e − Ts
df = −s dT − P dv (82)
Gibbs g(T, P ) = e − Ts + Pv
dg = −s dT + v dP (83)

2.2 Maxwell relations


 
∂T ∂P
= − (84)
∂v s ∂s v
 
∂T ∂v
= (85)
∂P s ∂s P
 
∂s ∂P
= (86)
∂v T ∂T v
 
∂s ∂v
= − (87)
∂P T ∂T P

Calculus identities:
 
∂F ∂F
F (x, y, . . . ) dF = dx + dy + . . . (88)
∂x y,z,... ∂y x,z,...

 ∂f
∂x ∂y
=− x (89)
∂y f
∂f
∂x
y

∂x 1
=  (90)
∂f y
∂f
∂x
y
2 THERMODYNAMICS 12

2.3 Various defined quantities



∂e
specific heat at constant volume cv ≡ (91)
∂T v

∂h
specific heat at constant pressure cp ≡ (92)
∂T P
cp
ratio of specific heats γ ≡ (93)
c
sv 
∂P
sound speed c ≡ (94)
∂ρ s

1 ∂v
coefficient of thermal expansion α ≡ (95)
v ∂T P

1 ∂v
isothermal compressibility KT ≡ − (96)
v ∂P T

1 ∂v 1
isentropic compressibility Ks ≡ − = 2 (97)
v ∂P s ρc

Specific heat relationships


 
∂P ∂P
KT = γKs or =γ (98)
∂v
s ∂v T
   2
∂P ∂v
cp − cv = −T (99)
∂v T ∂T P
Fundamental derivative

c4 ∂ 2 v

Γ ≡ (100)
2v 3 ∂P 2 s
v3 ∂ 2 P
 
= (101)
2c2 ∂v 2 s
 
∂c
= 1 + ρc (102)
∂P
 2  2 s 
1 v ∂ h
= +1 (103)
2 c2 ∂v 2 s

Sound speed (squared)


∂P
c2 ≡ (104)
∂ρ s

∂P
= −v 2 (105)
∂v s
v
= (106)
Ks
v
= γ (107)
Kt
Grüneisen Coefficient
2 THERMODYNAMICS 13


G ≡ (108)
cv KT
 
∂P
= v (109)
∂e v

= (110)
cp Ks
 
v ∂T
= − (111)
T ∂v s

2.4 v(P, s) relation

dv T ds
= −Ks dP + Γ(Ks dP )2 + α + ... (112)
v cp
 2
dP dP T ds
= − +Γ +G + ... (113)
ρc2 ρc2 c2

2.5 Equation of State Construction


Given cv (v, T ) and P (v, T ), integrate
  
∂P
de = cv dT + T − P dv (114)
∂T v

cv ∂P
ds = dT + dv (115)
T ∂T v
along two paths: I: variable T , fixed ρ and II: variable ρ, fixed T .
Energy:
Z T Z ρ  !
∂P dρ
e = e◦ + cv (T, ρ◦ ) dT + P −T (116)
T ρ ∂T ρ ρ2
| ◦ {z } | ◦ {z }
I II

Ideal gas limit ρ◦ → 0,

lim cv (T, ρ◦ ) = cig


v (T ) (117)
ρ◦ →0

The ideal gas limit of I is the ideal gas internal energy


Z T
ig
e (T ) = cig
v (T ) dT (118)
T◦

Ideal gas limit of II is the residual function


Z ρ  !
r ∂P dρ
e (ρ, T ) = P −T (119)
0 ∂T ρ ρ2
and the complete expression for internal energy is

e(ρ, T ) = e◦ + eig (T ) + er (ρ, T ) (120)


Entropy:
Z T Z ρ  !
cv (T, ρ◦ ) ∂P dρ
s = s◦ + dT + − (121)
T◦ T ρ ∂T ρ ρ2
| {z } | ◦ {z }
I II
2 THERMODYNAMICS 14

The ideal gas limit ρ◦ → 0 has to be carried out slightly differently since the ideal gas entropy, unlike the
internal energy, is a function of density and is singular at ρ = 0. Define
T ρ
cig
Z Z
v (T ) dρ
sig = dT − R (122)
T◦ T ρ◦ ρ
where the second integral on the RHS is R ln ρ◦ /ρ. Then compute the residual function by substracting the
singular part before carrying out the integration
Z ρ  !
r 1 ∂P dρ
s (ρ, T ) = R− (123)
0 ρ ∂T ρ ρ
and the complete expression for entropy is

s(ρ, T ) = s◦ + sig (ρ, T ) + sr (ρ, T ) (124)


3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 15

3 Compressible Flow
3.1 Steady Flow
A steady flow must be considered as compressible when the Mach number M = u/c is sufficiently large. In
an isentropic flow, the change in density produced by a speed u can be estimated as
1
∆ρs = c−2 ∆P ∼ − ρM 2 (125)
2
from the energy equation discussed below and the fundamental relation of thermodynamics.
If the flow is unsteady, then the change in the density along the pathlines for inviscid flows without body
forces is

u · ∇u2 1 1 ∂u2
 
1 Dρ 1 ∂P
= −∇ · u = − − − (126)
ρ Dt 2c2 c2 2 ∂t ρ ∂t
This first term is the steady flow condition ∼ M 2 . The second set of terms in the square braces are the
unsteady contributions. These will be significant when the time scale T is comparable to the acoustic transit
time L/c◦ , i.e., T ∼ Lco .

3.1.1 Streamlines and Total Properties


Stream lines X(t; x◦ ) are defined by
dX
=u X = x◦ when t = 0 (127)
dt
which in Cartesian coordinates yields
dx1 dx2 dx3
= = (128)
u1 u2 u3
Total enthalpy is constant along streamlines in adiabatic, steady, inviscid flow

|u|2
ht = h + = constant (129)
2
Velocity along a streamline is given by the energy equation:
p
u = |u| = 2(ht − h) (130)
Total properties are defined in terms of total enthalpy and an idealized isentropic deceleration process along
a streamline. Total pressure is defined by

Pt ≡ P (s◦ , ht ) (131)
Other total properties Tt , ρt , etc. can be computed from the equation of state.

3.2 Quasi-One Dimensional Flow


Adiabatic, frictionless flow:

d(ρuA) = 0 (132)
ρudu = −dP (133)
u2
h+ = constant or dh = −udu (134)
2
ds ≥ 0 (135)
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 16

3.2.1 Isentropic Flow


If ds = 0, then

(dρ)2
dP = c2 dρ + c2 (Γ − 1) + ... (136)
ρ
For isentropic flow, the quasi-one-dimensional equations can be written in terms of the Mach number as:

1 dρ M 2 1 dA
= (137)
ρ dx 1 − M 2 A dx
1 dP M 2 1 dA
= (138)
ρc2 dx 1 − M 2 A dx
1 du 1 1 dA
= − 2
(139)
u dx 1 − M A dx
1 dM 1 + (Γ − 1)M 2 1 dA
= − (140)
M dx 1 − M2 A dx
2
1 dh M 1 dA
= (141)
c2 dx 1 − M 2 A dx
At a throat, the gradient in Mach number is:
2
Γ d2 A

dM
= (142)
dx 2A dx2

Constant-Γ Gas If the value of Γ is assumed to be constant, the quasi-one dimensional equations can be
integrated to yield:
ρt 1
1 + (Γ − 1)M 2
 2(Γ−1)
= (143)
ρ
 Γ−1
ct ρt 1/2
= = 1 + (Γ − 1)M 2 (144)
c ρ
ht
1 + (Γ − 1)M 2

= (145)
h
1/2
M2

u = ct (146)
1 + (Γ − 1)M 2
 Γ
1 1 + (Γ − 1)M 2 2(Γ−1)

A
= (147)
A∗ M Γ
 
P − Pt 1 − 2Γ−1
= 1 + (Γ − 1)M 2 2(Γ−1) − 1 (148)
ρt c2t 2Γ − 1
(149)

Ideal Gas For an ideal gas P = ρRT and e = e(T ) only. In that case, we have
Z T Z T
cP (T )
h(T ) = e + RT = h◦ + cv (T ) dT, s = s◦ + dT − R ln(P/P◦ ) (150)
T◦ T◦ T

and you can show that Γ is given by:


γ + 1 γ − 1 T dγ
Γig = + (151)
2 2 γ dT
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 17

Perfect or Constant-γ Gas Perfect gas results for isentropic flow can be derived from the equation of
state
γR
P = ρRT h = cp T cp = (152)
γ−1
the value of Γ for a perfect gas,
γ+1
Γpg = (153)
2
the energy integral,  
γ−1 2
Tt = T 1+ M (154)
2
and the expression for entropy
T
s − so = cp ln − R ln P/Po (155)
To
or
T
s − so = cv ln − R ln ρ/ρo
To

Tt γ−1 2
= 1+ M (156)
T 2
γ
  γ−1
Pt Tt
= (157)
P T
  γ−11
ρt Tt
= (158)
ρ T

Mach Number–Area Relationship


  γ+1
 2(γ−1)
A 1 2 γ−1 2
= 1+ M (159)
A∗ M γ+1 2
Choked flow mass flux
 γ+1
 2(γ−1)
2
Ṁ = ct ρt A∗ (160)
γ+1
or
 γ+1
 2(γ−1)
√ 2 P
Ṁ = γ √ t A∗
γ+1 RTt
Velocity-Mach number relationship
M
u = ct q (161)
γ−1 2
1+ 2 M

Alternative reference speeds


r r
∗ γ+1 ∗ γ+1
ct = c umax = c (162)
2 γ−1
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 18

3.3 Heat and Friction


Constant-area, steady flow with friction F and heat addition Q

ρu = ṁ = constant (163)
ρudu + dP = −F dx (164)
dh + udu = Qdx (165)
 
1 F
ds = Q+ dx (166)
T ρ

F is the frictional stress per unit length of the duct. In terms of the Fanning friction factor f
2
F = f ρu2 (167)
D
where D is the hydraulic diameter of the duct D = 4×area/perimeter. Note that the conventional D’Arcy
or Moody friction factor λ = 4 f .
Q is the energy addition as heat per unit mass and unit length of the duct. If the heat flux into the fluid
is q̇, then we have
q̇ 4
Q= (168)
ρu D

3.3.1 Fanno Flow


Constant-area, adiabatic, steady flow with friction only:

ρu = ṁ = constant (169)
ρudu + dP = −F dx (170)
u2
h+ = ht = constant (171)
2
(172)

Change in entropy with volume along Fanno line, h + 1/2ṁ2 v 2 =ht

c2 − u2

ds
T = (173)
dv F anno v(1 + G)

3.3.2 Rayleigh Flow


Constant-area, steady flow with heat transfer only:

ρu = ṁ = constant (174)
P + ρu2 = I (175)
dh + udu = Qdx (176)
(177)

Change in entropy with volume along Rayleigh line, P + ṁ2 v = I

c2 − u2

ds
T = (178)
dv Rayleigh vG
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 19

3.4 Shock Jump Conditions


The basic jump conditions,

ρ1 w1 = ρ2 w2 (179)
P1 + ρ1 w12 = P2 + ρ2 w22 (180)
w2 w2
h1 + 1 = h2 + 2 (181)
2 2
s2 ≥ s1 (182)
or defining [f ] ≡ f2 - f1

[ρw] = 0 (183)
P + ρw2
 
= 0 (184)
w2
 
h+ = 0 (185)
2
[s] ≥ 0 (186)
The Rayleigh line:
P2 − P1
= −(ρ1 w1 )2 = −(ρ2 w2 )2 (187)
v2 − v1
or
[P ]
= −(ρw)2 (188)
[v]
Rankine-Hugoniot relation:

h2 − h1 = (P2 − P1 )(v2 + v1 )/2 or e2 − e1 = (P2 + P1 )(v1 − v2 )/2 (189)


Velocity-P v relation
p
[w]2 = −[P ][v] or w2 − w1 = − −(P2 − P1 )(v2 − v1 ) (190)
Alternate relations useful for numerical solution

 
ρ1
P2 = P1 + ρ1 w12 1 − (191)
ρ2
"  2 #
1 ρ1
h2 = h1 + w12 1 − (192)
2 ρ2

3.4.1 Lab frame (moving shock) versions


Shock velocity

w1 = Us (193)
Particle (fluid) velocity in laboratory frame

w2 = Us − up (194)
Jump conditions
ρ2 (Us − up ) = ρ1 Us (195)
P2 = P1 + ρ1 Us up (196)
h2 = h1 + up (Us − up /2) (197)
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 20

Kinetic energy:

u2p 1
= (P2 − P1 )(v1 − v2 )
2 2

3.5 Perfect Gas Results

[P ] 2γ
M12 − 1

= (198)
P1 γ+1
 
[w] 2 1
= − M1 − (199)
c1 γ+1 M1
 
[v] 2 1
= − 1− 2 (200)
v1 γ+1 M1
[s] Pt2
= − ln (201)
R Pt1
γ
γ+1 2
  γ−1
Pt2 1 M1
=
 2 
(202)
Pt1 
2γ γ−1
1
 γ−1  γ − 1 2
M2 − 1+ M1
γ+1 1 γ+1 2

Shock adiabat or Hugoniot:


γ + 1 v2

P2 γ − 1 v1
= (203)
P1 γ + 1 v2
−1
γ − 1 v1
Some alternatives

P2 2γ
M12 − 1

= 1+ (204)
P1 γ+1
2γ γ−1
= M12 − (205)
γ+1 γ+1
ρ2 γ+1
= (206)
ρ1 γ − 1 + 2/M12
2
M12 +
γ−1
M22 = (207)

M2 − 1
γ−1 1
Prandtl’s relation

w1 w2 = c∗2 (208)
where c∗ is the sound speed at a sonic point obtained in a fictitious isentropic process in the upstream flow.

w2
r
∗ γ−1
c = 2 ht , ht = h + (209)
γ+1 2

3.6 Reflected Shock Waves


Reflected shock velocity UR in terms of the velocity u2 and density ρ2 behind the incident shock or detonation
wave, and the density ρ3 behind the reflected shock.
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 21

u2
UR = ρ3 (210)
−1
ρ2
Pressure P3 behind reflected shock:

ρ3 u 2
P 3 = P 2 + ρ3 2 (211)
−1
ρ2
Enthalpy h3 behind reflected shock:
ρ3
+1
u22 ρ2
h3 = h2 + (212)
2 ρ3 − 1
ρ2
Perfect gas result for incident shock waves:
P2
(3γ − 1) − (γ − 1)
P3 P1
= (213)
P2 P2
(γ − 1) + (γ + 1)
P1
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 22

3.7 Detonation Waves


Jump conditions:

ρ1 w1 = ρ2 w2 (214)
P1 + ρ1 w12 = P2 + ρ2 w22 (215)
w2 w2
h1 + 1 = h2 + 2 (216)
2 2
s2 ≥ s1 (217)

3.8 Perfect-Gas, 2-γ Model


Perfect gas with energy release q, different values of γ and R in reactants and products.

h1 = cp1 T (218)
h2 = cp2 T − q (219)
P1 = ρ1 R 1 T 1 (220)
P2 = ρ2 R 2 T 2 (221)
γ1 R1
cp1 = (222)
γ1 − 1
γ2 R2
cp2 = (223)
γ2 − 1
(224)

Substitute into the jump conditions to yield:

P2 1 + γ1 M12
= (225)
P1 1 + γ2 M22

v2 γ2 M22 1 + γ1 M12
= (226)
v1 γ1 M12 1 + γ2 M22
1 1 q
+ M2 + 2
T2 γ1 R1 γ1 − 1 2 1 c1
= (227)
T1 γ2 R2 1 1
+ M22
γ2 − 1 2

Chapman-Jouguet Conditions Isentrope, Hugoniot and Rayleigh lines are all tangent at the CJ point
 
PCJ − P1 ∂P ∂P
= = (228)
vCJ − V1 ∂v Hugoniot ∂v s

which implies that the product velocity is sonic relative to the wave

w2,CJ = c2 (229)
Entropy variation along adiabat
1
ds = (v1 − v)2 dṁ2 (230)
2T
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 23

Jouguet’s Rule
" #
w2 − c2
 
G ∂P ∆P
= 1 − (v1 − v) − (231)
v2 2v ∂v Hug ∆v
where G is the Grúniesen coefficient.
The flow downstream of a detonation is subsonic relative to the wave for points above the CJ state and
supersonic for states below.

3.8.1 2-γ Solution


Mach Number for upper CJ (detonation) point
s s
(γ1 + γ2 )(γ2 − 1) (γ2 − γ1 )(γ2 + 1)
MCJ = H + + H+ (232)
2γ1 (γ1 − 1) 2γ1 (γ1 − 1)

where the parameter H is the nondimensional energy release

(γ2 − 1)(γ2 + 1)q


H= (233)
2γ1 R1 T1
CJ pressure
2
PCJ γ1 MCJ +1
= (234)
P1 γ2 + 1
CJ density
2
ρCJ γ1 (γ2 + 1)MCJ
= 2 ) (235)
ρ1 γ2 (1 + γ1 MCJ
CJ temperature
TCJ PCJ R1 ρ1
= (236)
T1 P1 R2 ρCJ
Strong detonation approximation MCJ  1

q
UCJ ≈ 2(γ22 − 1)q (237)
γ2 + 1
ρCJ ≈ ρ1 (238)
γ2
1 2
PCJ ≈ ρ1 UCJ (239)
γ2 + 1
(240)

3.8.2 High-Explosives
For high-explosives, the same jump conditions apply but the ideal gas equation of state is no longer appro-
priate for the products. A simple way to deal with this problem is through the nondimensional slope γs of
the principal isentrope, i.e., the isentrope passing through the CJ point:

v ∂P
γs ≡ − (241)
P ∂v s

Note that for a perfect gas, γs is identical to γ = cp /cv , the ratio of specific heats. In general, if the principal
isentrope can be expressed as a power law:

P v k = constant (242)
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 24

then γs = k. For high explosive products, γs ≈ 3. From the definition of the CJ point, we have that the
slope of the Rayleigh line and isentrope are equal at the CJ point:

∂P PCJ − P1 PCJ
= =− γs,CJ (243)
∂v s vCJ − V1 vCJ

From the mass conservation equation,


γs,CJ
vCJ = v1 (244)
γs,CJ + 1
and from momentum conservation, with PCJ  P1 , we have
2
ρ1 UCJ
PCJ = (245)
γs,CJ + 1
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 25

3.9 Weak shock waves


Nondimensional pressure jump
[P ]
Π= (246)
ρc2
A useful version of the jump conditions (exact):

[w] [v] [w] [v]


Π = −M1 = −M12 = M1 (247)
c1 v1 c1 v1
Thermodynamic expansions:

[v]
= −Π + ΓΠ2 + O(Π)3 (248)
v1
 2
[v] [v] 3
Π = − +Γ + O ([v]) (249)
v1 v1

Linearized jump conditions:

[w] Γ 2
− = Π− Π + O(Π)3 (250)
c1 2
 2
Γ [w] [w]
M1 = 1− +O (251)
2 c1 c1
Γ
M1 = 1 + Π + O(Π)2 (252)
2
Γ
M2 = 1 − Π + O(Π)2 (253)
2
[c]
= (Γ − 1)Π + O(Π)2 (254)
c1
M1 − 1 ≈ 1 − M2 (255)

Prandtl’s relation
1 1
c∗ ≈ w1 + [w] or ≈ w2 − [w] (256)
2 2
Change in entropy for weak waves:
 3
T [s] 1 1 [v]
= ΓΠ3 + . . . or = − Γ + ... (257)
c21 6 6 v
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 26

3.10 Acoustics
Simple waves
∆P = c2 ∆ρ (258)
∆P = ±ρc∆u (259)
+ for right-moving waves, - for left-moving waves
Acoustic Potential φ

u = ∇φ (260)
∂φ
P0 = −ρo (261)
∂t
ρo ∂φ
ρ0 = − 2 (262)
co ∂t

Potential Equation

1 ∂2φ
∇2 φ − =0 (263)
c2o ∂t2
d’Alembert’s solution for planar (1D) waves

φ = f (x − co t) + g(x + co t) (264)

Acoustic Impedance The specific acoustic impedance of a medium is defined as

P0
z= (265)
|u|
For a planar wavefront in a homogeneous medium z = ±ρc, depending on the direction of propagation.

Transmission coefficients A plane wave in medium 1 is normally incident on an interface with medium
2. Incident (i) and transmitted wave (t)

2z1
ut /ui = (266)
z2 + z1
2z2
Pt0 /Pi0 = (267)
z2 + z1
Harmonic waves (planar)
ω 2π 2π
φ = A exp i(wt − kx) + B exp i(wt + kx) c= k= ω= = 2πf (268)
k λ T
Spherical waves

f (t − r/c) g(t + r/c)


φ= + (269)
r r
Spherical source strength Q, [Q] = L3 T −1

Q(t) = lim 4πr2 ur (270)


r→0

potential function

Q(t − r/c)
φ(r, t) = − (271)
4πr
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 27

Energy flux

Φ = P 0u (272)
Acoustic intensity for harmonic waves
T 0
P 2
Z
1
I =< Φ >= Φ dt = rms (273)
T 0 ρc
Decibel scale of acoustic intensity

dB = 10 log10 (I/Iref ) Iref = 10−12 W/m2 (274)


or
0 0 0
dB = 20 log10 (Prms /Pref ) Pref = 2 × 10−10 atm (275)
2 −1
Cylindrical waves, q source strength per unit length [q] = L T
Z t−r/c
1 q(η) dη
φ(r, t) = − p (276)
2π −∞ (t − η)2 − r2 /c2
or
Z ∞
1
φ(r, t) = − q(t − r/c cosh ξ) dξ (277)
2π 0

3.11 Multipole Expansion


Potential from a distribution of volume sources, strength q per unit source volume

q(xs , t − R/c)
Z
1
φ(x, t) = − dVs R = |x − xs | (278)
4π Vs R

Harmonic source
q = f (x) exp(−iωt)
Potential function
exp i(kR − ωt)
Z
1
φ(x, t) = − f (xs ) dVs (279)
4π Vs R
Compact source approximation:

1. source distribution is in bounded region around the origin xs < a,


and small a  r = |x|
2. source distribution is compact ka << 1 or λ  a, so that the phase factor exp ikR does not vary too
much across the source

Multipole expansion:

exp ikR X (−xs · ∇x )n exp ikr
 
= (280)
R n=0
n! r
Series expansion of potential
φ = φ0 + φ1 + φ2 + . . . (281)
Monopole term
exp i(kr − ωt)
Z
0
φ (x, t) = − f (xs )dVs (282)
4πr Vs
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 28

Dipole term  
ikx · D i
φ1 (x, t) = 1+ exp i(kr − ωt) (283)
4πr2 kr
Dipole moment vector D Z
D= xs f (xs )dVs (284)
Vs

Quadrupole term
k2
 
2 3i 3 X
φ (x, t) = 1+ − exp i(kr − ωt) xi xj Qij (285)
4πr3 kr k 2 r2 i,j

Quadrupole moments Qik Z


1
Qij = xs,i xs,j f (xs )dVs (286)
2 Vs

3.12 Baffled (surface) source


Rayleigh’s formula for the potential

un (xs , t − R/c)
Z
1
φ=− dA (287)
2π R
Normal component of the source surface velocity

un = u · n̂ (288)

Harmonic source

un = f (x) exp(−iwt)
Fraunhofer conditions |xs | ≤ a
aa
1
λr
Approximate solution:
exp i(kr − wt)
Z
φ=− f (xs ) exp iκ · xs dA
2πr As
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 29

3.13 1-D Unsteady Flow


The primitive variable version of the equations is:

∂ρ
+ ∇ · (ρu) = 0 (289)
∂t
∂ρu
+ ∇ · (ρuu) = −∇P (290)
∂t
u2 u2
  

ρ e+ + ∇ · ρu(h + ) = 0 (291)
∂t 2 2
∂s
+ ∇ · (us) ≥ 0 (292)
∂t
(293)
Alternative version

1 Dρ
= −∇ · u (294)
ρ Dt
Du
ρ = −∇P (295)
Dt
u2

D ∂P
ρ h+ = (296)
Dt 2 ∂t
Ds
≥ 0 (297)
Dt
The characteristic version of the equations for isentropic flow (s = constant) is:
d dx
(u ± F ) = 0 on C ± : =u±c (298)
dt dt
This is equivalent to:
∂ ∂
(u ± F ) + (u ± c) (u ± F ) = 0 (299)
∂t ∂x
Riemann invariants:
Z Z Z
c dP dc
F = dρ= = (300)
ρ ρc Γ−1
Bending of characteristics:
d Γ
(u + c) = (301)
dP ρc
For an ideal gas:
2c
F = (302)
γ−1
Pressure-velocity relationship for expansion waves moving to the right into state (1), final state (2) with
velocity u2 < 0.
  2γ
P2 γ − 1 u2 γ−1 −2c1
= 1+ < u2 ≤ 0 (303)
P1 2 c1 γ−1
Shock waves moving to the right into state (1), final state (2) with velocity u2 > 0.
 s 
 2  2
[P ] γ(γ + 1) u2 4 c1
= 1 + 1 +  u2 > 0 (304)
P1 4 c1 γ + 1 u2
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 30

Shock Tube Performance


   −2γ 4  
P4 c1 γ4 − 1 1 γ4 −1
2γ1
Ms2 − 1

= 1− Ms − 1+ (305)
P1 c4 γ + 1 Ms γ1 + 1

Limiting shock Mach number for P4 /P1 → ∞


c4 γ1 + 1
Ms → (306)
c1 γ4 − 1
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 31

3.14 2-D Steady Flow


3.14.1 Oblique Shock Waves
Geometry:

w1 = u1 sin β (307)
w2 = u2 sin(β − θ) (308)
v = u1 cos β = u2 cos(β − θ) (309)

ρ2 w1 tan β
= = (310)
ρ1 w2 tan(β − θ)
Shock Polar

[w] M1 tan θ
− = (311)
c1 cos β(1 + tan β tan θ)
[P ] M12 tan θ
2 = (312)
ρ1 c1 cot β + tan θ
Real fluid results

w2 = f (w1 ) normal shock jump conditions (313)


−1
β = sin (w1 /u1 ) (314)
!
w 2
θ = β − tan−1 p 2 (315)
u1 − w12
Perfect gas result

2 cot β M12 sin2 β − 1



tan θ = (316)
(γ + 1)M12 − 2 M12 sin2 β − 1


Mach angle
1
µ = sin−1 (317)
M

3.14.2 Weak Oblique Waves


Results are all for C + family of waves, take θ → -θ for C − family.

 2
Γ1 1 [w] [w]
β = µ− p + O (318)
2 M12 − 1 c1 c1
p 2
M12 − 1 [w]
 
[w]
θ = − 2 +O (319)
M1 c1 c1
2
[P ] M
= p 21 θ + O(θ)2 (320)
ρ1 c21 M1 − 1
T1 [s] Γ1 M16
= θ3 + O(θ)4 (321)
c21 6 (M12 − 1)3/2
Perfect Gas Results

[P ] γM 2
= p 2 1 θ + O(θ)2 (322)
P1 M1 − 1
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 32

3.14.3 Prandtl-Meyer Expansion


d u1
q
d θ = − M12 − 1 (323)
u1
Function ω, d θ = -d ω

M2 − 1 d M
dω≡ (324)
1 + (Γ − 1)M 2 M
Perfect gas result
r r 
γ+1 γ−1 p
ω(M ) = tan−1 (M 2 − 1) − tan−1 M 2 − 1 (325)
γ−1 γ+1
Maximum turning angle
r 
π γ+1
ωmax = −1 (326)
2 γ−1

3.14.4 Inviscid Flow


Crocco-Vaszonyi Relation

∂u u2
+ (∇ × u) × u = T ∇S − ∇(h + ) (327)
∂t 2

3.14.5 Potential Flow


Steady, homoentropic, homoenthalpic, inviscid:

∇ · (ρu) = 0 (328)
∇×u = 0 (329)
u2
h+ = constant (330)
2
or with u = ∇φ = (φx , φy )

(φ2x − c2 )φxx + (φ2y − c2 )φyy + 2φx φy φxy = 0 (331)


Linearized potential flow:

u = U∞ + φ0x (332)
v = φ0y (333)
2
− 1 φ0xx − φ0yy

0 = M∞ (334)

Wave equation solution


p
λ= 2 −1
M∞ φ0 = f (x − λy) + g(x + λy) (335)
Boundary conditions for slender 2-D (Cartesian) bodies y(x)

U∞ dy
f 0 (ξ) = − y≥0 (336)
λ dx ξ
Prandtl-Glauert Scaling for subsonic flows
p
φ(x, y) = φinc (x, 2 y)
1 − M∞ ∇2 φinc = 0 (337)
3 COMPRESSIBLE FLOW 33

Prandtl-Glauert Rule

Cpinc
Cp = p (338)
2
1 − M∞

3.14.6 Natural Coordinates

∂ ∂ ∂
= cos θ − sin θ (339)
∂x ∂s ∂n
∂ ∂ ∂
= sin θ + cos θ (340)
∂y ∂s ∂n
u = U cos θ (341)
v = U sin θ (342)
The transformed equations of motion are:

∂ρU ∂θ
+ ρU = 0 (343)
∂s ∂n
∂U ∂P
ρU + = 0 (344)
∂s ∂s
∂θ ∂P
ρU 2 + = 0 (345)
∂s ∂n
∂θ ∂U
ωz = U − = 0 (346)
∂s ∂n
Curvature of stream lines, R = radius of curvature
∂θ 1
= (347)
∂s R
Vorticity production

1 ∂Po (T − To ) ∂S
ωz = − + (348)
U ρo ∂n U ∂n
Elimination of pressure dP = c2 dρ

∂U ∂θ
(M 2 − 1) −U = 0 (349)
∂s ∂n
∂U ∂θ
−U = 0 (350)
∂n ∂s

3.14.7 Method of Characteristics

∂ 1 ∂
(ω − θ) + √ (ω − θ) = 0 (351)
∂s M − 1 ∂n
2

∂ 1 ∂
(ω + θ) − √ (ω + θ) = 0 (352)
∂s 2
M −1 ∂n
(353)
Characteristic directions
dn 1
C± = ±√ = ± tan µ (354)
ds M2 − 1
Invariants

J ± = θ ∓ ω = constant on C ± (355)
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 34

4 Incompressible, Inviscid Flow


4.1 Velocity Field Decomposition
Split the velocity field into two parts: irrotational ue , and rotational (vortical) uv .

u = ue + uv (356)

Irrotational Flow Define the irrotational portion of the flow by the following two conditions:

∇ × ue = 0 (357)
∇ · ue = e(x, t) volume source distribution (358)

This is satisfied by deriving ue from a velocity potential φ

ue = ∇φ (359)
∇2 φ = e(x, t) (360)

Rotational Flow Define the rotational part of the flow by:

∇ · uv = 0 (361)
∇ × uv = ω(x, t) vorticity source distribution (362)

This is satisfied by deriving uv from a vector potential B

uv = ∇ × B (363)
∇·B = 0 choice of gauge (364)
2
∇ B = −ω(x, t) (365)

4.2 Solutions of Laplace’s Equation


The equation ∇2 φ = e is known as Laplaces equation and can be solved by the technique of Green’s functions:
Z
φ(x, t) = G(x|ξ)e(ξ, t)dVξ (366)

ξ
For a infinite domain, Green’s function is the solution to

∇2 G = δ(x − ξ) (367)
1 1 1
G = − =− (368)
4π |x − ξ| 4πr
r = |r| r=x−ξ (369)

This leads to the following solutions for the potentials

Z
1 e(ξ, t)
φ(x, t) = − dVξ (370)
4π Ω r
ξ
Z
1 ω(ξ, t)
B(x, t) = dVξ (371)
4π Ω r
ξ
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 35

The velocity fields are

Z
1 re(ξ, t)
ue (x, t) = dVξ (372)
4π Ω r3
ξ
r × ω(ξ, t)
Z
1
uv (x, t) = − dVξ (373)
4π Ω r3
ξ

If the domain is finite or there are surfaces (stationary or moving bodies, free surfaces, boundaries), then
an additional component of velocity, u0 , must be added to insure that the boundary conditions (described
subsequently) are satisfied. This additional component will be a source-free, ∇ · u0 = 0, irrotational ∇ × u0
= 0 field. The general solution for the velocity field will then be

u = ue + uv + u0 (374)

4.3 Boundary Conditions


Solid Boundaries In general, at an impermeable boundary ∂Ω, there is no relative motion between the
fluid and boundary in the local direction n̂ normal to the boundary surface.

u · n̂ = u∂Ω · n̂ on the surface ∂Ω (375)


In particular, if the surface is stationary, the normal component of velocity must vanish on the surface

u · n̂ = 0 on a stationary surface ∂Ω (376)


For an ideal or inviscid fluid, there is no restriction on the velocity tangential to the boundary, slip boundary
conditions.

u · t̂ arbitrary on the surface ∂Ω (377)


For a real or viscous fluid, the tangential component is zero, since the relative velocity between fluid and
surface must vanish, the no-slip condition.

u=0 on the surface ∂Ω (378)

Fluid Boundaries At an internal or free surface of an ideal fluid, the normal components of the velocity
have to be equal on each side of the surface

u1 · n̂ = u2 · n̂ = u∂Ω · n̂ (379)
and the interface has to be in mechanical equilibrium (in the absence of surface forces such as interfacial
tension)

P1 = P2 (380)

4.4 Streamfunction
The vector potential in flows that are two dimensional or have certain symmetries can be simplified to one
component that can be represented as a scalar function known as the streamfunction ψ. The exact form of
the streamfunction depends on the nature of the symmetry and related system of coordinates.
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 36

4.4.1 2-D Cartesian Flows


Compressible In a steady two-dimensional compressible flow:
∂ρu ∂ρv
∇ · ρu = 0 u = (u, v) x = (x, y) + =0 (381)
∂x ∂y
The streamfunction is:
1 ∂ψ 1 ∂ψ
u= v=− (382)
ρ ∂y ρ ∂x

Incompressible The density ρ is a constant


∂u ∂v
∇·u=0 u = (u, v) x = (x, y) + =0 (383)
∂x ∂y
The streamfunction defined by
∂ψ ∂ψ
u= v=− (384)
∂y ∂x
will identically satisfy the continuity equation as long as

∂2ψ ∂2ψ
− =0 (385)
∂x∂y ∂y∂x

which is always true as long as the function ψ(x, y) has continuous 2nd derivatives.
Stream lines (or surfaces in 3-D flows) are defined by ψ = constant. The normal to the stream surface is
∇ψ
n̂ψ = (386)
|∇ψ|
Integration of the differential of the stream function along a path L connecting points x1 and x2 in the plane
can be interpreted as volume flux across the path

dψ = u · n̂L dl = −v dx + u dy (387)
Z Z
dψ = ψ2 − ψ1 = u · n̂L dl = volume flux across L (388)
L L

where ψ1 = ψ(x1 ) and ψ2 = ψ(x2 ). For compressible flows, the difference in the streamfunction can be
interpreted as the mass flux rather than the volume flux.
For this flow, the streamfunction is exactly the nonzero component of the vector potential
∂ψ ∂ψ
B = (Bx , By , Bz ) = (0, 0, ψ) u = ∇ × B = x̂ − ŷ (389)
∂y ∂x
and the equation that the streamfunction has to satisfy will be

∂2ψ ∂2ψ
∇2 ψ = + = −ωz (390)
∂x2 ∂y 2
where the z-component of vorticity is
∂v ∂u
ωz = − (391)
∂x ∂y
A special case of this is irrotational flow with ωz = 0.
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 37

4.4.2 Cylindrical Polar Coordinates


In cylindrical polar coordinates (r, θ, z) with u = (ur , uθ , uz )

x = r cos θ (392)
y = r sin θ (393)
z = z (394)
u = ur cos θ − uθ sin θ (395)
v = ur sin θ + uθ cos θ (396)
w = uz (397)
The continuity equation is
1 ∂rur 1 ∂uθ ∂uz
∇·u=0= + + (398)
r ∂r r ∂θ ∂z

Translational Symmetry in z The results given above for 2-D incompressible flow have translational
symmetry in z such that ∂/∂z = 0. These can be rewritten in terms of the streamfunction ψ(r, θ) where

B = (0, 0, ψ) (399)
The velocity components are

1 ∂ψ
ur = (400)
r ∂θ
∂ψ
uθ = − (401)
∂r
The only nonzero component of vorticity is
1 ∂ruθ 1 ∂ur
ωz = − (402)
r ∂r r ∂θ
and the stream function satisfies
   
1 ∂ ∂ψ 1 ∂ 1 ∂ψ
r + = −ωz (403)
r ∂r ∂r r ∂θ r ∂θ

Rotational Symmetry in θ If the flow has rotational symmetry in θ, such that ∂/∂θ = 0, then the
stream function can be defined as
 
ψ
B = 0, , 0 (404)
r
and the velocity components are:

1 ∂ψ
ur = − (405)
r ∂z
1 ∂ψ
uz = (406)
r ∂r
The only nonzero vorticity component is
∂ur ∂uz
ωθ = − (407)
∂z ∂r
The stream function satisfies
   
∂ 1 ∂ψ ∂ 1 ∂ψ
+ = −ωθ (408)
∂z r ∂z ∂r r ∂r
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 38

4.4.3 Spherical Polar Coordinates


This coordinate system (r, φ, θ) results in the continuity equation
1 ∂ 1 ∂uθ 1 ∂
r 2 ur +

2
+ (uφ sin φ) = 0 (409)
r ∂r r sin φ ∂θ r sin φ ∂φ
Note that the r coordinate in this system is defined differently than in the cylindrical polar system discussed
previously. If we denote by r0 the radial distance from the z-axis in the cylindrical polar coordinates, then
r0 = r sin φ. With symmetry in the θ direction ∂/∂θ, the following Stokes’ stream function can be defined
 
ψ
B = 0, 0, (410)
r sin φ
Note that this stream function is identical to that used in the previous discussion of the case of rotational
symmetry in θ for the cylindrical polar coordinate system if we account for the reordering of the vector
components and the differences in the definitions of the radial coordinates.
The velocity components are:

1 ∂ψ
ur = (411)
r2 sin φ ∂φ
1 ∂ψ
uφ = − (412)
r sin φ ∂r
The only non-zero vorticity component is:
1 ∂ruφ 1 ∂ur
ωθ = − (413)
r ∂r r ∂φ
The stream function satisfies
   
1 ∂ 1 ∂ψ 1 ∂ 1 ∂ψ
+ 2
= −ωθ (414)
r ∂r sin φ ∂r r ∂φ r sin φ ∂φ

4.5 Simple Flows


The simplest flows are source-free and irrotational, which can be derived by a potential that satisfies the
Laplace equation, a special case of ue

∇2 φ = 0 ∇·u=0 (415)
In the case of flows, that contain sources and sinks or other singularities, this equation holds everywhere
except at those singular points.

Uniform Flow The simplest solution is a uniform flow U:

φ=U·x u = U = constant (416)


In 2-D cartesian coordinates with U = U x̂, the streamfunction is

ψ = Uy (417)
In spherical polar coordinates, Stokes streamfunction is

U r2
ψ= sin2 φ U = U ẑ (418)
2
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 39

Source Distributions Single source of strength Q(t) located at point ξ 1 . The meaning of Q is the volume
of fluid per unit time introduced or removed at point ξ 1 .

lim 4πr12 u · r̂1 = Q(t) r1 = x − ξ 1 e = Q(t)δ(x − ξ 1 ) (419)


r1 →0

which leads to the solution:

Q(t) r1 Q(t) r̂1 Q(t)


φ=− u= = (420)
4πr1 4πr13 4πr12
For multiple sources, add the individual solutions
k
1 X ri Qi
u=− (421)
4π i=1 ri3
In spherical polar cordinates, Stokes’ stream function for a single source of strength Q at the origin is
Q
ψ=−
cos φ (422)

For a 2-D flow, the source strength q is the volume flux per unit length or area per unit time since the
source can be thought of as a line source.
q q q
u = ur r̂ ur = φ= ln r ψ= θ (423)
2πr 2π 2π

Dipole Consider a source-sink pair of equal strength Q located a distance δ apart. The limiting process

δ→0 Q→∞ δQ → µ (424)


defines a dipole of strength µ. If the direction from the sink to the source is d̂, then the dipole moment
vector can be defined as

d = µd̂ (425)
The dipole potential for spherical (3-D) sources is
d·r
φ=− (426)
4πr3
and the resulting velocity field is
 
1 3d · r d
u= r − (427)
4π r5 r3
If the dipole is aligned with the z-axis, Stokes’ stream function is

µ sin2 φ
ψ= (428)
4πr
and the velocity components are

µ cos φ
ur = (429)
2πr3
µ sin φ
uφ = (430)
4πr3
The dipole potential for 2-D source-sink pairs is
µ cos θ
φ=− (431)
2π r
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 40

and the stream function is


µ sin θ
ψ= (432)
2π r
The velocity components are

µ cos θ
ur = (433)
2π r2
µ sin θ
uθ = (434)
2π r2

Combinations More complex flows can be built up by superposition of the flows discussed above. In
particular, flows over bodies can be found as follows:

half-body: source + uniform flow


sphere: dipole (3-D) + uniform flow
cylinder: dipole (2-D) + uniform flow
closed-body: sources & sinks + uniform flow

4.6 Vorticity
Vorticity fields are divergence free In general, we have ∇ · (∇ × A) ≡ 0 so that the vorticity ω = ∇ × u,
satisfies

∇·ω ≡0 (435)

Transport The vorticity transport equation can be obtained from the curl of the momentum equation:
 
Dω ∇·τ
= (ω · ∇)u − ω(∇ · u) + ∇T × ∇s + ∇ × (436)
Dt ρ
The cross products of the thermodynamic derivatives can be written as
∇P × ∇ρ
∇T × ∇s = ∇P × ∇v = − (437)
ρ2
which is known as the baroclinic torque.
For incompressible, homogeneous flow, the viscous term can be written ν∇2 ω and the incompressible
vorticity transport equation for a homogeneous fluid is

= (ω · ∇)u + ν∇2 ω (438)
Dt

Circulation The circulation Γ is defined as


I Z
Γ= u · dl = ω · n̂ dA (439)
∂Ω Ω
where is Ω is a simple surface bounded by a closed curve ∂Ω.

Vortex Lines and Tubes A vortex line is a curve drawn tangent to the vorticity vectors at each point in
the flow.
dx dy dz
= = (440)
ωx ωy ωz
The collection of vortex lines passing through a simple curve C form a vortex tube. On the surface of the
vortex tube, we have n̂ · ω =0.
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 41

A vortex tube of vanishing area is a vortex filament, which is characterized by a circulation Γ. The
contribution du to the velocity field due to an element dl of a vortex filament is given by the Biot Savart
Law
Γ r × dl
du = − (441)
4π r3

Line vortex A potential vortex has a singular vorticity field and purely azimuthal velocity field. For a
single vortex located at the origin of a two-dimensional flow
Γ
ω = ẑΓδ(r) uθ = (442)
2πr
For a line vortex of strength Γi located at (xi , yi ), the velocity field at point (x, y) can be obtained by
transforming the above result to get velocity components (u, v)

Γi y − yi
u = − (443)
2π (x − xi )2 + (y − yi )2
Γi x − xi
v = (444)
2π (x − xi )2 + (y − yi )2
(445)

Or setting Γ = ẑΓ
Γi × ri
ui = (446)
2πri2
where ri = i - xi .
The streamfunction for the line vortex is found by integration to be
Γi
ψi = − ln ri (447)

For a system of n vortices, the velocity field can be obtained by superposition of the individual contributions
to the velocity from each vortex. In the absence of boundaries or other surfaces:
n
X Γi × ri
u= (448)
i=1
2πri2

4.7 Key Ideas about Vorticity


1. Vorticity can be visualized as local rotation within the fluid. The local angular frequency of rotation
about the direction n̂ is

uθ 1 |ω · n̂|
fn̂ = lim =
r→0 2πr 2π 2
2. Vorticity cannot begin or end within the fluid.

∇·ω =0

3. The circulation is constant along a vortex tube or filament at a given instant in time
Z
ω · n̂ dA = constant
tube
However, the circulation can change with time due to viscous forces, baroclinic torque or nonconser-
vative external forces. A vortex tube does not have a fixed identity in a time-dependent flow.
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 42

4. Thompson’s or Kelvin’s theorem Vortex filaments move with the fluid and the circulation is constant
for an inviscid, homogeneous fluid subject only to conservative body forces.


=0 (449)
Dt
Bjerknes theorem If the fluid is inviscid but inhomgeneous, ρ(x, t), then the circulation will change due
to the baroclinic torque ∇P × ∇ρ:

∇P × ∇ρ
I Z
DΓ dP
=− =− · n̂dA (450)
Dt ∂Ω ρ Ω ρ2
Viscous fluids have an additional contribution due to the diffusion of vorticity into or out of the tube.

4.8 Unsteady Potential Flow


Bernoulli’s equation for unsteady potential flow

∂ U2 |∇φ|2
P − P∞ = −ρ (φ − φ∞ ) + ρ ∞ − ρ (451)
∂t 2 2

Induced Mass If the external force Fext is applied to a body of mass M , then the acceleration of the
body dU/dt is determined by
dU
Fext = (m + M·) (452)
dt
where M is the induced mass tensor. For a sphere (3-D) or a cylinder (2-D), the induced mass is simply M
= mi I.

2 3
mi,sphere = πa ρ (453)
3
mi,cylinder = πa2 ρ (454)
(455)

Bubble Oscillations The motion of a bubble of gas within an incompressible fluid can be described by
unsteady potential flow in the limit of small-amplitude, low-frequency oscillations. The potential is given by
the 3-D source solution. For a bubble of radius R(t), the potential is

R2 (t) dR
φ=− (456)
r dt
Integration of the momentum equation in spherical coordinates yields the Rayleigh equation
2
d2 R 3

dR P (R) − P∞
R 2 + = (457)
dt 2 dt ρ

4.9 Complex Variable Methods


Two dimensional potential flow problems can be solved in the complex plane

z = x + iy = r exp(iθ) = r cos θ + ir sin θ


The complex potential is defined as

F (z) = φ + iψ (458)
and the complex velocity w is defined as
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 43

dF
w = u − iv = (459)
dz
NB sign of v-term! The complex potential is an analytic function and the derivatives satisfy the Cauchy-
Riemann conditions

∂φ ∂ψ
= (460)
∂x ∂y
∂φ ∂ψ
= − (461)
∂y ∂x
which implies that both ∇2 φ = 0 and ∇2 ψ = 0, i.e., the real and imaginary parts of an analytic function
represent irrotational, potential flows.

Examples
1. Uniform flow u = (U∞ , V∞ )

F = (U∞ − iV∞ )z

2. Line source of strength q located at zo

q
F = ln(z − z◦ )

3. Line vortex of strength Γ located at z◦

Γ
F = −i ln(z − z◦ )

4. Source doublet (dipole) at z◦ oriented along +x axis

µ
F =−
2π(z − z◦ )
5. Vortex doublet at z◦ oriented along +x axis


F =
2π(z − z◦ )
6. Stagnation point

F = Cz 2

7. Exterior corner flow

F = Cz n 1/2 ≤ n ≤ 1

8. Interior corner flow, angle α

π
F = Cz n 1≤n=
α
9. Circular cylinder at origin, radius a, uniform flow U at x = ±∞

a2
F = U (z + )
z
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 44

4.9.1 Mapping Methods


A flow in the ζ plane can be mapped into the z plane using an analytic function z = f (ζ). An analytic function
is a conformal map, preserving angles between geometric features such as streamlines and isopotentials as
long as df /dz does not vanish. The velocity in the ζ-plane is w̃ and is related to the z-plane velocity by
dF w dF w̃
w̃ = = or w= = (462)
dζ dζ dz dz
dz dζ
In order to have well behaved values of w, require w̃ =0 at point where dz/dζ vanishes.

Blasius’ Theorem The force on a cylindrical (2-D) body in a potential flow is given by
I
i
D − iL = ρ w2 dz (463)
2 body
For rigid bodies

D=0 L = −ρU∞ Γ (464)


where the lift is perpendicular to the direction of fluid motion at ∞. The moment of force about the origin
is
I 
1 2
M = − ρ< zw dz (465)
2 body

4.10 Airfoil Theory


Rotating Cylinder The streamfunction for a uniform flow U∞ over a cylinder of radius a with a bound
vortex of strength Γ is
  a 2  Γ r
ψ = U∞ r sin θ 1 − − ln( ) (466)
r 2π a
The stagnation points on the surface of the cylinder can be found at
Γ
sin θs = (467)
4πU∞ a
The lift L is given by

L = −ρU∞ Γ (468)
The pressure coefficient on the surface of the cylinder is
 2
P − P∞ 4Γ Γ
CP = 1 2
= 1 − 4 sin2 θ + sin θ − (469)
2 ρU∞ 2πaU ∞ 2πaU∞

Generalized Cylinder Flow If the flow at infinity is at angle α w.r.t. the x-axis, the complex potential
for flow over a cylinder of radius a, center µ and bound circulation Γ is:

a2 exp(iα)
 
Γ z−µ
F (z) = U exp(−iα)(z − µ) + −i ln( ) (470)
z−µ 2π a
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 45

Joukowski Transformation The transformation

ζT2
z=ζ+ (471)
ζ
is the Joukowski transformation, which will map a cylinder of radius ζT in the ζ-plane to a line segment y
=0, −2ζT ≤ x ≤ 2ζT . Use this together with the generalized cylinder flow in the ζ plane to produce the flow
for a Joukowski arifoil at an angle of attack. The inverse transformation is
r 
z z 2
ζ= ± − ζT2 (472)
2 2

Kutta Condition The flow at the trailing edge of an airfoil must leave smoothly without any singularities.
There are two special cases:
• For a finite-angle trailing edge in potential flow, the trailing edge must be a stagnation point.
• For a cusp (zero angle) trailing edge in potential flow, the velocity can be finite but must be equal on
the two sides of the separating streamline.
Application to Joukowski airfoil: Locating the stagnation point at ζT = µ + a exp −iβ, the circulation
is determined to be:

Γκ = −4πaU∞ sin(α + β) (473)


and the lift coefficient is
L a
CL = 1 2
= 8π sin(α + β) (474)
2 ρU∞ c
c

4.11 Thin-Wing Theory


The flow consists of the superposition of the free stream flow and an irrotational velocity field derived from
disturbance potentials φt and φc associated with the thickness and camber functions.

u = U∞ cos α + ut + uc (475)
v = U∞ sin α + vt + vc (476)
ut = ∇φt (477)
uc = ∇φc (478)
(479)
where α is the angle of attack and ∇2 φi = 0.

Geometry A thin, two-dimensional, wing-like body can be represented by two surfaces displaced slightly
about a wing chord aligned with the x-axis, 0 ≤ x ≤ c. The upper (+) and lower (−) surfaces of the wing
are given by

y = Y+ (x) for upper surface 0 ≤ x ≤ c (480)


y = Y− (x) for lower surface 0 ≤ x ≤ c (481)
and can be represented by a thickness function f (x) and a camber function g(x).

f (x) = Y+ (x) − Y− (x) (482)


1
g(x) = [Y+ (x) + Y− (x)] (483)
2
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 46

The profiles of the upper and lower surface can be expressed in terms of f and g as

1
Y+ (x)
= g(x) + f (x) upper surface (484)
2
1
Y− (x) = g(x) − f (x) lower surface (485)
2
The maximum thickness t = O(f ), the maximum camber h = O(g), and the angle of attack are all
considered to be small in this analysis
t h
α∼ ∼ 1 and ui , vi << U∞ (486)
c c

Boundary Conditions The exact slip boundary condition for inviscid flow on the body is:
dY v
= (487)
dx u (x,Y (x))
The linearized version of this is:

dY± vt + vc
= α + lim (488)
dx y→±0 U∞ (x,y)
with cos α ≈ 1, and sin α ≈ α. This can be written as
 
1 0
vt (x, 0+) + vc (x, 0+) = U∞ g 0 + f − αU∞ (489)
2
 
1 0
vt (x, 0−) + vc (x, 0−) = U∞ g 0 − f − αU∞ (490)
2
where f 0 = df /dx and g 0 = dg/dx.
The boundary conditions are then divided between the thickness and camber disturbance flows as follows:

1
vt = ± U∞ f 0 for y → ±0 (491)
2
vc = U∞ (g 0 − α) for y → ±0 (492)
In addition, the disturbance velocities have to vanish far from the body.

4.11.1 Thickness Solution


The potential φt for the pure thickness case, which can be interpreted as a symmetric body at zero angle
of attack, can be calculated by the superposition of sources of strength q dx using the general solution for
potential flow
Z c
1
φt (x, y) = ln(y 2 + (x − ξ)2 )q(ξ) dξ (493)
2π 0
The velocity components are:
Z c
1 (x − ξ)q(ξ) dξ
ut = (494)
2π 0 y 2 + (x − ξ)2
Z c
1 yq(ξ) dξ
vt = (495)
2π 0 y 2 + (x − ξ)2
Apply the linearized boundary condition to obtain
Z c
1 df 1 yq(ξ) dξ
± U∞ = lim (496)
2 dx y→±0 2π 0 y2 + (x − ξ)2
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 47

Delta Function Representation The limit of the integrand is one of the representations of the Dirac
delta function
1 y
lim = ±δ(x − ξ) (497)
y→±0 π y 2 + (x − ξ)2
where  Z +∞
0 x 6= ξ
δ(x − ξ) = f (ξ)δ(x − ξ) dξ = f (x) (498)
∞ x=ξ −∞

Source Distribution This leads to the source distribution


df
q(x) = U∞ (499)
dx
and the solution for the velocity field is

U∞ c (x − ξ)f 0 (ξ) dξ
Z
∂φt
ut = = (500)
∂x 2π 0 y 2 + (x − ξ)2
U∞ c yf 0 (ξ) dξ
Z
∂φt
vt = = (501)
∂y 2π 0 y 2 + (x − ξ)2
The velocity components satisfy the following relationships across the surface of the wing

[u] = u(x, 0+) − u(x, 0−) = 0 (502)


[v] = v(x, 0+) − v(x, 0−) = q(x) (503)

Pressure Coefficient The pressure coefficient is defined to be

P − P∞ u2 + v 2
CP = 1 2
=1− 2
(504)
2 ρU∞
U∞
The linearized version of this is:
ut + uc
CP ≈ −2 (505)
U∞
For the pure thickness case, then we have the following result:

1 c f 0 (ξ) dξ
Z
CP ≈ − (506)
π 0 (x − ξ)
The integral is to be evaluated in the sense of the Principal value interpretation.

Principal Value Integrals If an integral has an integrand g that is singular at ξ = x, the principal value
or finite part is defined as
Z a Z x− Z a 
P g(ξ) dξ = lim g(ξ) dξ + g(ξ) dξ (507)
0 →0 0 x+

Important principal value integrals are


Z c  
dξ x
P = ln (508)
0 (x − ξ) x−c
and
c √ √ 
ξ −1/2 dξ
Z
1 c+ x
P = √ ln √ √ (509)
0 (x − ξ) x c− x
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 48

A generalization to other powers can be obtained by the recursion relation


Z c n Z c n−1
ξ dξ ξ dξ cn
P = xP − (510)
0 (x − ξ) 0 (x − ξ) n
A special case can be found for the transformed variables cos θ = 1 - 2ξ/c
Z π
cos nθdθ sin nθo
P =π (511)
0 cos θ − cos θ o sin θo

4.11.2 Camber Case


The camber case alone accounts for the lift (non-zero α) and the camber. The potential φc for the pure
camber case can be represented as a superposition of potential vortices of strength γ(x) dx along the chord
of the wing:
Z c  
1 −1 y
φc = γ(ξ) tan dξ (512)
2π 0 x−ξ
The velocity components are:

Z c
∂φc 1 yγ(ξ) dξ
uc = =− (513)
∂x 2π 0 y + (x − ξ)2
2
Z c
∂φc 1 (x − ξ)γ(ξ) dξ
vc = = (514)
∂y 2π 0 y 2 + (x − ξ)2

The u component of velocity on the surface of the wing is

γ(x)
lim uc (x, y) = u(x, ±0) = ∓ (515)
y→±0 2
Apply the linearized boundary condition to obtain the following integral equation for the vorticity distribution
γ
  Z c
dg 1 γ(ξ) dξ
U∞ −α = P dξ (516)
dx 2π 0 (x − ξ)

The total circulation Γ is given by


Z c
Γ= γ(ξ) dξ (517)
0
The velocity components satisfy the following relationships across the surface of the wing

[u] = u(x, 0+) − u(x, 0−) = −γ(x) (518)


[v] = v(x, 0+) − v(x, 0−) = 0 (519)

Kutta Condition The Kutta condition at the trailing edge of a sharp-edged airfoil reduces to

γ(x = c) = 0 (520)
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 49

Vorticity Distribution The integral equation for the vorticity distribution can be solved explicity. A
solution that satisfies the Kutta boundary condition is:
 1/2 " Z c 0  1/2 #
c−x 1 g (ξ) ξ
γ(x) = −2U∞ α+ P dξ (521)
x π 0 x−ξ c−ξ
The pressure coefficient for the pure camber case is

γ(x)
CP = ± for y → ±0 (522)
U∞
The integrals can be computed exactly for several special cases, which can be expressed most conveniently
using the transformation
2x 2ξ
z= −1 ρ= −1 (523)
c c
Z 1 r
1 1+ρ
P dρ = −π (524)
−1 z − ρ 1−ρ
Z 1 p
1 − ρ2
P dρ = πz (525)
−1 z−ρ
Z 1
1
P p dρ = 0 (526)
−1 1 − ρ2 (z − ρ)
Z 1
ρ
P p dρ = −π (527)
−1 1 − ρ2 (z − ρ)
Z 1
ρ2
P p dρ = −πz (528)
−1 1 − ρ2 (z − ρ)
Higher powers of the numerator can be evaluated from the recursion relation:
1 1
ρn ρn−1 1(3) · · · (n − 2)
Z Z
π
P p dρ = zP p dρ − [1 − (−1)n ] (529)
−1 1 − ρ2 (z − ρ) −1
2
1 − ρ (z − ρ) 2 2(4) · · · (n − 1)

4.12 Axisymmetric Slender Bodies


Disturbance potential solution using source distribution on x-axis:
Z c
1 f (ξ) dξ
φ(x, r) = − p (530)
4π 0 (x − ξ)2 + r2
Velocity components:

Z c
∂φ 1 (x − ξ)f (ξ) dξ
u = U∞ + = (531)
∂x 4π 0 [(x − ξ)2 + r2 ]3/2
Z c
∂φ 1 rf (ξ) dξ
v = = (532)
∂r 4π 0 [(x − ξ)2 + r2 ]3/2
(533)

Exact boundary condition on body R(x)


v dR
= (534)
u (x,R(x)) dx

4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 50

Linearized boundary condition, first approximation:


dR
v(x, r = R) = U∞ (535)
dx
Extrapolation to x axis:
dR
lim (2πrv) = 2πR U∞ (536)
r→0 dx
Source strength
dR
f (x) = U∞ 2πR = U∞ A0 (x) A(x) = πR2 (x) (537)
dx
Pressure coefficient
 2
2u dR
CP ≈ − − (538)
U∞ dx

4.13 Wing Theory


Wing span is −b/2 < y < +b/2. The section lift coefficient, L0 = lift per unit span

L0
CL0 (y) = 1 2
= m◦ (y) (α − αi − α◦ (y)) (539)
2 ρU∞ c(y)
Induced angle of attack, w = downwash velocity
 
w w
αi = tan−1 ≈ (540)
U∞ U∞
Induced drag

Di = ρU∞ Γαi (541)


Load distribution Γ(y), bound circulation at span location y
1
Γ(y) = m◦ U∞ c(y) (α − αi − α◦ (y)) (542)
2
Trailing vortex sheet strength

γ=− (543)
dy
Downwash velocity
Z +b/2
1 γ(ξ) dξ
w= P (544)
4pi −b/2 ξ−y
Integral equation for load distribution
" Z +b/2 0 #
1 1 Γ (ξ) dξ
Γ(y) = m◦ (y)U∞ c(y) α − α◦ (y) − P (545)
2 4piU∞ −b/2 ξ−y
Boundary conditions
b b
Γ( ) = Γ(− ) = 0 (546)
2 2
Elliptic load distribution, constant downwash, induced angle of attack
4 INCOMPRESSIBLE, INVISCID FLOW 51

  y 2 1/2 Γs Γs
Γ(y) = Γs 1 − w= αi = (547)
2b 2b 2U∞
Lift

πb2
L = ρU∞ Γs (548)
4
Induced drag (minimum for elliptic loading)

1 L2
Di = 1 2 b2
(549)
π 2 ρU∞
Induced drag coefficient

CL2 b
CD,i = AR = b2 /S ≈ (550)
πAR c
5 VISCOUS FLOW 52

5 Viscous Flow
Equations of motion in cartesian tensor form (without body forces) are:
Conservation of mass:
∂ρ ∂ρuk
+ =0 (551)
∂t ∂xk
Momentum equation:
∂ui ∂ui ∂P ∂τik
ρ + ρuk =− + (i = 1, 2, 3) (552)
∂t ∂xk ∂xi ∂xk
Viscous stress tensor
 
∂ui ∂uk ∂uj
τik = µ + + λδik sum on j (553)
∂xk ∂xi ∂xj
Lamé’s constant
2
λ = µv − µ (554)
3
Energy equation, total enthalpy form:
∂ht ∂ht ∂P ∂τki ui ∂qi
ρ + ρuk = + − sum on i and k (555)
∂t ∂xk ∂t ∂xk ∂xi
Thermal energy form
∂h ∂h ∂P ∂P ∂ui ∂qi
ρ + ρuk = + uk + τik − sum on i and k (556)
∂t ∂xk ∂t ∂xk ∂xk ∂xi
or alternatively
∂e ∂e ∂uk ∂ui ∂qi
ρ + ρuk = −P + τik − sum on i and k (557)
∂t ∂xk ∂xk ∂xk ∂xi
Dissipation function
∂ui
Υ = τik (558)
∂xk
Fourier’s law
∂T
qi = −k (559)
∂xi

5.1 Scaling
Reference conditions are

velocity U◦
length L
time T
density ρ◦
viscosity µ◦
thermal conductivity k◦
5 VISCOUS FLOW 53

Inertial flow Limit of vanishing viscosity, µ → 0. Nondimensional statement:


ρ◦ U◦ L
Reynolds number Re =  1 P ∼ ρ◦ U◦2 (560)
µ◦
Nondimensional momentum equation
Du 1
ρ = −∇P + ∇·τ (561)
Dt Re
Limiting case, Re → ∞, inviscid flow
Du
ρ = −∇P (562)
Dt

Viscous flow Limit of vanishing density, ρ → 0. Nondimensional statement:


ρ◦ U◦ L µ◦ U◦
Reynolds number Re = 1 P ∼ (563)
µ◦ L
Nondimensional momentum equation
Du
Reρ = −∇P + ∇ · τ (564)
Dt
Limiting case, Re → 0, creeping flow.

∇P = ∇ · τ (565)

5.2 Two-Dimensional Flow


For a viscous flow in two-space dimensions (x, y) the components of the viscous stress tensor in cartersian
coordinates are
     
∂u ∂u ∂v ∂u ∂v
2µ + λ + µ +
 
τxx τxy ∂x  ∂x  ∂y ∂y  ∂x
τ = =   (566)
τyx τyy µ ∂u + ∂v 2µ ∂v + λ ∂u + ∂v
∂y ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y

Dissipation function
"   2 #
2  2   2
∂u ∂v ∂u ∂v ∂u ∂v
Υ=µ 2 +2 + + +λ + (567)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂x ∂x ∂y

5.3 Parallel Flow


The simplest case of viscous flow is parallel flow,

(u, v) = (u(y, t), 0) ⇒ ∇ · u = 0 ⇒ ρ = ρ(y) only (568)


Momentum equation
 
∂u ∂P ∂ ∂u
ρ = − + µ (569)
∂t ∂x ∂y ∂y
∂P
0 = − (570)
∂y
We conclude from the y-momentum equation that P = P (x) only.
Energy equation
 2    
∂e ∂e ∂u ∂ ∂T ∂ ∂T
ρ + ρu =µ + k + k (571)
∂t ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂x ∂y ∂y
5 VISCOUS FLOW 54

5.3.1 Steady Flows



In these flows ∂t = 0 and inertia plays no role. Shear stress is either constant or varies only due to imposed
axial pressure gradients.

Couette Flow A special case are flows in which pressure gradients are absent
∂P
=0 (572)
∂x

and the properties strictly depend only on the y coordinate, these flows have ∂x = 0. The shear stress is
constant in these flows
∂u
τxy = µ = τw (573)
∂y
The motion is produced by friction at the moving boundaries

u(y = H) = U u(y = 0) = 0 (574)


and given the viscosity µ(y) the velocity profile and shear stress τw can be determined by integration
!−1
y H
dy 0 dy 0
Z Z
u(y) = τw τw = U (575)
o µ(y 0 ) 0 µ(y 0 )
The dissipation is balanced by thermal conduction in the y direction.
 2  
∂u ∂ ∂T
µ =− k (576)
∂y ∂y ∂y
Using the constant shear stress condition, we have the following energy integral
∂T
uτ − q = −qw = constant q = −k qw = q(y = 0) (577)
∂y
This relationship can be further investigated by defining the Prandtl number
cP µ ν k
Pr = = κ= (578)
k κ ρcP
For gases, P r ∼ 0.7, approximately independent of temperature. The Eucken relation is a useful approxi-
mation that only depends on the ratio of specific heats γ

Pr ≈ (579)
7.08γ − 1.80
For many gases, both viscosity and conductivity can be approximated by power laws µ ∼ T n , k ∼ T m where
the exponents n and m range between 0.65 to 1.4 depending on the substance.

Constant Prandtl Number Assuming P r = constant and using d h = cp d T , the energy equation can
be integrated to obtain the Crocco-Busemann relation

u2 qw
h − hw + P r = − Pr u (580)
2 τw
For constant cP , this is

u2 qw P r
T = Tw − P r − u (581)
2cP τw cP
5 VISCOUS FLOW 55

Recovery Temperature If the lower wall (y = 0) is insulated qw = 0, then the temperature at y = 0 is


defined to be the recovery temperature. In terms of the conditions at the upper plate (y = H), this defines
a recovery enthalpy
1
hr = h(Tr ) ≡ h(TH ) + P r U 2 (582)
2
If the heat capacity cP = constant and we use the conventional boundary layer notation, for which TH =
Te , the temperature at the outer edge of the boundary layer

1 U2
Tr = Te + P r (583)
2 cP
Contrast with the adiabatic stagnation temperature

1 U2
Tt = Te + (584)
2 cP
The recovery factor is defined as
Tr − Te
r= (585)
Tt − Te
In Couette flow, r = P r. The wall temperature is lower than the adiabatic stagnation temperature Tt when
P r < 1, due to thermal conduction removing energy faster than it is being generated by viscous dissipation.
If P r > 1, then viscous dissipation generates heat faster than it can be conducted away from the wall and
Tr > Tt .

Reynolds Analogy If the wall is not adiabatic, then the heat flux at the lower wall may significantly
change the temperature profile. In particular the lower wall temperature (for cp = constant) is
qw
Tw = Tr + P rU (586)
cP τw
In order to heat the fluid qw > 0, the lower wall must be hotter than the recovery temperature.
The heat transfer from the wall can be expressed as a heat transfer coefficient or Stanton number
qw
St = (587)
ρU cP (Tw − Tr )
where qw is the heat flux from the wall into the fluid, which is positive when heat is being added to the fluid.
The Stanton number is proportional to the skin friction coefficient
τw
Cf = 1 2
(588)
2 ρU
For Couette flow,
Cf
St = (589)
2P r
This relationship between skin friction and heat transfer is the Reynolds analogy.

Constant properties If µ and k are constant, then the velocity profile is linear:
U τw
τw = µ u= y (590)
H µ
The skin friction coefficient is
2 ρU H
Cf = Re = (591)
Re µ
5 VISCOUS FLOW 56

5.3.2 Poiseuille Flow


If an axial pressure gradient is present, ∂P
∂x < 0, then the shear stress will vary across the channel and fluid
motion will result even when the walls are stationary. In that case, the shear stress balances the pressure
drop. This is the usual situation in industrial pipe and channel flows. For the simple case of constant µ

∂P ∂2u
0=− +µ 2 (592)
∂x ∂y
With the boundary conditions u(0) = u(H) = 0, this can be integrated to yield the velocity distribution

∂P H 2 y  y
u=− 1− (593)
∂x 2µ H H
and the wall shear stress
∂P H
τw = − (594)
∂x 2

Pipe Flow The same situation for a round channel, a pipe of radius R, reduces to
1 ∂ ∂u 1 ∂P
r = (595)
r ∂r ∂r µ ∂x
which integrates to the velocity distribution
1 ∂P
R2 − r 2

u=− (596)
4µ ∂x
and a wall shear stress of
∂P R
τw = − (597)
∂x 2
The total volume flow rate is

∂P πR4
Q=− (598)
∂x 8µ
The skin friction coefficient is traditionally based on the mean speed ū and using the pipe diameter d = 2R
as the scale length.

Q ∂P R2
ū = = − (599)
πR2 ∂x 8µ
and is equal to
τw 16 ρūd
Cf = = Red = (600)
1/2ρū2 Red µ
In terms of the Darcy friction factor,
8τw 64
Λ= 2
= (601)
ρū Red
Turbulent flow in smooth pipes is correlated by Prandtl’s formula
1  √ 
√ = 2.0 log Red Λ − 0.8 (602)
Λ
or the simpler curvefit
−2.5
Λ = 1.02 (log Red ) (603)
5 VISCOUS FLOW 57

5.3.3 Rayleigh Problem


Also known as Stokes’ first problem. Another variant of parallel flow is unsteady flow with no gradients in
the x direction. The Rayleigh problem is to determine the motion above an infinite (−∞ < x < ∞) plate
impulsively accelerated parallel to itself.
The x-momentum equation (for constant µ) is

∂u ∂2u
=ν 2 (604)
∂t ∂y
The boundary conditions are

u(y, t = 0) = 0 u(y = 0, t > 0) = U (605)


The problem is self similar and in terms of the similarity variable η, the solution is
y η
u = U f (η) η=√ f 00 + f 0 = 0 (606)
νt 2
The solution is the complementary error function
Z s
η 2
f = erfc( ) erfc(s) = 1 − erf(s) erf(s) = √ exp(−x2 ) dx (607)
2 π 0

Shear stress at the wall


µU
τw = − √ (608)
πνt
Vorticity

∂u U η2
ω=− =√ exp(− ) (609)
∂y πνt 4
Vorticity thickness
Z ∞ √
1
δω = ω(y, t) dy = πνt (610)
ω◦ 0

5.4 Boundary Layers


For streamline bodies without separation, viscous effects are confined to a thin layer y ≤ δ, when the
Reynolds number is sufficiently high, Re  1.

Scaling

x ∼ L (611)
y ∼ δ (612)
u ∼ U (613)
δ U
v ∼ U∼ (614)
L Re1/2
L
δ ∼ (615)
Re1/2
Exterior or outer flow, ue . Re → ∞, slip boundary conditions. Equations are inviscid flow equations of
motion.
Interior or inner flow , ui . Finite Re but δ  L, noslip boundary conditions ui (y = 0) = 0, matching to
outer flow, limy→∞ ui = limy→0 ue . Equations are
5 VISCOUS FLOW 58

Boundary Layer Equations The unsteady, compressible boundary-layer equations are:

∂ρ ∂ρu ∂ρv
+ + = 0 (616)
∂t ∂x ∂y
∂u ∂u ∂u ∂P ∂τxy
ρ + ρu + ρv + = − (617)
∂t ∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y
∂P
0 = − (618)
∂y
∂ht ∂ht ∂ht ∂P ∂
ρ + ρu + ρv = + (uτxy − qy ) (619)
∂t ∂x ∂y ∂t ∂y

Thickness Measures 99% velocity thickness

δ.99 = y(u = .99ue ) (620)

Displacement thickness
Z ∞  
∗ ρu
δ = 1− dy (621)
0 ρe u e
Momentum thickness
Z ∞  
ρu u
θ= 1− dy (622)
0 ρe ue ue

Displacement Velocity Near the boundary layer, the external flow produces a vertical velocity ve which
can be estimated by continuity to be
∂ρe ue
ρe ve ≈ −y (623)
∂x
The boundary layer displaces the outer flow, producing a vertical velocity v far from the surface which differs
from ve by the amount v ∗
d
ρe v∗ =(ρe ue δ ∗ ) (624)
dx
The boundary layer influence on the outer flow can therefore by visualized as a source distribution producing
an equivalent displacement.

Steady Incompressible Boundary layers The pressure gradient can be replaced by using Bernoulli’s
equation in the outer flow

∂P ∂ue
= −ρue (625)
∂x ∂x y=0
For constant µ and k, the equations are
∂u ∂v
+ = 0 (626)
∂x ∂y
∂u ∂u ∂ue ∂2u
u +v = ue +ν 2 (627)
∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y
 2
∂e ∂e ∂u ∂2T
ρu + ρv = µ +k 2 (628)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂y
5 VISCOUS FLOW 59

5.4.1 Blasius Flow


The steady flow ue = U over a semi-infinite flat plate (0 ≤ x < ∞) with no pressure gradient can be solved
by a similarity transformation for the case of isothermal, incompressible flow.
r
y 2νx
η= δ(x) = (629)
δ(x) U
Define a stream function
∂ψ ∂ψ
u= v=− ψ = δ(x)U f (η) (630)
∂y ∂x
to obtain the Blasius equation

f 000 + f f 00 = 0 f (0) = f 0 (0) = 0 f 0 (∞) = 1 (631)


Numerical solution yields f 00 (0) = 0.469600 for a skin friction coefficient of
0.664 ρU x
Cf = 1/2
Rex = (632)
Rex µ
The various thickness measures are:
5.0x 1.7208x 0.664x
δ.99 = 1/2
δ∗ = 1/2
θ= 1/2
(633)
Rex Rex Rex
The displacement is equivalent to that produced by a slender body of thickness δ ∗ (x). The vertical velocity
outside the boundary layer (y → ∞) is
dδ ∗ 0.861U
v∗ ∼ U = 1/2
(634)
dx Rex
which agrees with direct computation from the stream function
∂ψ U
v ∗ = lim − = lim √ 1/2
(ηf 0 (η) − f (η)) (635)
η→∞ ∂x η→∞ 2Rex
where by numerical computation

lim f = η − η ∗ η ∗ = 1.21678 f 0 (∞) = 1 (636)


η→∞

5.4.2 Falkner-Skan Flow


For flows of the type ue = Cxm , i.e., external flows representing flow over an exterior or interior corner of
angle α = πm/(m + 1) , similarity solutions to the boundary layer equations can be obtained. Define the
similarity variable and streamfunction similar to Blasius case
s
2νx
η = y/δ(x) δ = ψ = ue (x)δ(x)f (η) (637)
(m + 1)ue (x)
The resulting equation for the function f is
2m
f 000 + f f 00 + β 1 − f 02 = 0

β= (638)
m+1
Some cases
5 VISCOUS FLOW 60

m flow
-.0904 separating
<0 retarded flows, expansion corner
0 flat plate, zero pressure gradient
1 stagnation point
0< accelerated flows, wedges
-2 doublet near a wall
-1 point sink

5.5 Kármán Integral Relations


Integration of the momentum equation for incompressible flow results in
Cf dθ θ due δ∗
= + (2 + H) H= (639)
2 dx ue dx θ
The Kármán-Pohlhausen technique consists of assuming a Blausius-type similarity profile for the velocity
y
u = ue (x)f (η) η = (640)
δ
where δ locates a definite outer edge of the boundary layer. Matching the boundary layer solution
smoothly to the outer flow at η = 1 and satisfying the noslip condition at η = 0, results in the following
conditions on f

f (0) = 0 (641)
δτw
f 0 (0) = (642)
µue
δ 2 due
f 00 (0) = − (643)
ν dx
f 000 (0) = 0 (644)
f (1) = 1 (645)
n>1
f (1) = 0 (646)

This results in an ordinary differential equation for δ as a function of x.

5.6 Thwaites’ Method


Rewrite the Kármán integral equation as

ue dθ2 θ2 due θτw


= 2(S − (2 + H)λ) λ= S= (647)
ν dx ν dx µue
Thwaites’ 1949 correlation

2(S − (H + 2)λ) ≈ 0.45 − 6λ (648)


Kármán integral equation
 
d λ due
ue = 0.45 − 6λ u0e = (649)
dx u0e dx
Approximate solution
Z x
0.45ν
θ2 = u5e dx (650)
u6e 0

Correlation functions S(λ) and H(λ)


5 VISCOUS FLOW 61

µue
τw = S(λ) δ ∗ = θH(λ) (651)
θ

5.7 Laminar Separation


Seperation of the boundary layer from the wall and the creation of a recirculating flow region occurs when
the shear stress vanishes.
∂u
τw,sep = µ =0 (652)
∂y y=0,x=xsep
For laminar boundary layers, this occurs when a sufficiently long region of adverse pressure gradient dP/ dx >
0 exists.
2

δ.99 dP
'5 λsep ' −0.0931 (653)
µue dx sep

5.8 Compressible Boundary Layers


Steady, compressible, two-dimensional boundary layer equations:

∂ρu ∂ρv
+ = 0 (654)
∂x ∂y
∂u ∂u ∂Pe ∂ ∂u
ρu + ρv = − + µ (655)
∂x ∂y ∂x ∂y ∂y
 2
∂h ∂h ∂u ∂ ∂T
ρu + ρv = µ + k (656)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂y ∂y

5.8.1 Transformations and Approximations


Modified stream function
∂Ψ ∂Ψ
ρu = ρ◦ ρv = −ρ◦ (657)
∂y ∂x
Density-weighted y-coordinate (Howarth-Doronitsyn-Stewartson)
Z
ρ
Y = dy X=x (658)
ρ◦
Derivative transformation
∂ ρ ∂ ∂ ∂ ∂Y ∂
= = + (659)
∂y ρ◦ ∂Y ∂x ∂X ∂x ∂Y
Chapman-Rubesin parameter, enthalpy-temperature relation
ρµ
C= dh = cp dT (660)
ρ◦ µ◦
Boundary layer equations

∂Ψ ∂ 2 Ψ ∂Ψ ∂ 2 Ψ ∂ ∂2Ψ
− = νo C (661)
∂Y ∂XY ∂X ∂Y 2 ∂Y ∂Y 2
   2 2
∂Ψ ∂h ∂Ψ ∂h ∂ C ∂h ∂ Ψ
− = ν◦ + ν◦ C (662)
∂Y ∂X ∂X ∂Y ∂Y P r ∂Y ∂Y 2

Similarity variable
5 VISCOUS FLOW 62

r
y 2ν◦ x
η= δ= (663)
δ(x) U
Streamfunction ansatz for zero pressure gradient

Ψ = U δf (η) h = h◦ g(η) (664)


Similarity function equations

(Cf 00 )0 + f f 00 = 0 (665)
C 2
( g 0 )0 + f g 0 = −CEc (f 00 ) (666)
Pr
where the Eckert number is

U2
Ec = = (γ − 1)M 2 for perfect gases (667)
h◦
Transport property approximation
cP µ
C = 1 ρµ = ρ◦ µ◦ Pr = = constant (668)
k
Approximate equation set:

f 000 + f f 00 = 0 (669)
00 0 00 2
g + P rf g = −P rEc (f ) (670)

5.8.2 Energy Equation


Integration of the energy equation results in the integral relationship for heat flux at the wall
Z ∞  
∂ ρu ht
qw = (ρe ue ht,e Θh ) Θh = − 1 dy (671)
∂x 0 ρe ue ht,e
where Θh is the energy thickness.
The recovery factor r determines the wall enthalpy in adiabatic flow,
1
hr = hw (qw = 0) = h∞ + r u2∞ (672)
2
The recovery factor is found to be an increasing function of the Prandtl number. In gases,

r ' P r1/2 laminar boundary layers


(673)
r ' P r1/3 turbulent boundary layers

Unity Prandtl Number For P r = 1, the energy equation is

u2
 
∂ht ∂ht ∂ ∂ht
ρu + ρv = µ ht = he + e (674)
∂x ∂y ∂y ∂y 2
This has as a solution in adiabatic flow

u2e u2
ht = he + = h∞ + ∞ = constant for qw = 0 (675)
2 2
Therefore, the recovery enthalpy is
5 VISCOUS FLOW 63

u2∞
hr = h∞ + (676)
2
From the exact correspondence to the x-momentum equation, the general, qw 6= 0, solution is ht = a + bu.
This leads directly to the Crocco integral

u2∞ u2
   
u
h = h∞ + [hw − hr ] 1 − + 1− 2 (677)
u∞ 2 u∞
The Stanton number can be derived from this result in the form of Reynolds analogy
Cf
St = (678)
2
The generalization of this to other Prandtl numbers that is valid for laminar and turbulent boundary layers
in gases is
Cf
St ' (679)
2P r2/3

General Prandtl Number For similarity solutions, the nondimensional enthalpy can be found by inte-
gration of the energy equation, simplest when C = 1, and P r = constant.
2
g 00 + P r f g 0 = −P r Ec (f 00 ) (680)
This equation can be integrated exactly to yield
η0
"Z #
η η 2
(f 00 (ξ)) dξ
Z Z
0 0 0 0
g(η) = g(0) + g (0) F (η ; P r) dη − P r Ec F (η ; P r) dη 0 (681)
0 0 0 F (ξ; P r)
where
η0
!
Z η Z
F (η; P r) = exp −P r f (ξ) dξ dη 0 (682)
0 0

and the boundary conditions yield



hw ∂T k he ρ 0
g(0) = qw = −k =− g (0) (683)
he ∂y w cP δ ρe
This results in a recovery factor of
"Z #
∞ η 2
(f 00 (ξ)) dξ
Z
r = 2P r F (η; P r) dη (684)
0 0 F (ξ; P r)
which for a laminar flat plate boundary layer has the approximate value
r ≈ P r1/2 0.1 ≤ P r ≤ 3.0 (685)
The Stanton number is
Z ∞ −1
qw G(P r)
St ≡ =√ 1/2
G(P r) = F (η; P r) dη (686)
ρe ue (hw − hr ) 2P rRex 0
and for a flat plate boundary layer G can be approximated as

G ≈ 0.4969P r1/3 0.1 ≤ P r ≤ 3.0 (687)


so that the Stanton number for flat plate gas flow is approximately
0.33206
St = 1/2
(688)
P r2/3 Rex
5 VISCOUS FLOW 64

Coordinate stretching The physical coordinate can be computed from the transformed similarity variable
and the velocity profile
r Z η
u∞ ρ∞
y = dη (689)
2ν∞ x 0 ρ
The density profile can be computed from the temperature profile since the pressure is constant across the
boundary layer. For an ideal gas
ρ∞ T
= (690)
ρ T∞
For the case of P r = 1 and a perfect gas, the temperature profile is
Z η
T γ−1 2
1 − f 02 dη 0

=1+ M∞ (691)
T∞ 2 0

where u = u∞ f 0 (η). The coordinate transformation is then


r Z η
u∞ γ−1 2
1 − f 02 dη 0

y =η+ M∞ (692)
2ν∞ x 2 0

If we suppose that the viscosity varies as µ ∼ T ω , then the skin friction coefficient is
√ 00
2f (0) 1
Cf = 1/2 1−ω (693)
γ−1 2
Rex 1 + 2 M∞

5.8.3 Moving Shock Waves


For a moving shock wave, the boundary conditions in the shock fixed frame are that the wall is moving with
the upstream velocity w1 and the freestream condition is w2 . If the reference velocity is w2 , then boundary
conditions on f are
uw w1
f (0) = 0, f 0 (0) = = f 0 (∞) = 1 (694)
ue w2
This results in a negative displacement thickness.

5.8.4 Weak Shock Wave Structure


∂ ∂
In contrast to the usual Boundary layer equations, here ∂y = ∂z = 0, and only derivatives in the x direction
are considered.

ρu = ρ1 u 1 (695)
4 0 ∂u
P + ρ1 u 1 u − µ = P1 + ρ1 u21 (696)
3 ∂x
u2 4 µ0 ∂u k ∂T u21
h+ − u − = h1 + (697)
2 3 ρ1 u1 ∂x ρ1 u1 ∂x 2
where
3
µ0 = µ + µv (698)
4
Entropy creation by gradients:
" 2 2 #
+∞
4 µ0
Z  
1 ∂u 1 ∂T
s2 − s1 = +k dx (699)
ρ1 u 1 −∞ 3T ∂x T ∂x
Weak shock thickness estimate based on maximum slope:
5 VISCOUS FLOW 65

8µ0 1 3
∆m = µ0 = µ + µv (700)
3ρc M1n − 1 4
For a perfect gas (γ = constant), the mean free path can be estimated as
 πγ 1/2 µ
Λ= (701)
2 ρc
and the shock thickness for γ = 1.4, µv = 0, is
1.8Λ
∆m = (702)
(M1n − 1)
5 VISCOUS FLOW 66

5.9 Creeping Flow


In the limit of zero inertia, the flow is described by Stokes approximation to the momentum equation

∇P = ∇ · τ (703)
If the viscosity and density are constant this is equivalent to

∇P = µ∇2 u or ∇P = −µ∇ × ω (704)


Applying the divergence and curl operations to these equations yields

∇2 P = 0 or ∇2 ω = 0 (705)

The Reynolds number enters solely through the boundary conditions. Consider a flow with characteristic
velocity U , lateral dimension L and viscosity µ. If the velocity is specified at the boundaries,

u = U g(x/L, geometry) (706)


then the pressure distribution can be obtained by integrating the momentum equation to get

ρU 2 ρU L
P = f (x/L, geometry) ReL = (707)
ReL µ
If the pressure is specified at the boundaries,

P = ρU 2 f (x/L, geometry) (708)


then the velocity will be given by

u = U ReL g(x/L, geometry) (709)


For flows in two space dimensions, a streamfunction ψ can be used to satisfy the continuity equation.
In cartesian coordinates, the streamfunction for Stokes flow of a constant viscosity fluid will satisfy the
Biharmonic equation

∇4 ψ = 0 (710)

Stokes Sphere Flow The force on a moving body in viscous flow is


Z Z
F= τ · n̂ dA − P n̂ dA (711)
∂Ω ∂Ω
Estimating the magnitude of the integrals, the force in a particular direction will have the magnitude

F = CµU L (712)
The constant C will in general depend on the shape of the body, the direction x̂ of the force and the motion
of the body.
For a sphere, the flow can be solved by using Stokes axisymmetric streamfunction ψ. The velocity
components are:

1 ∂ψ
ur = (713)
r2
sin φ ∂φ
1 ∂ψ
uφ = − (714)
r sin φ ∂r
The analog of the biharmonic equation is
5 VISCOUS FLOW 67

2
∂2
 
sin φ ∂ 1 ∂
+ 2 ψ=0 (715)
∂r2 r ∂φ sin φ ∂φ
The boundary conditions at the surface of the sphere are:
∂ψ ∂ψ
ψ=0 =0 =0 r=a (716)
∂r ∂φ
and the flow approaches a uniform flow far from the sphere

U r2
lim ψ = sin2 φ (717)
r→∞ 2
The solution is

a 3r 2r2
 
U
ψ = a2 sin2 φ − + 2 (718)
4 r a a
The pressure on the body is found by integrating the momentum equation
3µaU
P = P∞ − cos φ (719)
2r2
and the force (drag) is directed opposite to the direction of motion of the sphere with magnitude
D 24 ρU 2a
D = 6πµU a CD ≡ 2 2
= Re = (720)
1/2ρU πa Re µ
For a thin disk of radius a moving normal to the freestream the drag is

D = 16πµU a (721)
and moving parallel to the freestream
32
D= µU a (722)
3

Oseen’s Approximation The inertial terms neglected in Stokes’ approximation become significant at a
distance r ∼ a/Re. The Oseen equations are a uniform approximation for incompressible viscous flow over
a body. If the mean flow at large distances from body is U in direction x, then the Oseen equations are:

∇·u = 0 (723)
∂u ∂u
ρ + ρU = −∇P + µ∇2 u (724)
∂t ∂x
This results in a corrected drag law (the flow now has a wake) for the sphere
 
24 3Re 9 2
CD = 1+ + Re ln Re + . . . (725)
Re 16 160

Reynolds Lubrication Theory Incompressible flow in a two-dimensional channel with a slowly-varying


height h(x) and length L can be treated as a “boundary layer”-like flow if
L ∂h ∂h
1 which implies that v≈u (726)
h ∂x ∂x
The thin-layer or lubrication equations result when the channel is very thin h/L → 0, and viscous forces
dominate inertia Re  1.
5 VISCOUS FLOW 68

∂ρh ∂ρhu
+ = 0 (727)
∂t ∂x
∂P ∂ ∂u
0 = − + µ (728)
∂x ∂y ∂y
∂P
0 = − (729)
∂y
For a constant property flow, the velocity is given at any point in the channel by the Couette-Poiseuille
expression of parallel flow if the lower boundary is moving with velocity U and the upper boundary is at
most moving in the y direction

h2 ∂P y  y  y
u=− 1− +U 1− (730)
2µ ∂x h h h
Combining this result with the continuity equation yields the Reynolds lubrication equation
 
1 ∂ 3 ∂P ∂h ∂h
h = 6U + 12 (731)
µ ∂x ∂x ∂x ∂t
For a slipper pad bearing, the pressure is equal to the ambient value P◦ at x = 0 and x = L and the gap
height h is
 x
h = h◦ 1 − α α1 (732)
L
The pressure is given by

h∗ h2◦
    
µU L h◦
P − P◦ = 6 −1 −3 −1 (733)
αh2◦ h h◦ h2
where h∗ is the gap height at the location of the pressure maximum

h∗ 1−α α α2
=2 ≈1− − + O(α3 ) (734)
h◦ 2−α 2 4
and the maximum pressure is approximately
3 µU L
Pmax − P◦ ≈ α + O(α2 ) (735)
4 h2◦
A FAMOUS NUMBERS 69

A Famous Numbers

Fundamental Physical Constants

co speed of light in a vacuum 2.998×108 m/s


o permittivity of the vacuum 8.854×10−12 C2 /kg-m
µo permeability of the vacuum 4π×10−7 H/m
h Planck constant 6.626×10−34 J-s
k Boltzmann constant 1.381×10−23 J/K
No Avogadro number 6.022×1023 molecules/mol
e charge on electron 1.602×10−19 C
amu atomic mass unit 1.661×10−27 kg
me electron mass 9.109×10−31 kg
mp proton mass 1.673×10−27 kg
G universal gravitational constant 6.673×10−11 m3 /kg-s2
σ Stefan-Boltzmann constant 5.670×10−8 W/m2 K4

Astronautics

go gravitational acceleration at earth’s surface 9.807 m/s2


RE radius of earth 6378 km
ME mass of earth 5.976×1024 kg
MS mass of sun 1.99×1030 kg
au mean earth-sun distance 1.496×108 km
mass of moon 7.349×1022 kg
mean earth-moon distance 3.844×105 km

Ideal Gas Stuff

R̃ Universal gas constant 8314.5 J/kmol-K


8.3145 J/mol-K
82.06 cm3 -atm/mol-K
1.9872 cal/mol-K
mechanical equivalent of heat 4.186 J/cal
volume of 1 kmol at 273.15 K and 1 atm 22.41 m3
number of molecules at 298.15 K and 1 atm 2.46×1025 m3
collision frequency at 273.15 K and 1 atm 4.3×109 s−1
mean free path in N2 at 273.15 K and 1 atm 74 nm

Consistent with the 1998 CODATA adjustment of the funadamental physical constants
A FAMOUS NUMBERS 70

Our Atmosphere

composition (mol fractions)


0.7809 N2
0.2095 O2
0.0093 Ar
0.0003 CO2

Sea level

P pressure 1.01325×105 Pa
ρ density 1.225 kg/m3
T temperature 288.15 K
c sound speed 340.29 m/s
R gas constant 287.05 m2 /s2 -K
W molar mass 28.96 kg/kmol
µ viscosity (absolute) 1.79×10−5 kg/m-s
k thermal conductivity 2.54×10−3 W/m-K
cp heat capacity 1.0 kJ/kg-K

30 kft

P pressure 3.014×104 Pa
ρ density 0.458 kg/m3
T temperature 228.7 K
c sound speed 303.2 m/s

Based on the U.S. Standard Atmosphere, 1976 NOAA-S/T 76-1562, 1976.

Unit Conversions

1m ≡ 3.28 ft
0.3048 ft ≡ 1m
1 lb (force) ≡ 4.452 N
1 lb (mass) ≡ 0.454 kg
1 btu ≡ 1055 J
1 hp ≡ 745.7 W
1 hp ≡ 550 ft-lbf /s
1 mile (land) ≡ 1.609 km
1 mph ≡ 0.447 m/s
1 mile (nautical) ≡ 1.852 km
B BOOKS ON FLUID MECHANICS 71

B Books on Fluid Mechanics


There are a very large number of books on fluid mechanics. The following are a selected texts that cover
various topics. The call numbers (LOC system) are those used in the Caltech library system.
General Fluid Dynamics

1. Tritton, D. J. Physical Fluid Dynamics QC151.T74 1988 (available in paperback)


2. Panton, R. L. Incompressible Flow TA357.P29 1995.

3. Batchelor, G. K. An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics QA911.B33 1973 (available in paperback)


4. Landau, L. D. and Lifshitz, E. M. Fluid Mechanics QA901.L283 1989

Compressible Flow

1. Anderson, J. D. Modern Compressible Flow: with historical perspective, QA911.A6 1990.


2. Liepmann, H. A. and Roshko, A. Elements of Gasdynamics, QC168.L5 (available now as a Dover
paperback)
3. Thompson, P. A. Compressible Fluid Dynamics QC168.T5 1984. (Available from RPI bookstore
- see JES web page for information on ordering and errata for older editions)

Viscous Flow and Boundary Layers

1. Sherman, F. Viscous Flow TA357.S453 1990


2. Schlichting, H. Boundary Layer Theory TL574.B6 S283 1968
3. White, F.M. Viscous Fluid Flow 2nd Ed. 1991 QA929.W48

Acoustics

1. Pierce, A.D. Acoustics: an introduction to its physical principles and applications QC225.15
P52 1989

Aerodynamics

1. Kuethe, A.M. and Chow, C.-Y. Foundations of Aerodynamics TL570.K76 1998


2. Karamcheti, K. Principles of Ideal-Fluid Aerodynamics QA930.K74

Rotating Flow

1. Vanyo, J. P. Rotating Fluids in Engineering and Science TA357.V36 2000 (Dover paperback)

Thermodynamics
1. D. Kondepudi and I. PrigogineModern Thermodynamics, Wiley, 1998.
2. M. Abbott and H. van Ness Thermodynamics Schaum’s Outline Series. TJ265.A19 1989
3. Adkins, C. J. Equilibrium Thermodynamics QC318.T47 A34 1983
Some Data Tables

1. NACA 1135, Equations, Tables and Charts for Compressible Flow


2. Reynolds, W.C. Thermodynamic Properties in SI QC311.3 .R38
B BOOKS ON FLUID MECHANICS 72

3. Poling, B. E., Prausnitz, J. M., and O’Connell, J. P. The Properties of Gases and Liquids.
TP243.P62 2000.

Vector Analysis

1. Aris, R. Vectors, Tensors, and the Basic Equations of Fluid Mechanics QA911.A69 1989
2. Spiegel, M.R. Vector Analysis Schaum’s Outline Series Not in CIT libraries

Dimensional Analysis

1. Hornung, H. G. Dimensional Analysis: Examples of the use of Symmetry, Dover, 2006.


2. Bridgman, P. W. Dimensional Analysis QC39.B7 1922.
3. Sedov, L. I. Similarity and Dimensional Methods in Mechanics QC20.7 .D55 S42

Visualization

1. van Dyke, M. An Album of Fluid Motion TA357.V35


2. Lugt, H. Vortex Flow in Nature and Technology QC159.L8413 1983.
3. Pozrikidis, C. Little Book of Streamlines QA911.P66 1999

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