Flow and Drag Flashcards

1
Q

What is drag

A

Forces acting opposite to the relative motion of the object moving through surrounding fluid

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2
Q

What is D Alambert’s paradox

A

Based on calculations an object in steady fluid flow will experience no drag. however an object in steady flow must experience drag because flow is viscid and there will be energy lost due to friction

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3
Q

Why did D Alambert calculate that objects in flow will experience no drag

A

because he assumed inviscid flow: no energy will be lost or gained ; total energy would remain constant ( no friction) and he said there will be no net pressure differences

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4
Q

Draw the pressure map experienced by an object in viscid flow

A

L12 slide 13

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5
Q

What is the boundary layer concept

A
  • viscous effects of drag are confined within the boundary layer
  • viscosity leads to a steep velocity gradient and high shear forces
  • outside the layer viscosity is irrelevant and flow is inviscid
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6
Q

Describe what happens to the boundary layer of a moving sphere

A
  1. fluid hits stagnation point, no velocity high static pressure
  2. moves up the ball surface, gaining velocity because it is entering a constricted ‘area’ ( so static pressure decreases).
  3. favourable pressure gradient allows fluid to flow past ( while offsetting effects due to friction)
  4. when we move down the curve, velocity decreases due to frictional loses ( static pressure increases) and the increase in SA (continuity principle)
  5. dynamic pressure is converted back to static prssure but there is a loss of fluid momentum due to friction and the unfav. gradient
  6. there is an unfavourable pressure gradient. which causes flow to slow: leads to stagnation and flow separation and flow reversal
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7
Q

What is frictional drag ?

A
  • occurs tangential to the surface of the object
  • occurs as a direct result of viscosity
  • arises due to shearing of the fluid in the boundary layer adjacent to the surface
  • directly proportional to v
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8
Q

What is pressure drag?

A
  • normal to the surface
  • indirect result of the viscosity of the fluid reducing the momentum of the fluid
  • leads to flow separation
  • fluid collides with the plate area and exerts a force proportional to the density of the fluid and the surface area of the plate
  • 1/2 * p * S* v^2
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9
Q

what is the maximum pressure acting on the object in a flowing medium

A

it is at the stagnation point where P_max = 1/2 * p * v^2

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10
Q

When we plot the pressure difference along an object length – how would we normalize this

A

y axis: take the dP/ P_max. (P_max= 1/2 * p * v^2) = the pressure coefficient

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11
Q

In a pressure coefficient vs length graph where do you expect to find

a. lens/eyes of the fish
b. the gills

A

a. lens will be found where C_p = 0 because there is no pressure difference for distortion
b. gills found at minimum Cp

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12
Q

Given that there is a fish swimming at 2m/s in salt water ( p =1027) what is the pressure gradient flowing through the gills if Cp = -0.4

A

Because we have to find the pressure gradient from mouth the gills so at mouth Cp =1 ( outermost point)
so we have 1-(-0.4) = 1.4 = dP / P_max

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13
Q

At high Reynold’s number what causes drag and what is the significance of drag

A
  • drag is the net force exerted by the fluid on the object
  • drag is due to the friction exerted by the fluid as it flows around the object AND the pressure drag due to the pressure differences around the object
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14
Q

How does the drag force change with increasing fluid speed

A

drag force increases ( since drag is proportional to fluid by v^2)

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15
Q

How do we standardize the drag force vs velocity graph

A

plot the coefficient of drag with respect to the Reynold’s number ( the greater the Reynold’s number the greater the drag since high Reynold’s number typically implies more velocity)

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16
Q

What is the coefficient of drag

A
  • because drag is force = pressure* are = dynamic pressure * area so we take the drag force/ ( 1/2 * p *v ^2 * A)
  • relative amount of drag experienced by an object in a flowing fluid relative to the amount of force exerted directly on some defined area of the object
17
Q

What is the coefficient of drag for a perpendicular plate.

A

perpendicular plate will not have a flow behind the plate ( so no low pressure turbulent wake is made) will have Cd=1

18
Q

For high drag body what is the area used for coefficient of drag calculations

A

cross sectional area

19
Q

What is the reference area used for streamlined bodies

A

wetted area

20
Q

What is the reference area used for objects with wings

A

planform area

21
Q

What is the reference area used for Cd calc for blimp shaped objects

A

V^2/3

22
Q

Draw how the coefficient of drag vs Re curve will look like

A

at low Re there is high viscosity and skin friction fominates
- at high Re pressure drag dominates

23
Q

What is the drag crisis?

A

The minimum point in the coefficient of drag vs. Re curve.
It is when the boundary layer becomes turbulent upstream such that the boundary layer separates further back leading to a narrow wake and thus less pressure drag

24
Q

Why is there flow separation of the boundary layer

A

drag present in the boundary layer reduces the momentum of the fluid and causes separation

25
Q

How can we reduce the drag coefficient

A

Minimize pressure drag

  1. fill the space behind a bluff body to delay separation
  2. dimpling of the surface to induce turbulence in the boundary layer– increases the momentum exchanged between the high momentum free stream fluid and the no slip condition fluid, this adds momentum to the surface and delays boundary layer separation ( smaller wake = smaller pressure drag)
26
Q

What happens to drag forces at low Re

A

drag depends solely on the viscous forces ( = uvS/l)

so the drag is proportional to the size and speed of the object ( greater size and speed= slower)

27
Q

Why is a streamline slower than a sphere in low Re than in high Re

A

low Re: the streamline object has a greater surface area and so it experienes more viscous force than the sphere
high Re: because pressure forces are dominant so the streamline will have a narrow wake ( = less pressure force)

28
Q

if heart volume scales with M, how will heart rate scale with animal mass

A

the blood volume should increase isometrically (M) while the rate at which heart is pumped should match the metabolic rate (M^2/3) so
blood flow = stroke volume * heart rate
M = M^2/3 * M^x
so M^x = M ^-1/3

29
Q

Draw how the coefficient of drag vs Reynold’s number of a circular disc will look like

A

at high Re number the pressure drag will be dominant and the only contributing force. because the 1/2 pv^2*A will be the same so that is why it would be fixed at Cd =1 at high Re only ( at low Re it will have experienced frictional forces)

30
Q

Compare the difference between the different drag components of a sphere and streamline body at high Re number

A

skin drag of sphere &laquo_space;skin drag of streamline body
pressure drag of sphere&raquo_space;»» pressure drag of streamline
so the sum of the pressure drag and skin drag causes
drag exp. by sphere > drag exp. by streamline

31
Q

Given the Re and a Cd vs Re graph how would you find the drag experienced by the object

A

using Re read Cd off the graph and since Cd = Fd / 1/2pv^2*A we can find the area and backtrack to calculate Fd

32
Q

What happens to the boundary layer if the fluid flow was inviscid

A

there would be no boundary layer as the no slip condition would not exist