ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS IP CH 3-2013 Fluid Flow.pdf
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1、3.1CHAPTER 3FLUID FLOWFluid Properties 3.1Basic Relations of Fluid Dynamics . 3.2Basic Flow Processes 3.3Flow Analysis 3.6Noise in Fluid Flow. 3.13Symbols . 3.14LOWING fluids in HVAC gasesmay range from compressible to nearly incompressible. Liquidshave unbalanced molecular cohesive forces at or nea
2、r the surface(interface), so the liquid surface tends to contract and has propertiessimilar to a stretched elastic membrane. A liquid surface, therefore,is under tension (surface tension).Fluid motion can be described by several simplified models. Thesimplest is the ideal-fluid model, which assumes
3、that the fluid hasno resistance to shearing. Ideal fluid flow analysis is well developede.g., Schlichting (1979), and may be valid for a wide range ofapplications.Viscosity is a measure of a fluids resistance to shear. Viscouseffects are taken into account by categorizing a fluid as either New-tonia
4、n or non-Newtonian. In Newtonian fluids, the rate of deforma-tion is directly proportional to the shearing stress; most fluids in theHVAC industry (e.g., water, air, most refrigerants) can be treated asNewtonian. In non-Newtonian fluids, the relationship between therate of deformation and shear stre
5、ss is more complicated.DensityThe density of a fluid is its mass per unit volume. The densitiesof air and water (Fox et al. 2004) at standard indoor conditions of68F and 14.696 psi (sea-level atmospheric pressure) arewater= 62.4 lbm/ft3air= 0.0753 lbm/ft3ViscosityViscosity is the resistance of adjac
6、ent fluid layers to shear. A clas-sic example of shear is shown in Figure 1, where a fluid is betweentwo parallel plates, each of area A separated by distance Y. The bot-tom plate is fixed and the top plate is moving, which induces a shear-ing force in the fluid. For a Newtonian fluid, the tangentia
7、l force Fper unit area required to slide one plate with velocity V parallel to theother is proportional to V/Y:F/A = (V/Y )(1)where the proportionality factor is the absolute or dynamic vis-cosity of the fluid. The ratio of F to A is the shearing stress , andV/Y is the lateral velocity gradient (Fig
8、ure 1A). In complex flows,velocity and shear stress may vary across the flow field; this isexpressed by = (2)The velocity gradient associated with viscous shear for a simple caseinvolving flow velocity in the x direction but of varying magnitude inthe y direction is illustrated in Figure 1B.Absolute
9、 viscosity depends primarily on temperature. Forgases (except near the critical point), viscosity increases with thesquare root of the absolute temperature, as predicted by the kinetictheory of gases. In contrast, a liquids viscosity decreases as temper-ature increases. Absolute viscosities of vario
10、us fluids are given inChapter 33.Absolute viscosity has dimensions of force time/length2. Atstandard indoor conditions, the absolute viscosities of water and dryair (Fox et al. 2004) arewater= 6.76 104lbm/fts = 2.10 105lbfs/ft2air= 1.22 105lbm/fts = 3.79 107lbfs/ft2Another common unit of viscosity i
11、s the centipoise (1 centipoise =1 g/(sm) = 1 mPas). At standard conditions, water has a viscosityclose to 1.0 centipoise.In fluid dynamics, kinematic viscosity is sometimes used inlieu of absolute or dynamic viscosity. Kinematic viscosity is the ratioof absolute viscosity to density: = /At standard
12、indoor conditions, the kinematic viscosities of waterand dry air (Fox et al. 2004) arewater= 1.08 105ft2/sair= 1.62 104ft2/sThe stoke (1 cm2/s) and centistoke (1 mm2/s) are common unitsfor kinematic viscosity.The preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 1.3, Heat Transfer andFluid Flow.Fig. 1 V
13、elocity Profiles and Gradients in Shear Flowsdvdy-3.2 2013 ASHRAE HandbookFundamentalsNote that the inch-pound system of units often requires the con-version factor gc= 32.1740 lbmft/s2lbfto make some equationscontaining lbfand lbmdimensionally consistent. The conversionfactor gcis not shown in the
14、equations, but is included as needed.BASIC RELATIONS OF FLUID DYNAMICSThis section discusses fundamental principles of fluid flow forconstant-property, homogeneous, incompressible fluids and intro-duces fluid dynamic considerations used in most analyses.Continuity in a Pipe or DuctConservation of ma
15、ss applied to fluid flow in a conduit requiresthat mass not be created or destroyed. Specifically, the mass flowrate into a section of pipe must equal the mass flow rate out of thatsection of pipe if no mass is accumulated or lost (e.g., from leak-age). This requires thatdA = constant (3)where is ma
16、ss flow rate across the area normal to flow, v is fluidvelocity normal to differential area dA, and is fluid density. Both and v may vary over the cross section A of the conduit. When flowis effectively incompressible ( = constant) in a pipe or duct flowanalysis, the average velocity is then V = (1/
17、A)vdA, and the massflow rate can be written as= VA (4)orQ = = AV (5)where Q is volumetric flow rate.Bernoulli Equation and Pressure Variation inFlow DirectionThe Bernoulli equation is a fundamental principle of fluid flowanalysis. It involves the conservation of momentum and energyalong a streamline
18、; it is not generally applicable across streamlines.Development is fairly straightforward. The first law of thermody-namics can apply to both mechanical flow energies (kinetic andpotential energy) and thermal energies.The change in energy content E per unit mass of flowing fluidis a result of the wo
19、rk per unit mass w done on the system plus theheat per unit mass q absorbed or rejected:E = w + q (6)Fluid energy is composed of kinetic, potential (because of elevationz), and internal (u) energies. Per unit mass of fluid, the energychange relation between two sections of the system is = EM + q (7)
20、where the work terms are (1) external work EMfrom a fluidmachine (EMis positive for a pump or blower) and (2) flow workp/ (where p = pressure), and g is the gravitational constant. Re-arranging, the energy equation can be written as the generalizedBernoulli equation: = EM+ q (8)The expression in par
21、entheses in Equation (8) is the sum of thekinetic energy, potential energy, internal energy, and flow work perunit mass flow rate. In cases with no work interaction, no heat trans-fer, and no viscous frictional forces that convert mechanical energyinto internal energy, this expression is constant an
22、d is known as theBernoulli constant B:+ gz + = B (9)Alternative forms of this relation are obtained through multiplica-tion by or division by g:p + + gz = B (10)(11)where = g is the weight density ( = weight/volume versus =mass/volume). Note that Equations (9) to (11) assume no frictionallosses.The
23、units in the first form of the Bernoulli equation Equation(9) are energy per unit mass; in Equation (10), energy per unit vol-ume; in Equation (11), energy per unit weight, usually called head.Note that the units for head reduce to just length (i.e., ftlbf/lbfto ft).In gas flow analysis, Equation (1
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