Fundamental of Transport Phenomena
Fundamental of Transport Phenomena
Fundamental of Transport Phenomena
of Fluid Mechanics
and Transport Phenomena
Jean-Laurent Peube
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Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
This page intentionally left blank
Fundamentals
of Fluid Mechanics
and Transport Phenomena
Jean-Laurent Peube
First published in France in 2006 by Hermes Science/Lavoisier entitled Physique des écoulements et des
transferts in volumes 1 and 2 © LAVOISIER, 2006
First published in Great Britain and the United States in 2009 by ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as
permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced,
stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers,
or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA.
Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the
undermentioned address:
www.iste.co.uk www.wiley.com
The rights of Jean-Laurent Peube to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted by him in
accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Peube, J. L.
[Physique des écoulements et des transferts. English]
Fundamentals of fluid mechanics and transport phenomena / Jean-Laurent Peube.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-84821-065-3
1. Fluid mechanics. 2. Transport theory. I. Title.
TA357.P49813 2008
620.1'06--dc22
2008036553
Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Antony Rowe Ltd, Chippenham, Wiltshire.
Table of Contents
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 489
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 497
Preface
The study of fluid mechanics and transfer phenomena in flows involves the
association of difficulties which are encountered in different disciplines:
thermodynamics, mechanics, thermal conduction, diffusion, chemical reactions, etc.
This book is not intended to be an encyclopaedia, and we will thus not endeavour to
cover all of the aforementioned disciplines in a detailed fashion. The main objective
of the text is to present the study of the movement of fluids and the main
consequences in terms of the transfer of mass and heat. The book is the result of
many years of teaching and research, both theoretical and applied, in scientific
domains which are often considered separately. In effect, the development of new
disciplines which are at the same time specialized and universal was very much a
characteristic of science in the 20th century. Thus, signal processing, system
analysis, numerical analysis, etc. are all autonomous disciplines and indispensable
means for students, engineers or researchers working in the domain of fluid
mechanics and energetics. In the same way, various domains such as the design of
chemical reactors, the study of the stars and meteorology require a solid knowledge
of fluid mechanics in addition to that of their specific topics.
its concepts, which are based on the current state of knowledge, and the science of
fluid mechanics was reduced for the most part to semi-empirical engineering
formulae and to particular analytical solutions. Between the 1920s and the 1950s,
our ideas on boundary layers and hydrodynamic stability were progressively
elucidated. Studies of turbulence, which began in the 1920s from a conceptual
statistical point of view, have really only made further progress in the 1970s, with
the writing of the balance equations using turbulence models with a physical basis.
This progress remains quite modest, however, considering the immensity of the task
which remains.
It should be noted that certain disciplines have seen a spectacular renewal since
the 1970s for two main reasons: on the one hand, the development of information
technology has provided formidable computation and experimental methods, and on
the other hand, multidisciplinary problems have arisen from industrial necessities.
Acoustics is a typical example: many problems of propagation had been solved in
the 1950s-1960s and those which were not made only very slow progress. Physics
focused on other fundamental, more promising sectors (semiconductors, properties
of matter, etc.). However, in the face of a need to provide practical solutions to
industrial problems (sound generated by fluid flow, the development of ultra-sound
equipment, etc.), acoustics became an engineering science in the 1970s. Acoustics is
indeed a domain of compressible fluid mechanics and it will constitute an integral
part of our treatment of the subject.
The conception of this book results from the preceding observations. The author
refuses to get into the argument which consists of saying that the time of analytical
solutions has passed and that numerical simulation will solve all our problems. The
reality is clearly more subtle than this: analytical solution in the broad sense, that is,
the obtaining of results derived from reasoning and mathematical concepts, is the
basis of physical concepts. Computations performed by computers by themselves
cannot provide any more insight than an experiment, although both must be
performed with great care. The state of knowledge and of understanding of
mechanisms varies depending on the domain studied. In particular, the science of
turbulence is still at a somewhat embryonic stage, and the mystery of turbulent
solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations is far from being thoroughly cleared up.
Preface xiii
We are still at the stage of Galileo who attempted to understand mechanics without
the ideas of differential calculus. Nobody can today say precisely what are the
difficulties to be solved, and the time which will be required for their resolution (10
years, a century or 10 centuries). We will therefore present the state of our
knowledge in the current scientific context by also considering some of the
accompanying disciplines (thermodynamics, ideas related to partial differential
equations, signal processing, system analysis) which are directly useful to the
concepts, modeling, experiments and applications in fluid mechanics and energetics
of flows. We will not cover specific combustion phenomena, limiting ourselves to a
few simplified cases of physico-chemical reactions.
This book covers the necessary fundamentals for the study and understanding of
the specific concepts and general properties of flows: the establishment and
discussion of the balance equations of extensive quantities in fluid motions, the
transport of these quantities by convection, wave-propagation or diffusion. These
physical concepts are issued from the comprehension of theoretical notions
associated with equations, such as characteristic curves or surfaces, perturbation
methods, modal developments (Fourier series, etc.) and integral transforms, model
reduction, etc. These mathematical aspects are either consequences of properties of
partial differential equations or derived from other disciplines such as signal
processing and system analysis, whose impact is important in every scientific or
technological domain. They are discussed and illustrated by some elementary
problems of fluid mechanics and thermal conduction, including measurement
methods and experimental data processing This book is an introduction to the study
of more specialized topics of fluid flow and transfer phenomena encountered in
different domains of application: incompressible or compressible flow, dynamic and
thermal boundary layers, natural or mixed convection, 3D boundary layers, physico-
chemical reactions in flows, acoustics in flows, aerodynamic sound,
thermoacoustics, etc.
The continuous medium at rest is obtained by taking the limit of discrete systems
in Chapter 2. The exchange of extensive quantities is modeled by means of flux
densities, and irreversible thermodynamics leads to the diffusion equations. Some
reminders of fluid statics are given. We then discuss the difficulties specific to the
diffusion of matter.
xiv Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The measurement of flow and transfer phenomena presents difficulties which are
outlined in Chapter 7. The recent evolution of techniques based on the digitization
of measurements, signal processing, analysis and reduction of models are naturally
suited to applications in fluid mechanics and energetics. These methods have led to
a renewal of progress in disciplines where unsteady phenomena are encountered,
and in particular in the study of acoustic phenomena and turbulent flows.
Preface xv
NOTE.
We have chosen to respect the usual notation of physical quantities in each
discussed scientific domain, while trying to have consistent notations whenever
possible.
At the same time, the notations for derivatives are different, depending on the
domain covered (thermodynamics, mechanics or more mathematical developments)
and the size of equations. They all are usual and well known:
For functions y (x) of one variable, they are marked y' (x), y'' (x), y''' (x), y''''
(x),..., y(n)(x).
When discussing mechanical questions, the two first temporal derivatives of
x(t) are written with dots: x (t ) and x(t ) .
xvi Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
d
The symbol is used only for material (Lagrangian) derivatives, which are
dt
indeed derivatives with respect to time of compound functions in Euler variables;
D
this is equivalent to the other usual notation .
Dt
For functions f (x, y) of several variables, the two following notations are used
wf wf w 2 f w 3 f
according circumstances: either with symbol w ( , , , ,...) or with
wx wy wxwy wx 2 wy
indices marking the variables with respect of which derivations are performed: fx ,
fy, fxy , fxxy.
Integrals are always indicated by a simple integration sign, as the nature of this
(single, double, triple, etc.) should be clear from the integration domain indicated
and the differential element.
When tensor notation is used, vectors or matrices are denoted using upper case
letters, their components being written in lower case letters. The convention of
summation over repeated indices (Einstein’s convention) will systematically be
used.
Chapter 1
1.1.1. Introduction
We also admit (Axiom 2) that this space is homogenous and isotropic, which
leads us to a traditional geometric Euclidean description of space R3 with its
associated notions of length, surface and volume, whose scalar values are
independent of the particular geometric frame of reference we choose to consider.
This property of homogenity and isotropy will have important consequences for the
expression of physical laws, which must not favor any given point or physical
spatial direction. In particular, physical laws should neither favor any particular
point in the universe, nor change as a result of a change in reference frame.
of the day and the night were respectively divided into seven and four parts, the
Babylonians 2,000 years beforehand divided the day and the night each into 12
hours, which were clearly of unequal duration and varied according to the seasons.
The Chinese and the Japanese divided each of the two cycles, from dawn to dusk
and from dusk to dawn, into six periods. Japan only adopted the occidental system in
1873, but this did not prevent Japanese clockmakers from making mechanical clocks
as early as the 17th century, these having quite complex mechanisms in order to
accommodate the variable length of their hour.
The definition and measurement of time are thus not automatic operations for
human beings. The relatively old notion of regular time (homogenous in the physical
sense) is related to the use of indefinitely reproducible phenomena; this notion dates
from the end of antiquity, the early Middle Ages and the invention of the clock
(clepsydras, mechanical clocks, hourglass).
Having long been attached to the average duration of a solar day, the definition
of time is now effected using the vibration frequency of an atom of caesium 123
under the most stable conditions possible (at very low temperature).
The age of the universe is thus associated with a measure of its entropy on a very
large scale (the universe or at least the earth). However, a time characterized by this
4 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
scale has no guarantee of being homogenous. This “age” of the universe does not
give us a useful indication of what time to use, and we will content ourselves with
the time previously defined from the notion of reproducibility. The notion of entropy
(or of the ageing of the universe) shows that time has a considerable anisotropy,
manifest in the distinction between the past, the present and the future. The
equations translating the physical laws and their consequences should not violate
this anisotropy, the effect of which can be immediately seen if we change the
direction of time by letting t ' t .
T
ª1 2 1 2º T
'E m « mx kx » ³0 f x 2 dt
¬2 2 ¼0
The absolute value of this variation 'Em is always negative and increasing for a
T
positive value of the friction coefficient. The quantity ³0 f x 2 dt is known as the
dissipation function of the system.
Laplace equation: w f2 w 2f
2 2
0;
wx wt
wave equation: w 2f w 2f
2 2
0;
wx wt
w f wf
2
heat equation: 0.
wx 2 wt
The wave equation (which is hyperbolic) on the contrary is compatible with the
definition of time. Its general solution:
f x, t I (x t) \ (x t)
represents two waves which propagate along the x-axis with velocities +1 and –1.
The value at a point x and instant t depends on what happens to each of the said
waves to the left and the right of x, and before their arrival at time t. The wave
equation is thus compatible with the non-influence of the future on the present.
The heat equation (which is parabolic) is also compatible with the non-influence
of the future on the present, as we will see for heat conduction problems, since the
initial conditions (or values from the past) suffice for a determination of the solution
at any later time.
Another remark can be made here regarding the inversion of the direction of
time. By replacing t with t', we see that the wave equation remains unchanged,
while the heat equation becomes:
w2 f wf
0
2 wt '
wx
We will see similar behavior for the complete solution of the heat equation in a
wall (Chapter 8) in which the inversion of the direction of time results in a change of
a sum of temporally decaying exponential terms to a sum of temporally increasing
exponential terms. Changing the direction of time in the heat equation leads to a
physically inadmissible equation.
The notions of past and future, with respect to an event, introduce a fundamental
asymmetry; the present does not depend on the future. This has certain
consequences, both in the application of certain mathematical transformations
(Fourier for example) on temporal signals, and in flow problems where the
distinction between upstream and downstream is of the same nature as that between
the past and the future.
Kant upholds that the causality relation is “absolutely general and even
necessary”. The general principle of causality is even more clear in determinism,
which holds that all events can be rationally predicted, with a desired degree of
precision, provided that past events and all of the laws of nature are known with
sufficient precision. Such absolute and universal determinism is associated with a
conception of a universe dominated by laws of celestial mechanics (Laplace). In
other words, the same causes produce the same effects, and so our capacity to
predict depends only on our scientific knowledge. Of course, quantum mechanics
has brought this vision of things into question, but not on the scale of the phenomena
studied here.
It is useful to note at this point that the conditions for prediction can be defined
mathematically via theorems which treat of the existence of unique solutions for
differential equations given a suitable set of initial conditions. The Cauchy-Lipschitz
theorem is the best known, and deals with differential equations with real variables
(x,y) of the form:
dy dx f ( x, y )
The function f(x,y) is only required to verify a Lipschitz condition1. This theorem
establishes the existence of a unique solution y = M(x) which verifies the initial
condition y0 = M(x0) . This solution is continuous over the interval ( x 0 , x 0 h) ,
where h is characterized by the interval of definition for x and an upper bound of f
in the rectangle considered. This theorem can be extended to systems of differential
equations with the same kinds of conditions.
1 I.e.: f ( x, y ) f ( x, y ' ) A y y ' , condition in which (x,y) and (x,y') are arbitrarily
chosen in a rectangle where f(x,y) is supposed to be continuous, A being a positive constant.
8 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Cauchy’s theorem thus translates a form of determinism, since given a cause (the
initial condition y 0 M ( x 0 ) ), a unique solution y M (x) exits. However, we see
that there are certain limitations, in particular with the Cauchy-Kovalevskaïa
theorem which imposes analyticity conditions, the physical realization of which has
no reason to be assured for the function f(x,y) or any other perturbation which we
may add in order to test the stability of the system
In all causal situations, the preceding Cauchy theorems lead to results of a local
nature, that is to say over a short period of time, considering the variable x to
represent time. In the middle to long term, numerous “mathematical accidents” may
occur. The uniqueness of a local solution is not in contradiction with the
impossibility of prediction of the evolution of this solution on a long enough period
of time due to a chaotic behavior ([BER 84], [ORS 77]).
In conclusion, the notions of determinism and causality are far from being
universally applicable in the domains which we will cover.
1.1.2.1. Introduction
The analysis of systems is a discipline which consists of constructing a model or
a representation of a system characterized by observations and measurements, with a
view to predicting the behavior of this system at a later stage, under conditions
which may be different from those first encountered. We also attempt to contrive
means of manipulating the system in order to cause it to evolve in a manner which
we specify a priori. We thus enter into the domain of command and control, since it
is now necessary to verify that the results are those sought, and if not, to perform the
necessary corrections in order to obtain the desired results.
output quantities y(t) which are also obtained via a measurement (output variables).
For example, the input variables of a heating system are the available heating power,
the desired temperature, and the output (controlled) variables are the power
consumed and the temperature observed in the space to be heated. We also dispose
of a command variable for the heating system. The input variables are thus the given
conditions, while the output variables are the quantities obtained. Observations can
be made for the time evolution of the various quantities in a continuous or sampled
manner.
The external description of a state is thus generally not sufficient. The difference
between a raw egg and a hard-boiled egg is not visible to external measurements
(size, mass, color, etc.); it is a result of internal variables (chemical composition)
which cannot be measured directly, but which can be known indirectly (the
rotational movement of a mass of solid and a mass of liquid are not the same), or by
virtue of some previous known history (the egg was boiled).
dX
AX BU (t ); t t 0 : X (t 0 ) X0
dt
'T
x
e e
behavior of the material elements, associated for example with physics (state
equations of compressible fluids), chemistry, electricity, magnetism,
electromagnetism, or any combination of these disciplines (laser-matter interactions,
plasmas, chemical reactions or electrolysis in flows, etc.).
state. The state of a system may be more or less complex and its description may
require a more or less large number of variables, depending on the case considered.
T T
P1 P2 P1 P2
Tf Tf
(a) (b)
Figure 1.2. (a) System with 2n variables; (b) system with 3 variables
The general problem of describing a state comes down to finding the necessary
variables. From the preceding example we see that the number of necessary
variables depends largely on the physical situation we wish to describe. The more
complex the system considered, the greater the number of variables required. We
will frequently come back to this point, emphasizing it with respect to the specific
objectives.
From a physical perspective, this means that a process can only be defined if the
initial and boundary conditions are entirely determined during the process. It makes
no sense to speak of a process which allows us to pass from a state (a) to state (b)
unless the external conditions which constrain that process are specified. This is no
longer a mathematical question, but rather a problem related to a determinism which
amounts to admitting that an initial state (a), well-defined and always subjected to
the same constraints, will always lead to the same final state (b). It will always be
possible to relate two given states, under the condition that, on the one hand,
exchanges with the exterior furnish the necessary physical quantities, and on the
other, that the internal system processes which redistribute these quantities allow the
desired distribution of these system quantities to be achieved. For example, it is not
possible to realize a state consisting of a given mass whose temperature distribution
comprises a central peak (Figure 1.1) by means of an action at the exterior walls.
The necessary energy must be directly supplied to the central zone, which must be
insulated from the adjacent regions.
clearly identified if we do not entirely state the conditions of the process under
study.
D’=D(t’)
D(t) D0
V V
C=D=D’
Figure 1.3. (a) and (b): closed systems; (c) open system
2) Now consider the case where matter is caused to move at a velocity V with
respect to the used reference. The observation and description of this matter in
movement can be performed:
– either, by following the matter in its movement, in which case the observation
domain D(t) is displaced in time (Figure 1.3b); the matter contained within the
domain D(t) constitutes a closed system in the sense just defined;
– or, by considering a fixed domain D0 in which the matter is continually
renewed; the ensemble of states contained within the fixed geometric domain is
qualified as an open system, in other words a system which exchanges matter with
the exterior (Figure 1.3c).
On the other hand, a process (a series of states) during which some matter passes
from the inside of the domain to its outside corresponds to an open system.
An adiabatic wall is impermeable to heat and does not allow the passage of
entropy. It thermally insulates the system from the exterior.
1.2.1. Introduction
pertaining to irreversible thermodynamics. We will also more clearly outline the fact
that the more complex and irreversible the evolution considered, the greater the
number of variables required.
S
b
a
Consider two disjoint states, i.e. states which have no matter in common; the
extensive quantity Xi associated with the ensemble of the two states (a) and (b) is
equal to the sum of the quantities corresponding to each state:
X i (a b) X i (a ) X i (b)
If the sub-ensembles corresponding to (a) and (b) are not disjoint, we clearly
have:
X i ( a b) X i (a) X i (b) X i (a b)
The index i takes on small integer values as these quantities are generally small
in number for a state. The following quantities are extensive: mass, volume, number
of moles, energy, entropy, force, etc.
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 17
S (b)
X ao b X bo a
(a)
X a ob X b o a 0 [1.2]
To be more general, we can consider a process during which the sub-systems (a)
and (b) receive in addition the quantities Xa ext and Xb ext from the exterior of the
system S:
Xa X a ext X b o a ; Xb X b ext X a o b
The conservation of the quantity X in the system implies that the total amount of
the quantity X is equal to the amount of this quantity which is received from the
exterior:
Xa Xb X a ext X b ext
The preceding reasoning is not applicable to entropy, for which we do not have
conservation, but only non-decay. This results in the principle of action and reaction,
which, as applied to the entropy, is written:
S a ob Sb o a t 0 [1.3]
This inequality implies that one of the sub-systems has gained more entropy than
the other has lost.
The actions leading to a gain in the quantity X in system (a) can be classed into
two categories:
– volume actions related to fields which can exert their influence from a distance:
an electric field produces a displacement of electric charges, electromagnetic
radiation can lead to a the creation of heat by absorption in the material medium,
etc.;
– contact actions (on a surface) between (a) and (b) (Figure 1.5) essentially
results from the action between the molecules in the immediate vicinity of the
surface S (at distances of the order of the intermolecular distances or of the mean
free path in a gas). As this volume is based on the surface S and is of small
thickness, it can be modeled by the surface S, on which we can concentrate the
interaction between (a) and (b). The usual contact actions are pressure, frictional
force, thermal conduction, molecular diffusion, etc.
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 19
Let us now isolate the system and leave it to evolve according to a natural
process; the extensive quantities which it contains will naturally distribute
themselves in a balanced way throughout the system. It is easy to understand that the
final equilibrium state of the system is unique, as confirmed by experience. In other
words, the extensive quantities of a material system allow a description of the
equilibrium state achieved by a system at the end of all natural processes (provided
the system remains isolated). Following the axiom pertaining to the entropy (section
1.2.2.2), the entropy associated with such a material system increases in order to
attain a maximum value corresponding to this final state of equilibrium. We thereby
deduce that this entropy of the equilibrium state is a well-determined function of the
other extensive quantities for the system considered:
S S( X i ) [1.4]
1.2.2.5. Homogenity
We have said that the extensive quantities of a material system are proportional
to its extension without stating exactly what this extension is. Let us suppose that
these extensive quantities Xi and the entropy S are all associated with a given
volume of ordinary 3D space. Taking two systems SO and S with material contents
which are homothetic (or which are geometrically similar) with a ratio of O and
which are constituted from the same matter, under the same physical conditions, at
homologous points, we can say that the extensive quantities Xi are proportional to a
cube with a reference dimension:
20 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
X Oi O 3 Xi SO O 3S
Denoting our two states by (a) and p (a), with p = O3, state relation [1.4] can be
written:
Sp S ( pX i ) pS ( X i ) [1.5]
1.2.2.6. Note
This property no longer holds if the extensive quantities are associated with
spaces of different dimensions. As an example consider a drop of water whose total
energy is the sum of two terms, on the one hand an energy associated with its
weight, Eg, proportional to its volume, and on the other hand an energy associated
with its surface tension, ET, proportional to its surface:
E E g ET
The total energy of the system SO becomes, considering a homothetic ratio O
EO O 3 E g O 2 ET
Other extensive quantities Xi (for example, mass or volume) of this drop remain
proportional to the homothetic ratio O3 and respect relation [1.4]. It is therefore clear
that relation [1.5] is no longer respected. We will not consider such cases in what
follows.
S S ( E, X i ) or E E (S , X i ) [1.6]
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 21
wE wE § ·
dE dS ¦ dX i
1 ¨ dS ¦ wS dX i ¸
wS wX i wS ¨ ¸
i © i wX i ¹
wE
we can define the elementary work dW and the elementary heat dQ by the relations:
wE 1 wE 1 wS
dQ dS dS dW ¦ dX i ¦ dX i
wS wS i wX i wS i wX i [1.7]
wE wE
wS 1 wS
Zi [1.8]
wX i T wE
Zi (resp. 1/T) being called the conjugated variable of Xi (resp. E) with respect to S.
22 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wE wE
Yi T [1.9]
wX i wS
dE TdS ¦ Yi dX i [1.10]
i
1
dS dE ¦ Z i dX i [1.11]
T i
From this, the relation between the energetic and entropic intensive variables,
respectively Yi and Zi can be obtained:
Yi TZi [1.12]
wS wS E
S E ¦ Xi ¦ Zi X i [1.13]
wE i wX i T i
and:
E TS ¦ Yi X i [1.14]
i
We note that the general relation [1.13] or [1.14] does not allow the
characterization of a system. It constitutes a differential equation which is satisfied
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 23
by any homogenous function S of degree 1. For example, for a fluid, the following
relation can be written:
E TS pV PN
§1·
Ed ¨¨ ¸¸ ¦ X i dZ i 0 [1.16]
©T ¹ i
For example, for a perfect gas, we know that there are two equations of state:
pV NRT dE mC v dT
These are not independent as the first equation of state implies that the specific
heat Cv can only be a function of the temperature (Joule’s law; see elementary works
on thermostatics).
1.3.2.1. Introduction
While the preceding presentation assigns a particular role to the extensive
variables, using them to represent a given system does not lead to the most useful
means of studying that system. The temperature or pressure of a fluid are of a more
direct interest than its volume or its energy when it comes to isobaric or isothermal
processes. We often prefer a combination of intensive and extensive variables for
studying a given system. From a mathematical point of view, such changing of
24 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
H(p,S,N) E pV
Using relation [1.10]3 the differential of the function E X i , Y j can be written
as:
dE
dE ¦ X j dY j Y j dX j ¦ Yi dX i ¦ X j dY j [1.17]
j i j
2 The subscripts i and j correspond respectively to the different couples of extensive and
intensive variables.
3 Here, S is included in extensive variables X and is not explicitly written.
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 25
§ wE ·
Xk ¨ ¸
¨ wY ¸X ,Y
© k ¹ i j z k
with respect to the intensive variables Yk, are the corresponding extensive variables4.
wE
E¦ Yj E [1.18]
j wY j
F V , T , N
E TS
hence: dF pdV SdT μdN
sF sF sF
with: p S μ
sV sT sN
G p, T , N
E pV TS
hence: dG Vdp SdT μdN
sG sG sG
with: V S μ
sp sT sN
4 Notation w wYk X , Y specifies that the chosen independent variables are Xi and Yj.
i jzk
26 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Generally speaking, the source of an extensive quantity Xj, for which the
intensive variable Yj is constant, providing the system with 'Xj by means of a quasi-
static process, leads to a variation of its thermodynamic potential equal to:
(W and Q being respectively the work and heat received from means other than the
source, with Yj being constant).
We will leave it to the reader to work out examples involving the explicit
functions given below.
Remember the rules for changing variables when using partial derivatives: if the
three variables (x,y,z) are related, it is straightforward to show that:
§ wx · § wy · § wz · § wx · § wy ·
¨ ¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ 1 ¨ ¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ 1 [1.20]
¨ w y ¸ © wz ¹ © wx ¹ ¨ wy ¸ © wx ¹
© ¹z x y © ¹z z
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 27
T § wS · T w2 F
Cv ¨¨ ¸¸
NM © wT ¹ V , N NM wT 2
[1.21]
T § wS · T w2G
Cp ¨¨ ¸¸
NM © wT ¹ p, N NM wT 2
§ wS · w 2F § wp ·
l T ¨¨ ¸¸ T T ¨¨ ¸¸ [1.22]
© wV ¹T , N wVwT © wT ¹V , N
§ wS · w 2G § wV ·
h T ¨¨ ¸¸ T T ¨¨ ¸¸ [1.23]
© wP ¹ T , N wPwT © wT ¹ P, N
dQ TdS O dp P dv
and the isothermal and adiabatic compressibility coefficients, respectively FT and FS:
1 § wV · 1 § wV ·
FT ¨ ¸ F ¨ ¸ [1.24]
V ¨© wp ¸ V ¨© wp ¸
S
¹T ¹S
FT Cp
J
FS CV
28 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The speed of sound is defined by the relation (U being specific mass):
§ wp · 1
c2 ¨ ¸
¨ wU ¸ [1.25]
© ¹ SN UF S
1 § wV · 1 w 2G 1 § wp · 1 w2F
D ¨¨ ¸¸ ; E ¨¨ ¸¸ [1.26]
V © wT ¹ P V wTwp p © wT ¹V p wTwV
We recall the usual relations, which the reader can verify using identities [1.20]:
T § wV · § wp · § wC v · T §¨ w 2 p ·¸
C p Cv ¨¨ ¸¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ ; ¨¨ ¸¸ ;
NM © wT ¹ p © wT ¹V © wV ¹T NM ¨© wT 2 ¸¹
V
§ wC p · T §¨ w 2V ·
¸ ; § wT · § wT ·
¨ ¸ O NMC v ¨¨ ¸ ; P NMC p ¨¨ ¸¸ ;
¨ wp ¸ NM ¨© wT 2 ¸ ¸
© ¹T ¹p © wp ¹V © wV ¹p
E J p § ws · § ws · § ws · C p § wT · Cp
c2 ; ¨ ¸
¨ wU ¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ c 2 ; ¨ ¸
¨ wU ¸ ¨ ¸
D U © ¹p © wp ¹ U © ¹p T ¨© wU ¸¹ p D UT
We deduce from this that the differential of the specific entropy (per unit mass) s
as a function of the dp and dU variables can be written in one of the following forms:
ds
§ ws · § ws ·
¨ ¸ dp ¨
¨ wp ¸
¸
¨ wU ¸ dU
§ ws ·
¨ wp ¸
¨ ¸ dp c 2 dU
© ¹U © ¹p © ¹U
[1.27]
Cv
E pT
dp
Cp
D UT
dU
E pT
Cv
dp c dU
2
e ¬ s ¬
s Cv Ln 1 const e 1 exp const
® Cv ®
with: m V NM V ; s S m; e E m hH m
From the intensive variable definitions, we can easily derive the usual state
equations:
p Jp
e C v T e0 e0 ; h C p T h0 h0 ;
J 1U J 1U
§ T · § T · § p ·
s C v Ln¨ ¸ s0 C p Ln¨ ¸s C v Ln¨ ¸ s0
¨ U J 1 ¸ ¨ p J 1 J ¸ 0 ¨ UJ ¸
© ¹ © ¹ © ¹
1 1 J p
l p; h ; D E ; c2 J rT U FS ;
U T U [1.28]
C p Cv r; C p Cv J.
The reasoning of section 1.2.2.4 shows how a system which is not in equilibrium
does not have a general state relation outside of equilibrium conditions. The
extensive quantities remain defined, but they are no longer sufficient to characterize
the state of the system, as the entropy can no longer be defined as a function of these
parameters alone. As seen in section 1.2.2.4, the distribution of extensive variables
is uniquely defined for a system in equilibrium, whereas this is no longer the case
for a system which is not in equilibrium: a more detailed description of the structure
of the system is thus necessary. This implies that more parameters will be necessary
a priori for a description of an out-of-equilibrium system than for one which is in a
state of equilibrium.
30 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Sp
S p X ip p 1,..., P; i 1,..., k
The extensive quantities of the complete system can be obtained by adding the
corresponding extensive quantities of the sub-systems:
¦ S p X ip ( p 1,..., P)
P P
Xi ¦ X ip ; S
p 1 p 1
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 31
Note that in general, it is obviously not possible to obtain a relation between the
extensive quantities Xi of a system and its entropy S, since the kP variables Xip must
be eliminated from the k + 1 preceding equations. This fact bears witness to the
absence of a general equation of state for an out-of-equilibrium system.
The extensive quantities Xi are generally functions of time. The flux Mip of the
quantity Xi received by the component p is defined by:
dX ip
M ip
dt
The origin of the quantities dXip and the flux Mip can be considered individually
for each of the sub-systems. Let dXip,q (resp. dXiq,p) be the amount of extensive
quantity Xi received by the sub-system p (resp. q) from the sub-system q (resp. p) in
time dt. The amount of entropy dSp,q (resp. dSq,p) received by each of the systems
and associated with the aforementioned transfer is evaluated by means of the
entropic representation differential of each of the sub-systems:
k k
dS p , q ¦ Z ip dX ip, q dS q, p ¦ Z iq dX iq, p
i 1 i 1
The intensive variables Zip and Ziq of two neighboring sub-systems will have
different values if the sub-systems are not in equilibrium, and so the entropy
variations dSp,q and dSq,p will have different absolute values. Indeed, there can only
be an exact balance between the two sub-systems if the intensive variables Zip and
Ziq are equal.
dX ip , q dX iq , p dS p, q dS q , p t 0 [1.29]
their effects. Before dealing with the general problem of these relations, we will
illustrate the methodology using the following elementary example, comprising two
sub-systems which only exchange heat between themselves, or with the exterior.
Ti Ti
A (a) A A (b) A
S S1 S 2 mC LnT1T2 const
As the ensemble is insulated from the exterior, the total amount of heat remains
constant:
The natural evolution of the system S from initial temperatures T10 and T20 leads
T10 T20
to the final temperature T f , which is identical for the two blocks, and
2
to the final entropy S of the system:
The variation in entropy 'S between the final and initial instants is thus:
dQ1,2 dQ 2,1 0
The heat flow MTp,q received by the sub-system p is the quantity of heat
dQ p, q dt received per unit time by the component p ( p 1,2 ) from the other
component. Thus, we have:
The rate of entropy creation dS dt is always positive on account of the fact that
the heat transfer naturally occurs from the hot body to the cold body:
Let us consider the first situation (T1 > T2). The quantity dQ2,1 is positive; the
entropy (positive) dS2 gained by sub-system 2 is greater than the entropy -dS1 lost by
sub-system 1. This is in accordance with the fact that for irreversible heat transfer,
the entropy gained by a system is greater than the entropy lost by the body which
has provided the heat.
34 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The higher the degree of the imbalance, the greater the thermal flux, and the
greater the rate of entropy creation.
wS1 wS 2
Z1 or Z 2
wX 1 wX 2
dS dX 1, 2 dX 2,1 dX 1,2
Z1 Z2 Z 1 Z 2 [1.31]
dt dt dt dt
As the entropy can only increase, the value of X increases (resp. decreases) in the
sub-system for which the value of Z is greatest (smallest). The transfer of the
quantity X occurs spontaneously from the sub-system with the smallest value of Z to
the sub-system with the greatest value of Z.
dS I P P ª dX ip , q º
¦ ¦ ¦ « Z i, p », q z p.
dt i 1 p 1 q 1 «¬ dt »¼
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 35
or, after grouping the opposing fluxes (p < q, so as to only count this component
once):
ª dX ip, q º
¦ ¦ ¦ «Z i, p Z i, q
dS I P P
» pq
dt i 1 p 1 q 1 ¬« dt ¼»
1 dQ1e 1 dQ2e
The external entropy supply terms and can now take any
T1 dt T2 dt
sign. The term in [1.32] which corresponds to irreversible internal heat exchange,
which is always positive, constitutes an entropy source. We thus have:
dQ pe
¦ d dS [1.33]
p 1,2 Tp
dQ pe dQ pe dQ pe §¨ 1 1 ·
¸t0
¦ ¦ ¦ ¨
¸ [1.34]
p 1, 2 Tp p 1, 2 T pS p 1,2 T p © T p T pS ¹
36 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
By then evaluating the entropy lost by the external sources we obtain the
Clausius inequality:
dQ pe dQ pe
¦ d ¦ d dS [1.35]
p 1,2 T pS p 1,2 Tp
dS dX 1e dX 2 e dX 1,2
Z1 Z2 Z1 Z 2
dt dt dt dt
positive term
dX 1,2
The term Z1 Z 2 , which is always positive, is the entropy source
dt
associated with internal exchanges. The rate of entropy creation is proportional to
dX 1, 2
the intensity of the internal exchanges and to the imbalance Z1 Z 2
dt
between the two sub-systems.
dS int I dX i1, 2
¦ Z i1 Z i 2 i 1, 2,....I [1.36]
dt i 1 dt
Finally, let us recall that the entropic intensive quantities Zi are related to the
energetic intensive quantities ([1.12]: Yi TZ i ) and that it is possible to express
the entropy source as a function of any other quantities.
dS int
in a
The reasoning used above leads to an expression for entropy sources
dt
system made up of P sub-systems characterized by I independent extensive
quantities:
I P P dxip , q ¯
dsint
¡(Zi, p Zi, p ) ° pq [1.37]
dt ¡
i1 p 1 q 1 ¢ dt °±
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 37
P dQ pe P dQ pe
¦ d ¦ d dS
p 1 T pS p 1 Tp
Z ip
Z ip X ip , X jp (i 1,..., I ; j 1,..., N I ; p 1,..., P)
X ip
X ip Z ip , X jp (i 1,..., I ; j 1,..., N I ; p 1,..., P )
¦ X ip Z ip , X jp (i 1,..., I ; j 1,..., N I ; )
P
Xi
p 1
The equilibrium conditions for the system can be written Zip Zim (i 1,...,I; p) Z
pI.
We laid down that certain extensive variables were not exchanged between the
sub-systems. The problem can be easily discussed in the same manner with different
conditions: for example, by fixing the uniform value to certain intensive quantities
in the whole system (section 1.4.2.5.2, example 2), or by choosing different
conditions according to certain ensembles of sub-systems.
1.4.2.5.2. Examples
We will consider two examples in order to illustrate the preceding procedure,
which we will encounter again in the study of fluid mechanics:
1) A thermal system – consider a system S1 (Figure 1.7a) whose P sub-systems
exchange heat via a constant-volume process, such that the temperature Tp is the
only variable intensive quantity of any of the sub-systems during the process. The
energy Ep of each sub-system can be expressed as a function of its temperature and
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 39
its specific heat capacity *p, which is assumed to be constant for the sake of
simplicity:
Ep * pT p
The energy E of the system and its average temperature Tm can be obtained:
P § P · P
E ¦ * pT p ¨ ¦ * ¸T *T m ; with : * ¦ *p
p
¨p 1 ¸ m
p 1 © ¹ p 1
1
Tm ¦ * pT p
* p
In this particular case, the average temperature is the average of the temperatures
weighted by the specific heat capacities.
T1
T2
p1 p2 pp
Tp T1 T2 Tp
np RTp
Vp E p * vp Tp (* vp : heat capacity at constant volume)
pp
40 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The global volume and internal energy balances for a natural transformation
allow the average pressure and temperature to be defined:
P P np RTp nRTm P
V Vp ; E * vp Tp * v Tm
p 1 p 1 pp pm p 1
P P
with: n np and: * v * vp
p 1 p 1
We obtain the following expressions for the average temperature and pressure:
1 P 1 1 P n pT p
Tm ¦ *vp T p ¦
*v p 1 pm nTm p 1 pp
The average values of the intensive quantities are no longer simply weighted
arithmetic averages.
pressure on the system. The reader can verify that this amounts to writing the
conservation of enthalpy of the sub-systems.
We have a relation between the causes Zjp and Ziq and the effects (the fluxes)
whose general form can be written as:
dX ip , q
Fi Z jp , Z jq i, j 1,..., I
dt
The principle of action and reaction and the condition of zero flux at thermostatic
equilibrium ( Z jp Z jq Z je ) can be represented by the relations:
Fi Z jp , Z jq
Fi Z jq , Z jp ;
Fi Z je , Z je 0
From this we can deduce a property of the derivatives of Fi which will be used in
the following section:
wFi
Z jp , Z jq
wFi
Z jq , Z jp
wZ jp wZ jq
vicinity of the point Zie , (ie 1,..., I ) , of thermodynamic equilibrium. Taking into
account the above equality we have:
Fi Z jp , Z jq Z jp Z jq wFi Z ie , Z ie oZ jp
Z jq , i, j 1,..., I
wZ jp
wFi
In the preceding relations, Lij Z i 0 Z ie , Z ie is a square matrix of
wZ jp
order I, the properties of which cannot be obtained via thermodynamic
considerations. Only an experiment or a suitably adapted theory can provide these
laws, which we here qualify as phenomenological laws.
As long as the preceding approximation is valid, we say that we are dealing with
linear thermodynamics of irreversible phenomena. We thus have, for each
thermodynamic flux of an extensive quantity:
dX ip , q
Lij Z ie Z jp Z jq [1.39]
dt
Internal entropy source [1.36], which exists at the interface of the two sub-
systems considered, becomes:
¦ ¦ Lij Z e Z i1 Z i 2 Z j1 Z j 2
dSint [1.40]
i, j 1,2,....n
dt i j
This internal entropy source is thus a positive quadratic form whose principal
diagonal elements are all positive ( Lii Z e ! 0 ).
For example, with the intensive entropic variable 1 T which is associated with
energy, we obtain:
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 43
1 1 T2 T1
[1.41]
T1 T2 T1T 2
Yi1 Y i2 T1 Yi1
Z i1 Z i2 Yi1 Yi2 T1 T2 [1.42]
T1 T2 T1T 2 T1T 2
1 1 T1 T 2 1 Yi0
; Z i1 Z i 2 Yi1 Yi2 T1 T2 [1.43]
T1 T2 T 02 T0 T02
dX i1 int
Lijc T0 , Yi 0 Y j1 Y j 2
dt
in which the matrix Lijc can be easily deduced from the matrix Lij. It is easy to see
that the matrix Lijc is not symmetric, as noted earlier.
In addition, the terms of the matrix diagonal Lijc are negative: the flux of the
extensive quantities is in the same direction as the decaying intensive energy
quantities.
dQ1, 2
Letting i = j = 1, the heat flux and the temperature T, we define the
dt c of the first diagonal term
thermal resistance RT which is the inverse of the term L11
of the matrix Lijc :
dQ1, 2 T2 T1
dt RT
The entropy source at the interface of the two sub-systems can be written using
the energy variables (accurate to second order excepted):
44 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
¦ ¦ L' ij Y j Yi1 Yi 2 Y j1 Y j 2
dS int
i, j 1,2,....I
dt i j
However, we must realize that the collision properties can vary with temperature,
even if the mean free path is not very temperature sensitive. This implies that the
properties of thermal resistance can depend on the temperature chosen T0 in relation
[1.43], in order to evaluate the thermal resistance (the inverse of the first diagonal
Thermodynamics of Discrete Systems 45
term of the matrix L'ij ). In fact, for large temperature differences, it is necessary to
consider thermal resistance as a succession of isothermic thermal resistances in
series and to perform an integration which takes the temperature variation into
account:
dQ1, 2 T2 dT
³T
dt 1 R T T
qT
V T24 T14
The preceding relation will quickly deviate from a linear heat transfer law valid
for small temperature differences. The reader can verify that in this case the
preceding law can be represented by a thermal resistance RT equal to 1 3 V T 3 ,
which varies strongly with temperature.
The fluid which circulates in the engine passes through successive devices which
either furnish or extract work and heat. Consider a mass m of this fluid whose
quantities and in particular the temperature T(t) evolve in a quasi-static manner as a
time function t. Let GQ be an amount of heat which it receives between the instants t
and t+Gt. During the cycle C, the variations of the fluid’s entropy and of its internal
energy are zero:
³C dE ³C G W G Q W Q 0; ³C dS 0 [1.44]
Thus, the evolution process of the fluid over a cycle, as for all processes, creates
entropy (see section 1.4.2.4). As the entropy variation of the fluid is zero over the
cycle, a generalized version of relation [1.33] can be written, T being the
temperature of the fluid:
dQ
³C d0
T
On the other hand, the heat transfer from the sources at temperature TS(t) is also
accompanied by a creation of entropy, the reasoning of relation shows that we have
the Clausius inequalities:
dQ dQ
³C d ³C d ³C dS 0
TS T
The preceding reasoning has the advantage of highlighting the entropy sources
associated with the Clausius inequality; it also shows that the difference between the
inequality terms is greater in proportion to the level of irreversibility.
We will not get into a detailed discussion of such cycles and the efficiency of
heat engines, all of which can be deduced from the aforementioned inequalities. The
reader will find such discussions in texts on applied thermodynamics.
Chapter 2
We define reduced extensive quantities, i.e. extensive quantities per unit of mass,
volume, or number of moles:
G
– a quantity per unit mass g ,
m
48 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
G
– a volume quantity g ,
V
G
– a molar quantity g~ .
N
~
G ³D U gdv ³D gdv ³D ngdv
r
M
U m M , r
U M
r
p
rT e C v T const
U
The local thermodynamic equilibrium hypothesis is based on the fact that the
time required for the local gas equilibrium to be achieved (relaxation time) is small
compared with the times associated with the macroscopic gas evolution. For the
molecules of mean free path A and molecular velocity c, the relaxation time is in the
order of A/c, if we consider that each molecular collision is efficient in the transfer of
extensive molecular quantities (quantum conditions).
50 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
This condition of local thermodynamic equilibrium does not allow the entire
medium considered to be in global thermodynamic equilibrium. It can be shown
using statistical methods taken from kinetic gas theory, for example, that the net
balance of the extensive molecular quantities gives, at first order, a distribution of
Maxwell-Boltzmann velocities which correspond to a local statistic mechanical
equilibrium ([CHA 91], [HIR 64]). At second order we have phenomena associated
with the irreversible transfer of extensive quantities ([BIR 02]); in section 3.4.1.3 we
will discuss the mechanism of this irreversible transfer in the case of momentum
transfer. The statistical equations describing turbulence are identical to the preceding
molecular statistical transfer equations, in which turbulent fluctuations play the role
of molecular fluctuations for the transfer of these extensive quantities.
Unfortunately, turbulent fluctuations do not verify general statistical laws and the
preceding analogy is only formal ([COU 89], [MAT 00], [TEN 72]).
Consider the tetrahedron OA1A2A3 whose corners are the origin O and three
points lying on the axes (Figure 2.2). Suppose that the surface dimensions of this
tetrahedron are small, of order H. Let q G1 ds1, q G 2 ds2, qG3 ds3 be, respectively,
the fluxes of quantity G across the surfaces OA2A3, OA1A3 and OA1A2 (of
respective surface areas ds1, ds2 and ds3, of order H2) in the positive direction along
the coordinate axes.
Let dM G be the flux leaving the face A1A2A3 of area ds of the tetrahedron.
Suppose that the (algebraic) sources of the quantity G are volumetric. The amount of
the quantity created in the tetrahedron is O(H3). The balance of the extensive
quantity G leaving the tetrahedron can be written:
dM G q G1ds1 q G 2 ds 2 q G 3 ds 3 O (H 3 )
x3 A3
n
A2 x2
A1
x11
We obtain:
ds i D i ds (i 1,2,3)
G
where Di designates the directional cosines of the normal n oriented towards the
exterior of the tetrahedron.
By replacing the surfaces dsi with their previous expressions and by letting H
G
towards 0, the terms of order H2 should cancel out. By defining vector qG or the flux
density of the quantity G, with components q G1 , q G 2 , q G 3 , we obtain the
elementary flux of the quantity G across ds (the quantity of G crossing ds per unit
G
time in the direction normal n ):
G G
dM G q GiD i ds q G .n ds [2.2]
52 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
G G
M G6 ³S q G .n ds [2.3]
G
dM Gi q Gij n j ds q G .n ds [2.4]
where the tensor q G is defined, as before, using the vector fluxes across the co-
ordinate planes.
df i V ij n j ds [2.5]
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 53
exterior V33
73
n 1 V12
V32
V31
ds V23 V
2 V13 72 V
interior 71
G G x3 V12 V22
df 1o 2 Tds V21
V
V11
O
(a) x2 (b) (c)
x1
df G
T (M , t ) V .n
ds
Figure 2.3b shows the stresses on the faces of a parallelepiped whose corners are
parallel to the axes. The reader can easily verify that in the absence of volume sources of
torques, the equality of the moments about the axis Ox3 of the stresses exerted on the
four faces parallel to the axis Ox3 (see Figure 2.3c) leads to V 12 V 21 . The same goes
for the other components of the stress tensor ( V ij V ji ).
G G § wq Gi ·
M G6 ³6 q G .n ds ³D div q G dv ¨ ³ dv ¸ [2.6]
¨ D wx ¸
© i ¹
This flux can thus be written in the form of a volume integral, which implies
that the total flux of the quantity G on a closed surface is equivalent to the
action of the volume source div q G of the quantity G.
54 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
G
³6 T (M , t ) ds ³6 V .n ds ³D divV dv
Reciprocally, all volume sources which are mathematically expressed by means of a
G
divergence operator ( div q for instance) can be interpreted as a transfer by the flux
G
across a closed surface of vector flux density q .
G
x3 n
D
O
x2 6
x1
wg
³D dv ³D V G dv ³¦ q Gj n j ds [2.7]
wt
Supposing this relation to be true regardless of the domain D, we can deduce the
local equation:
wg wqGj
VG [2.8]
wt wx j
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 55
For a fixed medium, which can thus not be deformed, mass1 must be strictly
conserved, and we have:
wU
0
wt
Balance equation [2.8] for the quantity G can also be written, using the mass
quantity g:
wg wq Gj
U VG [2.9]
wt wx j
For a fixed continuous medium, the principal extensive quantities are internal
energy (in its thermal form, and in the absence of possible physicochemical
reactions), volume and the number of moles of a chemical species. Electric
quantities may also be manifested; however, we will not deal with such questions in
this work.
wT wqTj
UC VT [2.10]
wt wx j
For a chemical species comprising a number of moles ni per unit volume (molar
concentration), the balance equation can be written:
wni wq n ij
U V ni [2.11]
wt wx j
1 Excepting diffusion processes, for which we only give volumic balances in this chapter
(section 2.4.4.2.2).
56 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The molar flux densities qni and the sources Vni of chemical species are due,
respectively, to diffusion phenomena and chemical reactions.
On account of the local equilibrium hypothesis, relation [1.13] can be written, for the
per mass unit quantities:
ws U we w gi
U U Zi [2.12]
wt T wt wt
wg i
By replacing the derivatives U in equation [2.12] by expressions obtained using
wt
balance equations [2.9], the following relation can be obtained:
ws U we § wq ·
U Z k ¨ V Gk Gki ¸
wt T wt ¨ wxi ¸¹
© [2.13]
U we w>Z k q Gki @ wZ k
Z k V Gk q Gki
T wt wxi wx i
in which the surface flux terms associated with the divergence operator have been
separated from those associated with the volume source as defined in section 2.1.3.3.
The entropy is associated with the extensive quantities and the corresponding entropy
addition are represented by two terms:
– Z k V Gk V S external entropy source associated with the source V Gk of the
extensive quantity Gk;
– Z k q Gki Z S entropy flux associated with the flux of extensive quantities.
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 57
2.1.5.1. Introduction
G
An irreversible evolution is characterized by flux density fields of the quantity q Gk
in a continuous medium. These thermodynamic fluxes are associated with gradients of
intensive entropic quantities Zi. The transfer of a quantity Gi can occur via relatively
different kinds of processes:
1) Molecular agitation leads to an exchange of extensive quantities between the
particles involved. These intermolecular actions occur from place to place, because it is
these microscopic particles themselves which transport the extensive quantity considered
(mass, momentum, energy, chemical species, etc.). The interaction zone between two
material domains D1 and D2 separated by the surface S (Figure 2.5) is limited to a
thickness in the order of 2d (d: intermolecular distance in liquids or mean free path in
gases). This extremely thin zone is modeled on the macroscopic scale by the surface S,
on which we can consider contact actions.
S
D2
D1
2d
As with discrete systems (section 1.4.2.6) all causes of the same tensorial nature
act on all the corresponding effects and we have a coupling of irreversible
phenomena: for example, a temperature gradient leads to a material flux (thermal
diffusion). Phenomena of different tensorial orders do not interact.
homogeneity and of spatial and material isotropy. In what follows, we will limit our
discussion to cases where the difference from thermodynamic equilibrium is
relatively small, so that we can justify a first order Taylor expansion of the functions
G
Fk grad Z l :
Fk grad Z
l L kl grad Z l
Thermodynamics does not provide access to any properties associated with the
matrix Lkl . However, by means of statistical reasoning the matrix can be shown to
be symmetric (Onsager’s relations). This symmetry is only verified if the entropic
variables Zk are used to define this matrix.
In practice, the local imbalance is characterized using simpler variables than the
intensive entropic variables Zk. For example, we use temperature in place of the
entropic intensive variable 1 T (section 1.3.1.1). Expressions for linearized
thermodynamic force are equivalent to first order, but the matrix coefficients Lij are
modified, such that the symmetric properties generally disappear. An analogous
situation has been observed in the case of discontinuous media (section 1.4.2.6.2).
G JJJJJG sT
q T Ȝ . gradT or qTi Ȝij
sxj
The principal axes of the 3*3 tensor Oij are the symmetric axes of the medium.
If the medium is homogenous (fluids, non-crystalline solids, etc.), the three
60 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
eigenvalues of the tensor Oij are equal and this one is spherical ( O ij OG ij ); it can
thus be expressed solely as a function of the thermal conductivity O of the medium.
Fourier’s law can be written as:
wT
qTi O qT O gradT [2.15]
wx i
Solid crystalline media are generally good conductors: as the crystalline structure
presents a reasonably strong coherence on account of its organization, energy can be
transmitted in a vibrational form (phonons). The coefficient values O are in the order
of a few W/m.K.
Liquids, comprising a looser structure, are poorer conductors of heat than solids
(of the order of 0.1 to 0.2 W/m.K): intermolecular forces here assure conduction.
G G G wT
MT ³S qT .nds ³S O gradT .nds ³S O .ds
wn
O
a
UC
The reader can easily verify that this quantity a can be expressed in m2/sec; we
will see the important role that this quantity plays in the heat equation (section
2.3.1).
qn D grad n1 [2.16]
1
j V el grad V el
G
where j is the electric current density and V el is the electrical conductivity.
Thermal molecular agitation, which grows with temperature, slows down the
movement of electric charge-carriers because of collisions; thus, electrical
conductivity is a decreasing function of temperature, whereas for other irreversible
phenomena, thermal agitation is the driving factor of thermal and diffusional fluxes.
We can schematically write under certain conditions the following relations for
the diffusion of a constituent of binary mixing in the presence of heat transfer:
qT O gradT K grad n1
gradT
q n1 D1T D grad n1
T
The coefficient D1T characterizes the thermal diffusion (Soret effect), i.e. the
existence of a flux of chemical species which is associated with a temperature
gradient. The symmetric effect of a heat flux caused by a concentration gradient
(Dufour effect) and characterized by the coefficient K is generally much weaker.
From a physical point of view, the problem is more complex than this, as each
chemical species introduces its own thermal energy (enthalpy at constant pressure,
etc.). Definitions of the preceding coefficients may vary, and we will not provide a
complete discussion of these phenomena, as this would require lengthy discussions
concerning chemical thermodynamics ([BIR 01], [DEG 62], [PRI 68]).
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 63
G
Using the identity ³6 f .n ds ³D grad f .dv , we obtain:
wp
U gi 0 [2.18]
wx i
64 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Equation [2.18] can only be solved if the vector Ugi can be derived from a
potential, in other words if the following condition is satisfied:
G G G
rot U g U rot g grad U g 0
We can see that for a fluid of constant density, an equilibrium situation can only
G
exist if the force field g grad U derives from a potential.
grad U grad U 0
This leads to the fact that surfaces of U=const. and U=const. are identical.
This also leads to the identity of isobaric and equipotential surfaces that are
identical. If the fluid is divariant, with an equation of state in the form p pU , T ,
the said surfaces are also isothermal.
The resultant pressure force on the exterior of the closed surface 6 can be
immediately deduced from relation [2.17]:
G G
³6 p.nds ³D U gdv
G
This force is the opposite of the sum of the forces exerted by the force field g
on the fluid contained in D.
Let us now consider the case of gravity. As with equation [2.17], the balance
moment of forces on domain D – where 3 is the center of gravity of this domain D
filled with the fluid – can be written:
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 65
G G G
³6 3 M p.n ds ³D 3M U gdv g ³D U 3 M dv 0
So, the collection of the pressure forces is equivalent to a single force, equal to
the weight of fluid displaced and applied at the center of gravity 3of the domain
supposed to be filled with the fluid. The point 3 is called the center of buoyancy.
This result constitutes Archimedes’ theorem.
Now, considering a vertical cylinder with identical horizontal bases, we see that
the difference in pressure forces between the lower and the upper bases is equal to
the weight of fluid contained in the cylinder.
dp
We can thus define the function h( p) ³ such that:
U
dp § grad p ·¸
dh ¨ grad h
U ¨ U ¸¹
©
If the specific fluid entropy is constant over the entire domain studied, it is said
to be homoentropic, and the function h is therefore the specific fluid enthalpy.
General equation [2.19] can be written as:
grad h U 0
and its solution is: h U const . The pressure p can thus be obtained by inverting
the function h(p).
So, it is this quantity p U 0U (in the case of gravity p U 0 gz ) and not the
pressure alone which is constant in a motionless fluid. Hence, variations of this
quantity must be the causes of movement. For this reason, we will call it “driving
pressure” and we will note it as p g p U 0 gz in the case of gravity.
In fact, for such an incompressible homogenous fluid, we will find (see Chapter
4) that, under certain conditions, movement is associated with variations of this
driving pressure alone, without explicit intervention from pressure.
EXERCISES –
1) Equilibrium of a homogenous liquid in a rotating reference frame of axis Oz.
Give the expression for pressure as a function of the coordinates x and y and z. Show
that in a reference frame which rotates with angular velocity Z about the vertical
axis Oz, the isobar surfaces are paraboloids of revolution about the axis Oz.
1
(Answer: p U Z 2 ( x 2 y 2 ) U gz const)
2
2) Equilibrium of a homogenous liquid in a reference frame which is undergoing
a constant horizontal acceleration J. Derive an expression for pressure as a function
of the abscissa x parallel to the acceleration and the altitude z. Show that in this
reference frame isobar surfaces are inclined planes.
(Answer: p U gz J x const)
§1 1·
p1 p 2 V ¨¨ ¸¸
©R R' ¹
R and R' are the radii of curvature of two interfacial surface sections by
perpendicular planes which contain the normal to this interface at the considered
point of this one. The pressure p1 is greater on the concave side of the surface
(Figure 2.6b).
On the other hand, the contact angle between an interface and wall is a physical
characteristic between these three domains [BEN 06]. A liquid wetting the wall
perfectly is joining tangentially to another liquid (water on a clean wall made of
glass, for instance). Surface active substances generally ensure a perfect wetting of
the surface, but they modify the value of the surface tension.
EXERCISES –
§ g z z 0 ·
1) in an isothermal atmosphere of temperature T0: ( p p 0 exp¨ ¸ );
¨ rT0 ¸¹
©
2) in a homoentropic atmosphere, where the temperature at the ground is equal to
T0.
68 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
F ³S p n ds
The component of the uniform pressure force in the direction Ox is equal to the
pressure force on the surface S', which is a projection of S on the plane
perpendicular to Ox.
P n
n
x
ds' x
S T
ds ds
OF 3
x
S’ S
(a) (b) y z
Figure 2.7. Pressure forces: (a) arbitrary surface with constant pressure;
(b) forces due to a liquid on a plane surface
In practice, this surface is an element of a pipe, a reservoir, etc. Let us take the
example of a cylindrical pipe with radius R. The stress T on the wall, due to the
overpressure 'p in the pipe, must balance the pressure forces on a half-cylinder. It is
thus equal to 'pR per unit length: the stress on the wall increases with the radius R.
For a tube of radius 1 cm transporting compressed air pressurized to 100
atmospheres, this is equal to 105 N/meter.
2.2.2.2. Hydrostatics
The equilibrium of a homogenous liquid (often water) in a gravitational field is
of considerable practical importance, particularly in cases such as water reservoir
walls, sluice gates and boat hulls.
The pressure forces on a plane surface, one side of which is covered by a liquid,
are parallel to the wall normal: they are thus equivalent to a single vector applied at
a given point on the wall, the center of pressure 3. Consider a plane surface S
identified by the coordinates Oxy in its plane (Figure 2.7b). Suppose that the free
surface of the water is at z = 0. The hydrostatic pressure is equal to 'p = Ug z.
Denoting the center of inertia of the surface S as G, the thrust P (the resultant
pressure force) is equal to:
The thrust P is equal to the product of the pressure at the center of inertia G of
the homogenous surface and its surface S. The center of pressure, which can be
easily calculated by taking the moment of the pressure forces with respect to Oz, is
beneath the inertia centers.
The forces exerted by water on the walls of large reservoirs and dams are often
considerable; the construction of dams thus involves massive elevations of earth
whose weight blocks the mass of water (weight dams), or large concrete
constructions which resist by returning the thrust on the rocky walls (mountain arch
dams).
The reader can easily verify that the horizontal component (along Ox) of the
hydrostatic pressure force on a curved surface is equal to the hydrostatic pressure
force on the surface S', which is the projection of S on a plane perpendicular to Ox.
This result clearly makes no sense for a vertical component.
EXERCISES –
1) Calculate the coordinates of the pressure center 3 on the surface S of Figure
2.7b. (Answer: x 3 x G , y 3 y Gy I G y / S , IGy giving the inertia moment of
the surface taking with respect to a straight line parallel to Oy and passing through
G.)
2) Calculate the load-force generated on a vertical rectangular wall, 4 m in width
and containing a mass of water 3 m in height. Determine the position of the center of
pressure. (Answer: 18.0 ×104 newtons, 1 m above the bottom.)
3) Answer the same questions for a dam in the form of a 50 m high equilateral
triangle.
2.2.2.3. Floaters
A floater is a body placed on the surface of a liquid, and whose weight is less
than that of an equivalent volume of the same liquid. In this kind of situation there is
always an equilibrium position, such that the force exerted by the fluid on the body
balances its weight. However, the stability of this position is not guaranteed. We will
not study hull-stability problems ([BAR 01]) which requires geometrical knowledge
related to surface curvature and normal fields ([KRE 91]).
We will only discuss a simple example in order to illustrate the origin of such
problems. Consider a homogenous, elliptical cylinder whose density is half that of
water, such that at equilibrium, the center of the ellipse is always in the plane free
surface of the water. While in equilibrium, the upward thrust which the cylinder
experiences, P, applied at the center of buoyancy 3 opposes that of its weight, P,
applied at the center of gravity of the ellipse, G, which lies in a vertical section of
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 71
the meridian plane of the cylinder. There are two equilibrium positions ((a) and (c)
in Figure 2.8) corresponding to the vertical positions for each axes of the ellipse.
The equilibrium stability is studied in the usual way: a small clockwise rotation of
the cylinder is performed (positions (b) and (d) in Figure 2.8).
G G G G
3 3 3 3
We assume that the submerged volume (beneath the flotation plane) and the
thrust P remain constant during the displacement; however as the distribution of
the volume submerged has changed, the center of buoyancy 3 is moved to the
side where the submerged volume has increased (with respect to the vertical
passing through G), thus creating either a restoring moment (situation (b)) or an
amplifying moment (situation (d)), depending on the situation: position (a) is
stable, whereas position (c) is unstable.
In fact for a real hull we must also take account of the way it is loaded, and
possible movements of this load. For the preceding elliptical floater, we see that
we can add a weight to the upper surface of the cylinder: the system will be
stable as long as the restoring moment is less than the moment generated by the
extra weight. On the other hand, a circular cylinder is in a state of neutral
equilibrium if it is not loaded; it obviously becomes unstable if any weight is
added to the upper side. Escorting floating logs during their floatation down
rivers is not a straightforward use of fluid statics!
72 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wT w § wT ·
UC ¨O ¸ VT
wt wx i ¨© wxi ¸¹
wT w 2T
UC O 'T V T with '
wt wx i wx i
In the absence of thermal power sources (VT = 0), we obtain the heat equation:
wT
a'T
wt
Here we will deal with the principal problems of heat conduction, which we
will later encounter in a similar form when we deal with viscous fluid
mechanics. Thermal boundary conditions can generally be classed in one of the
following categories:
1) Dirichlet condition: the temperature distribution T(M) is known at all
points on the boundary. This is often the case for recipient walls which contain
an agitated fluid, walls which are in contact with highly conductive solids
(metals, etc.); the corresponding practical problems relate to heating, thermal
insulation, etc.
2) Neumann condition: the heat-flux density on the boundary qTp ( M ) is
known at all points M on the boundary. These conditions are found in the
presence of heat sources resulting from the dissipation of other forms of energy,
such as heating by Joule effect, heat produced by nuclear reactors, radiation
absorption, etc.
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 73
3) Mixed condition: where a linear relationship exists between the wall flux-
density and the temperature difference between the wall temperature Tp(M) and
a given temperature T0:
qTp ( M )
§ wT ·
O ¨¨ ¸¸
h T p T0
© wn ¹ p
2.4. Diffusion
2.4.1. Introduction
2.4.1.1. Definition
When a fluid F1 is carefully introduced to a recipient which contains a fluid F2
which is miscible with F1, after a certain duration we notice that movements related
74 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Let us consider two molecular species (black and white molecules in Figure
2.9a). By supposing that the two categories of molecules have the same energy (in
other words the same temperature), each molecular species moves as a result of
collisions. These collisions have a random character; for a resting gas made up of
one or many species of molecule, uniformly distributed, we see that the molecules
are statistically stationary, because each species only permutes between themselves.
During collisions and molecular interactions in the volume shown in Figure 2.9a,
there are more black (or respectively white) molecules at the bottom (or at the top),
but they will end up uniformly distributed in the container considered. The statistical
aspects of the second principle of thermodynamics leads to a complete mixing of the
two species, whose concentrations become uniform.
However, in this container, where the pressure is supposed constant, the total
molar concentration remains constant at all points, with the species whose
concentration decreases being replaced by the other species whose concentration
increases. This pressure constraint leads to a relation between migrations of the two
species.
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 75
x n2a x
A
ns O
(a) (b)
For the sake of simplicity, we will consider the case of mixing between two
perfect gases: gravity here often plays a negligible role at the laboratory scale.
Kinetic gas theory allows the modeling of phenomena at the molecular scale. We
will limit the discussion to cases where the temperature of the systems studied is
uniform; if this was not the case, it would be necessary to introduce a further
phenomenon: thermal diffusion. The interested reader should refer to classic texts on
the subject (see section 2.4.5).
As the preceding quantities are additive, we can define the total number of moles
n (or molecules) per unit volume, and the density U of the mixture:
k k k
n ¦ ni ; U ¦ Ui ¦ ni M i [2.20]
i 1 i 1 i 1
If the system comprises a perfect gas, which we assume in what follows, the
total pressure is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of the different
constituents.
Ji ni / n ; Z i Ui / U [2.21]
k k
¦J i 1; ¦Zi 1
i 1 i 1
While the density U or the number of moles n per unit volume of a mixture
appear in the global mixing equations, the composition of the mixture is in fact
characterized by the given concentrations of only k 1 components.
It often happens that the mixture contains a constituent 1, which is dominant, and
a weak proportion of a species i:
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 77
All relative concentrations of species 1 then have the same first order value. For
example, it is thus possible to confuse the molar fraction Ji = ni / n with the quantity
Ji = ni / n1, the errors thus committed being in the order of (ni / n1)2. The same goes
for the mass fraction Zi = Ui / U and the quantity Ui / U1, the partial pressure pi / p
and pi / p1. All these variables of relative concentration are proportional. We will
note as ci the species concentration i present in small quantities in a mixture.
Letting g be the volume density of the quantity G (see section 2.1.1), we can
G
derive expressions for the vector flux density q g of G2 and the flux M GS of the
quantity G across the surface S:
G G G G GG
qg gV M GS ³S q G .n ds ³S g V .nds
G G G G G
q ni niVi ; M ni ³S q ni .nds ³S ni Vi .nds [2.22]
G G G G G G
q mi ȡ i Vi M mi ³S q mi .n ds ³S U iVi .n ds. [2.23]
The molar flux M ni and the mass flux M mi represent, respectively, the number
of moles and the component mass i crossing S per unit time.
wni
w
ni uij V ni i 1,2,..k . [2.24]
wt wx j
Balance equations can be written for the density Ui , which are equivalent to
[2.24], by multiplying each of these by the molar mass Mi of the corresponding
component:
w Ui
w
U i uij M iV ni i 1,2,..k . [2.25]
wt wx j
G k G k G G G
qn ¦ q ni ¦ niVi Mn ³S q n .n ds [2.26]
i 1 i 1
G
– the total density q m of the mass flux and the total mass flux M m :
G k G k G G G
qm ¦ q mi ¦ U iVi Mm ³S q m .n ds [2.27]
i 1 i 1
The global molar and mass balances for the mixture allow average mixing
velocities to be defined according to the methodology described in section 1.4.2.5
for the intensive quantities3. We thus define:
G
– the molar average velocity V * (which is independent of the molar mass) using
the molar balance [2.26]:
G 1 k G
V* ¦ niVi [2.28]
ni 1
G
– the mass average velocity V (velocity of the inertia center of a fluid particle4),
using mass balance [2.27]:
G k G G
1 qm
V ¦ U i Vi [2.29]
U i 1 U
G G
The velocities V and V * are the same only if the continuous medium comprises
a homogenous mixture of constant composition or of identical molecules (a pure
substance).
The molar fluxes M n and M m represent, respectively, the number of moles and
the total mass of a mixture which are crossing a surface S per unit time:
G *
G G
Mn ³S q n .ds ³S nV .ds Mm ³S q m .ds ³S UV .ds
wn
wt
G
div nV *
k
¦ V ni [2.30]
i 1
k
The quantity ¦ V ni is the number of moles created by chemical reactions.
i 1
k
We do the same for equations [2.25] and [2.29]; however, the sum ¦ M i V ni is
i 1
zero as there is no mass source. We obtain the conservation equation for the total
mass:
wU
G
div U V 0 [2.31]
wt
We will encounter the preceding equation again in the next chapter, during our
study of fluid flows, where it plays a fundamental role.
The reader will note that the k equation [2.24] (or [2.25]) is equivalent to the
system of k-1 equation [2.24] (or [2.25]) and equation [2.30] (or [2.31]). In other
words, it suffices to describe k-1 component balance equations in addition to the
global balance equation for the mixture.
2.4.3.1. Introduction
In this chapter, we have already studied the transfer of diverse quantities G
(energy, entropy, etc.) with respect to matter which was supposed stationary; in
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 81
G k G * G * G G
nV * ni ¡¢Vi ¯°± 0, with: ¡¢Vi ¯°± Vi V *
i1
This results in the molar flux densities playing an important role in this reference
frame:
G G G *
q ¯ * n V ¯ * , with: ¡ q ni ¯° 0
¢¡ ni ±° i ¢¡ i ±° ¢ ±
i
As the free surface of the liquid at the bottom of the tube is impermeable to air,
the flux density and velocity of the air are both zero at all points within the tube: the
G 1
air is at rest in the reference frame of the tube ( V1 > @
0 ) and so diffusion velocity
of vapor in air can be written:
>VG2 @1 G G
V2 V1
Since we have a steady evaporation regime, we can conclude that the flux of
liquid evaporated >n2V2 @1 across a cross-section of the tube is independent of the
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 83
G k G
UV ¦ U iVi [2.33]
i 1
k G G G G G G
i ¡¢Vi ¯°± 0, with: ¡Vi ¯° Vi V
¢ ±
[2.34]
i1
G G k
G
q ¯ G V ¯ G ,
¡¢ mi °± i ¡¢ i °± with: <qmi >G 0 [2.35]
i1
section 2.4.1.3 that all concentration definitions were equivalent for the first order. It
can be shown in the same way from expressions [2.28] and [2.29] that the
G G G
velocities V , V * and V1 are equal to order H, so that the predominant component
constitutes the natural reference frame.
In this case, the diffusion velocity of a component is its velocity with respect to
the predominant species, and any extensive quantities can be used to define a flux
density, as the reference frame is no longer described by a balance equation.
G
5 The massG speed
G V is the local speed of fluid medium intervening in the mechanical
equations ( V G V ).
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 85
RG
mass average
Ui
>VGi @G G G
Vi V >qGmi @G > G @G
U i Vi G
U i Vi V
G
G k G
¦ >q mi @
velocity V G
0
i 1
R1 ni
>VGi @1 G G
Vi V1
G
> qmi @1
G 1
Ui ª¬Vi º¼ , i z 1
component 1 Ui
G
velocity V1 >VG1 @1 0 G
> qni @1
G 1
ni ª¬Vi º¼ , i z 1
G G
> qm1 @1 > qn1 @1 0
weak concentrations
of components other
ci i z 1
>VGi @1 >VGi @G >qGci @1 > @1
G
c i Vi G G
c i Vi V 1
than 1 >VGi @* i z 1 i z1
R * #R G # R 1 >VG1 @1 0
Table 2.1. Variables characterizing diffusion for different reference frames
For a binary mixture, the only quantity which is independent of the reference
G G
frame and diffusion characteristic is the velocity difference V1 V 2 , of species 1
and 2 with respect to an arbitrary reference frame. Diffusion velocities in the
G G
reference frames R* or RG can then be easily expressed as a function of V1 V 2 .
G
In effect, in the reference frame corresponding to the mean molar velocity V * ,
we obtain relation [2.28]:
G * G * G G G*
n1 ¢¡ V1 ±°¯ n2 ¢¡ V 2 ±°¯ 0 with: ¯*
¢¡V i ±° V i V
>VG1 @*
>
V2 @
G *
V1 V 2
G G
n1 n 2 G G
V1 V 2 [2.36]
1 1 1 1 n
n1 n2 n1 n2
or:
>qG n1 @* > @
G *
n1 V1
G
>q n 2 @* > @
G *
n 2 V 2
n
n1 n 2 G G
V1 V 2 [2.37]
In the reference frame R* associated with the molar velocity, the diffusion
velocities and molar flux densities of each component can be written as a function of
G G
the velocity difference V1 V2 .
Similarly, using relation [2.34] between the mass flux densities in reference
frame RG we obtain:
>qG m1 @G > G @G
U1 V1
G
>q m 2 @G U 2 V2> @
G G
U
U1 U 2 G G
V1 V 2 [2.38]
>VG1 @G U2 n G
> @* n1 n 2 M 2 >VG1 @* > @
M2 G *
[2.39]
V1 V1
U n2 n1 M 1 n 2 M 2 M
>VG2 @G M1 G
M
V2> @* [2.40]
n1 M 1 n 2 M 2
where M is the local average molar mass of the mixture.
n1 n 2
In summary, the diffusion velocity in a given reference frame can be expressed
as a function of the velocity difference between the two components by means of the
law which defines the reference frame. It is thus velocity differences which
characterize binary diffusion phenomena independently of the reference frame
which is chosen.
n
grad 1
G G n2
V1 V 2 D [2.41]
n1
n2
n1
the ratio being dimensionless. It is equal to the concentrations ratio of two
n2
species, expressed using a proportional definition for the two species6:
G G grad J 1 J 2 grad U1 U 2
V1 V 2 D D
J1 J 2 U1 U 2
[2.42]
grad Z 1 Z 2 grad p1 p 2
D D
Z1 Z 2 p1 p 2
6 Using partial pressures is only correct for perfect gases and ideal solutions.
88 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Relation [2.41] shows that the diffusion coefficient can be expressed in m2.s-1.
For a gas at atmospheric pressure, it is more or less independent of concentration.
For mixtures with air, it usually lies between 1.0 × 10-5 and 2.5 × 10-5 m2.s-1, the
lowest values corresponding to heavy molecules (carbon dioxide, ethanol, benzene,
etc.). Very light molecules (hydrogen, helium) give larger values (up to 13.2 × 10-5
m2.s-1 for hydrogen-helium mixtures).
Expression [2.41] shows that the quantity D grad has the dimension of velocity
and that this gives an order of magnitude of D A for the diffusion velocities, where
A is the distance over which the concentration gradient is extended. Taking for
example A = 0.1 meter, we can see that the diffusion velocity is in the order of 10-4
m.s-1 in gases and 10-8 m.s-1 in liquids. These velocities increase considerably if the
distance A is significantly diminished; as for momentum transfer (section 6.5.3),
convection effect can reduce this quantity to values comparable with the thickness of
a boundary layer, leading to a significant increase in diffusion velocity ([BIR 01]).
We define the Lewis number Le as the dimensionless ratio between the diffusion
coefficient and thermal diffusivity a:
D
Le
a
Substituting [2.43] into Fick’s law [2.41], the velocity difference can be written
as a function of the concentration n1 alone:
G G n n
V1 V 2 D grad n1 D grad n1 [2.44]
n1 n 2 n1 n n1
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 89
>VG1 @* D
grad n1
n1
>VG2 @* D
grad n 2
n2
[2.45]
From this we can deduce the molar flux densities of the two species:
>qG n1 @* n1 V1> @
G * G
>q n 2 @* > @
G *
n 2 V2 D grad n1 D grad n 2 [2.46]
>VG1 @* D
grad U1
U1
D
grad p1
p1
D
grad J 1
J1
[2.47]
> @
G *
V2 D
grad U 2
U2
D
grad p 2
p2
D
grad J 2
J2
NOTE – Expression [2.47], using the molar fractions as variables, is exact, even if
the volumic number of moles n has a non-zero gradient. This results from the
definition:
JJJJJG JJJJJG
1 2 1 and: grad1 grad2 0
and from expression [2.42] of Fick’s law using molar fractions which can be written:
G G D
V1 V 2 gradJ 1 [2.48]
J 1J 2
90 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wn1 wq n1 j
VG
wt wx j
wn1
wt
w §¨ wn1
D
wx j ¨© wx j
·
¸ V
¸ G
§ wn1
¨¨
© wt
·
div D grad n1 V G ¸¸
¹
[2.50]
¹
The volume source VG of species 1 expresses the number of moles per unit volume
of this species created by a homogenous chemical reaction inside the container. It is
fixed by chemical kinetics. It is zero in the absence of any chemical reaction.
In the common case where the diffusion coefficient is constant and where there
is no chemical reaction, equation [2.50] reduces to the heat equation:
wn1
D 'n1 [2.51]
wt
G § wn1 ·
n w .grad n1 ¨¨ ¸¸ 0
© wn ¹ w
G n
V2 D grad n 2
n1 n 2
§ grad n 2 ·¸
div¨ D n 0 [2.52]
¨ n n 2 ¸¹
©
Dn dn2
qn2 constant [2.53]
n n2 dx
§ x q n2 ·
n n2 n n S exp¨¨ ¸
¸
© Dn ¹
92 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Expressing, at the abscissa A, the concentration condition for the ambient air
we obtain a relation giving the flux density of the vapor:
q n2 A § n n 2a ·
ln¨ ¸
Dn ¨ nn ¸
© S ¹
Dn S n 2a
q n2 [2.54]
A
Numerical application
Take a tube of height A = 0.10 m. We base our reasoning on a density which is
proportional to the volumic number of moles for water vapor at 20ºC, assuming the
external air to be perfectly dry (n2a = 0) and using the following data: D=2.6 × 10-5
m2.s-1: Us = 0.018 kg.m-3. We find, for the flux density evaporated:
2.6 u 10 5 u 0.018
q m2 4.68 u 10 6 kg.m 2 .s 1
0.1
This corresponds to a reduction in the level of the free surface of about 0.4 mm
per day. For acetone, whose saturated vapor pressure is 10 times greater, the
evaporation is 10 times more rapid.
>qG m1 @G > G @G
U1 V1
G
>q m 2 @G > @
G G
U 2 V2
U 1U
U
2
VG1 VG2 [2.55]
The expression of Fick’s law [2.42] which is best adapted to this reference frame
uses mass fractions for the concentration variables:
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 93
Z1
grad
G G Z2 ª gradZ gradZ 2 º
1
V1 V2 D D« »
Z1 «¬ Z1 Z 2 »¼
Z2
and thus:
G G D
V1 V 2 gradZ1 [2.56]
Z1Z 2
There are almost no static diffusion problems which lead to a motionless local
inertia center. Expression [2.57] will be used in the diffusion equation in the
presence of convection in Chapter 4.
NOTE – Using relations [2.39] and [2.40], diffusion velocities in the reference
frame RG can be expressed, as before, as a function of the variables n1 and n2, as
well as U1 with U2, p1 and p2 or J1 and J2:
>VG1 @G
DM 2 grad U 1
M U1
DM 2 grad p1
M p1
DM 2 grad J 1
M J1
[2.58]
>VG2 @G
DM 1 grad U 2
M U2
DM 1 grad p 2
M p2
DM 1 grad J 2
M J2
[2.59]
DM 2 DM 1
DG1 DG 2
M M
94 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
On the other hand, if the evaporation is no longer steady, then the air (species 1)
is no longer stationary. Consider the case where the tube in Figure 2.9b is filled only
with air at the initial instant; the total pressure remains constant; the rise of vapor
(species 2) in the tube moves the molar quantity corresponding to the air which is
now in movement and is thus no longer the favored reference frame.
wn 2 w
n 2V2 0 [2.60]
wt wx
The flux density of the vapor n 2V 2 is now a function of the two variables x and t.
G G *
It can be obtained by decomposing the velocity, V 2 ¡V 2 ¯° V * , and by replacing
¢ ±
JJG
[V 2 ] by its expression in [2.45]:
wn 2 n2
q n2 n 2V2 D qn [2.61]
wx n
wn 2 w § qn wn ·
¨¨ n2 D 2 ¸¸ 0 [2.62]
wt wx © n wx ¹
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 95
Dn wn 2
qn nV * >n 2V2 @x 0 [2.63]
n n S wx 0
The molar concentration n2 satisfies equation [2.62] and condition [2.63] with
which we can associate the conditions used in section 2.4.4.2.4 for positions 0 and A:
n 2 0, t ns n 2 A, t n 2a
We will go no further with these calculations. Let us just recover the steady
regime studied earlier (section 2.4.4.2.4) by observing that in this case, gas 1 is
stationary; we therefore have, for all x:
qn nV * n 2V 2
n wn 2
n 2V 2 D
n n 2 wx
w § n ª wn 2 º ·
¨ « D »¸ 0
wx ¨© n n 2 ¬ wx ¼ ¸¹
By comparing relations [2.28] and [2.29], we can see that the three reference
frames R*, RG and R1 become identical to the first order. We can note that
G *
> @
expressions [2.47], or [2.58] and [2.59], show that the diffusion velocities V1 or
> @
G G
V1 of component 1, which is excessively large, are negligible compared with the
G *
> @
diffusion velocity V 2 or V 2
G G
> @
of component 2.
G grad c 2
V2 D [2.64]
c2
In these conditions, we can define the flux density of species 2 by means of the
variable c2:
G G
qc2 c 2V 2 D grad c 2 [2.65]
The flux M c 2 of the variable c2 across the surface (S) related to any one of the
three mentioned reference frames is:
G
M c2 ³S q c 2 .ds ³S D grad c 2 .ds [2.66]
Thermodynamics of Continuous Media 97
This approximation of law [2.41] in balance equation [2.8] allows the diffusion
equation to be obtained:
wc 2
wt
w §¨ wc 2
D
wx j ¨© wx j
·
¸ V
¸ 2
§ wc 2
¨¨
© wt
·
div D grad c 2 V 2 ¸¸
¹
[2.67]
¹
The volume source V2 of species 2 expresses, with the units of concentration c2,
the quantity per unit of time of this species created by a homogenous chemical
reaction.
For weak concentrations, we can usually assume that the coefficient of diffusion
D is constant; the diffusion equation is then reduced to the heat equation:
wc 2 w 2 c2 § wc 2 ·
D V2 ¨¨ D'c 2 V 2 ¸¸ [2.68]
wt wx j wx j © wt ¹
The action of a mass force field (gravity, inertial forces, etc.) on the two species
is manifest in a static equilibrium comprising a pressure gradient (or of the volumic
number of moles), as we saw in section 2.2.1.5 (atmospheric equilibrium). In such a
98 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
situation, the lighter molecules tend to rise. The thermodynamic force responsible
for this effect is the pressure gradient. In practice, the diffusion of pressure is
entirely negligible in the atmosphere, where the quantity grad n is nearly always
negligible compared with grad n1 or grad n 2 ; diffusion therefore occurs as if there
was no force field. The diffusion of pressure must be accounted for in mixtures
subjected to high accelerations, as in centrifuges.
Another cause for the molecular migration of a chemical species with respect to
molecules of another species is a difference in the forces exerted between the two,
for example between ions with different charges placed in an electric field. This
thermodynamic force is a vector field, in other words of the same rank as the
gradient of a scalar quantity. These phenomena are encountered, for example, during
the electrolysis of solutions or in an ionized gas in the presence of an electric field.
Kinetic gas theory allows us to construct the theory of diffusive phenomena. The
principle involves seeking distribution functions for neighboring velocities of the
Maxwell-Boltzman distribution (Chapman-Enskog method). We find that first order
deviations from this equilibrium distribution lead to the irreversible processes
previously discussed. This theory also shows a decoupling between imbalances of
different tensor orders such as thermal, mass or viscous fluxes. We will not develop
the corresponding equations. For velocity differences in a gas ([PEN 55]) we obtain:
DnM 1 M 2
>VG1 @ >VG2 @ n
D 2 grad
n1
n1
n2
pU
grad p
[2.69]
n 2 D U1 U 2 G n2
G
F1 F2 DT
grad T
n1 n 2 pU n1 n 2 T
DT kT D
methods are not practicable (for example, in gaseous mixtures comprising two
isotopes).
Following the principle outlined in sections 1.4.2.6 and 2.1.5.2, all diffusive fluxes
depend on all of the thermodynamic forces of the same tensor rank. We thus have a
matrix of diffusion coefficients. The general discussion concerning the choice of
reference frames which characterize the diffusion processes is identical to that outlined
earlier.
As we have already said (section 2.4.2.3), the k balance equations for each
component leads to a global mixing equation that describes the conditions under
which the mixture will evolve (in movement, at rest in a fixed container, during
evaporation). The k equations are generally replaced by this global equation and k –
1 equations characterizing the components of the mixture.
§ wc ·
D ¨¨ 1 ¸¸ kc1mP [2.70]
© wn ¹ P
reaction speed. The heat release due to heterogenous chemical reactions must be
taken into account in the boundary conditions of the energy equation ([BOR 00],
[PEN 55], [WIL 65]).
Chapter 3
The presence of the time variable in these reference frame changes leads to
specific properties of temporal derivatives. As time is the same in all Galilean
reference frames, the values of extensive scalar quantities are independent of the
Galilean reference frame used. On the other hand, components of vector or tensor
quantities vary in reference frame changes according to the usual formulae
(covariant or contravariant according to the case considered). We say that these
quantities are invariant for (geometric) changes of the Galilean reference frame (see
texts on linear or tensor algebra). However, certain vectors (position or velocity of a
particle) are defined with respect to a given Galilean reference frame; the evaluation
of their temporal derivatives depends on the reference frame chosen for this
definition. For example, the components in reference frame R’ of the velocity of a
point defined in reference frame R are not equal to the components in reference
frame R’ of the velocity of the point defined in reference frame R’. In a general
manner, so-called cinematic operations (such as calculations of temporal derivatives
velocity, acceleration) lead to formulae of changing reference frames dependent on
their relative motion. We will assume that these ideas are known to the reader.
Let us recall the following elementary formulae, which will subsequently prove
useful:
G G G G G G G G
Va Ve V r , Ja J e J r 2Z V r
in which the indices a and r indicate that derivatives with respect to time are
calculated in a Galilean reference frame (a) or in some other reference frame (r)
which is in motion relative to the former. In the expression of acceleration the first
term e represents the drag term (centripetal acceleration in the case of a rotating frame)
and the third term is the Coriolis acceleration.
We must note firstly that the idea of entropy does not exist in the mechanics of a
particle. It only appears for systems in which the thermodynamic properties are
defined and in which mechanical energy is transformed into heat. We will come
back to this point a little later (section 3.2.5).
The intensive quantity associated with the momentum, for an elementary system,
G
is the velocity V , with components ui, which represents the intensity of motion in a
Galilean reference frame. Velocity depends on the reference frame used.
G G G G
p V1 p V 2
G G
2p V'
104 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
This equality must be true in all Galilean reference frames moving with constant
G G
velocity V ( V having any value) with respect to the reference frame R. The
G
following identity is derived, true for all V :
G G
G G G
G
p V1 V p V 2 V
G G G
2 p V 'V G
V
G G
G
This equality implies that the function p V is a linear function (take V
G G
successively equal to V1 and V ' , and then derive the identity
G G G G
p X pY
G G G
p X Y , characteristic of a linear relationship).
G G
pi mij u j p m.V
Similar reasoning using a Lorentz group for changing reference frames leads to a
different expression of mass in special relativity.
G G
dp
f [3.2]
dt
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 105
Forces are independent of the Galilean reference frame chosen for their
description (this is no longer true in relativistic mechanics).
The idea of an impulse is useful in the study of collisions, which are often very
rapid events and the detailed modeling of which is replaced by more or less global
G
assumptions regarding their nature (soft impact, elastic, etc.). The external force f
G
dI
acting on a material particle is the impulse quantity received by the particle per
dt
unit time.
NOTES –
1) A force is associated with the material element on which it acts: forces are
localized vectors (bi-points in mathematics) which can only be composed for each
application point considered separately, except in the case of a rigid solid.
2) Forces are actions which obviously exist independent of motion.
106 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Consider a closed material particle, i.e. one that does not exchange matter with
the exterior; its mass is thus constant. Substituting [3.1] into [3.2] we obtain:
G
f
d mV
m
dV
[3.4]
dt dt
This equation, called the fundamental law of dynamics (or Newton’s second law
G G G
of motion), involves the acceleration Ȗ dV / dt ; the quantity mJ is called the
quantity of acceleration.
The quantity of acceleration is only the momentum’s time derivative for systems
of constant mass. A rocket which ejects a certain momentum in order to propel itself
is not a closed system. In fluid mechanics, we will often reason in terms of open
systems which exchange momentum with the exterior.
Every extensive quantity has a corresponding form of energy. The term for the
G
energy differential (kinetic energy Ec) associated with the extensive quantity p for
the preceding system’s motion is:
dE c u i dp i [3.5]
which, taking account of expression [3.1] for a particle of constant mass m, is:
§ mV 2 ·
dE c mu i du i d¨ ¸ [3.6]
¨ 2 ¸
© ¹
mV 2
Ec
2
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 107
The kinetic energy theorem can be obtained G by taking the scalar product of the
two sides of equation [3.2] with the velocity V :
dE c G dpG G G
V. f .V [3.7]
dt dt
G G G
The quantity f .V is the power of the force f in the reference frame considered.
As with the kinetic energy, it depends on the reference frame used for its evaluation.
G n H n m i Vi 2
p ¦ pi Ec ¦ [3.8]
i 1 i 1 2
G n G
VO ¦ OM i p i
i 1
Introducing the inertia center of the material system, and using formula [3.1],
relation [3.8] can be written:
G G
P mVG
108 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Internal actions between components of the material system balance one another
two by two like all internal actions. Let us separate the forces acting on the particle
G G
Mi into external forces Fext i and internal forces Fint i representing interactions
between Mi and the other material particles of the system. Applying equation [3.2]
gives:
G G G
dp i
Fext i Fint i i 1,2,.....n [3.9]
dt
The n vector equations [3.9] enable a detailed study of the mechanical system.
By taking their sum, we obtain a vector equation which eliminates the internal forces
and describes the effect of external action on the sum of the quantities of particle
G G
acceleration mi J i dp i dt in the system, which is called dynamic
G G
resultant ¦ mi J i dP dt
i
G
dP G n G
mJ G ¦ Fext i [3.10]
dt i 1
G
Equations [3.10] state that the dynamic resultant dP dt is equal to the sum of
the external forces. Internal forces do not participate and the momentum of an
isolated system remains constant.
We proceed in similar fashion for the moments of the internal forces, which
G
cancel one another out, two by two; the moment C at a given point in the ensemble
of forces, naturally reduces to the moment of the external forces. The sum of the
G
moments of the quantities of acceleration d p i dt at O, also called dynamic moment
G G
G O at a point O, is equal to the sum M ext of the moments of the external forces
acting on the points Mi and considered at the same point.
G G G
dV O n
GO ¦ M ext i [3.11]
dt i 1
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 109
dE c d ª n m i Vi2 º
«¦ » Pf int Pmec [3.12]
dt dt ¬«i 1 2 ¼»
Wij
K K K K
Fij M j F ji M i
K K
K
Fij M j M i K
Fij .M i M j
110 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The two vectors of the scalar product Wij are independent of the reference frame
chosen (Galilean or otherwise) and the scalar Wij takes on the same value in all
reference frames; the same is true for the total work done by the internal forces. As
time is identical in all reference frames, the power of the internal forces is thus
independent of the reference frame used.
d ª n §¨ miVi2 ·º n G G
«¦ U Mi ¸» ¦ Vi .F f int i [3.13]
dt «¬i 1¨© 2 ¸»
¹¼ i 1
n § m i Vi2 ·
Em ¦ ¨¨ U M i ¸
i 1© 2
¸
¹
dE m
Pf int [3.14]
dt
The total mechanical energy of the isolated material system is not conserved
because the internal forces provide a non-zero power, except in certain particular
cases (rigid, solid, etc.).
Consider the following example: two particles of the same mass m are elastically
linked with friction; they constitute an oscillator where each of their opposed
elongations are centered around the inertia center G.
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 111
G
m G V
m
f x
x1 x2
A
We assume that there are no external forces. The kinetic energy of the whole is
the kinetic energy of the inertia center animated by the constant velocity VG, which
is increased by the kinetic energy of the oscillator in a reference frame related to the
inertia center G. The total mechanical energy can be obtained by adding the
potential energy of the oscillator. This decreases on account of the friction and is
transformed into heat, thus increasing the internal energy by heat addition. On the
other hand, the momentum of the ensemble has not changed.
The power of the internal forces depends only on the relative particle velocity
and not on the chosen reference frame. On account of the internal friction of the
system, it decays as well as the total mechanical energy of the system.
We obtain the same final state for a material system placed in a force field
derived from a potential. The fluids contained in such a material system are thus in
hydrostatic equilibrium. We have already discussed, in section 2.2.1.2, the restrictive
conditions necessary for the existence of such a situation. However, if the external
force field does not derive from a potential, the exterior will always be able to
112 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The rigid solid thus plays an important role from the point of view of
thermostatics, since it is the ultimate state (thermostatic equilibrium) towards which
all isolated mechanical systems will tend. It is furthermore what is observed for a
gaseous or liquid mass enclosed in a container which is not subject to any external
action; the same is true for all collections of solids (a pile of sand, etc.), including
solar bodies: the moon no longer rotates, always showing the same side to the Earth;
the daily rotation of the Earth slows continually due to diverse dissipative effects
(mostly tidal movements of the oceans, which lead to a dissipation of energy on
account of a gravitational Earth-sun and Earth-moon interactions).
Let m(t) be the rocket mass at instant t. We consider a fixed reference frame Oz
and perform an elementary momentum balance between time t and t + dt on the
mass m comprised by the rocket at time t.
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 113
At the instant t + dt the rocket mass has changed from m to m + dm, whereas the
G
velocity in the fixed reference frame has increased from V to V dV , and the mass
–dm of gas has been ejected. The mass ejected, initially moving at a velocity V has
G G
now changed to V U at time t + dt in the fixed reference frame. Between these
two instants, the momentum variation of the mass m can be calculated as:
m dm V dV dmV U mV
G G G G G G G G
dp m dV U dm [3.15]
m dm V dV mV
G G G G G
dp f d mV
G
the momentum d p g of the mass –dm ejected from the rocket:
G G
dp g dm V U
We have, per unit time:
G
dp dm VG UG
G
d mV
G
dp f
G
dp g
m
G
dV G dm
U [3.16]
dt dt dt dt dt dt dt
114 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
G
The time derivative of the momentum p f of the rocket is not equal to the
G
dV
quantity of acceleration m .
dt
G
The quantity dp g dt is associated with a matter which is constantly being
generated at the exit of the rocket exhaust: it is a momentum flux.
In order to simplify matters, we will consider that the only external force is
constituted by gravity; taking account of [3.16], equation [3.10] for the momentum
at constant mass m can be written:
G G
dp dV G dm G
m U mg
dt dt dt
or:
G
dV G G
m U q m mg [3.17]
dt
Equation [3.17] shows that we can apply the fundamental dynamic relation to a
system of variable mass by considering the quantity of acceleration for that system,
the ejection of burned gases generating a force on the rocket opposed to the
G
momentum flux Uq m (relative to the rocket) generated by the propulsion system.
We can verify that the opposite of this force, acting for a time dt, corresponds to
G
the impulsion U q m dt necessary to give to the mass q m dt ejected in time dt a
G
variation in velocity equal to U . This force is the rocket thrust .
The preceding balance can also be written in the non-Galilean reference frame of
dV
the rocket (whose acceleration is ). In this reference frame, the rocket ejects
dt
G
momentum Uq m per unit time (momentum flux) which balances the inertial force
G
dV G
m and the gravitational force mg .
dt
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 115
d §¨ V 2 ·¸ G G G G
m U .V q m mg .V
dt ¨© 2 ¸¹
dE c U2 G G
qm mg .V [3.18]
dt 2
G G
The term mg .V is the power of the gravitational force. The power Pfint of the
U2
internal forces is here equal to q m which represents the quantity of kinetic
2
energy per unit time created by combustion in the fixed reference frame of the
rocket where chemical energy (reaction enthalpy) is transformed into mechanical
energy.
p
dE ¦ Ti dS i Yi dX i
i 1
Now suppose that the system components are in motion. The total energy
contained in the system must take account of all energy forms, including its kinetic
energy Ec. In other words, the mechanical properties constitute just one particular
aspect of the physical phenomena to be considered. We denote as Et this “total”
energy in order to distinguish it from the internal energy, denoted E:
Et E Ec
The conservation principle is thus applied, not to the internal energy alone, but to
the total energy, whose variation 'E t is equal to the quantities of heat Q and of
work W received from the exterior, including the work Wmec received by the system
and coming from the external forces:
The extensive and intensive scalar variables, and in particular the internal
energy, do not depend on the reference frame chosen: for example, the tension of an
elastic string and its stretching, the pressure of a gas and its volume, the number of
moles of a chemical species and its chemical potential, etc. Interpretations of
internal energy in diverse physical theories are often made using forces whose
details are of little importance, but as these are internal forces, their resultant
moments are zero; we have seen (section 3.2.2.2) that the power Pfint of the internal
forces of a system (or the corresponding work) is independent of the reference frame
chosen for its evaluation. This power of the internal forces is in fact already
described in the differential dE of the internal energy (work done by pressure forces,
etc.).
The kinetic energy and the total energy of a system depends on the reference
frame chosen for their evaluation.
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 117
For a system which receives from exterior sources of a purely mechanical kind,
we thus have:
d
( E + Ec ) Pmec + Pth [3.19]
dt
Pmec and Pth being the mechanical and thermal powers provided to the system from
the exterior.
d §¨ mV 2 ·¸
E Pth Pmec
dt ¨© 2 ¸¹
G
Now consider a system of n material particles of velocities Vk . Letting E denote
the internal energy of the system (which is not in equilibrium), the balance equation
can be written, taking account of motion, as:
d §¨ n mk V 2
k
·
¸
E ¦ Pth Pmec [3.20]
dt ¨ 2 ¸
© k 1 ¹
Subtracting the kinetic energy equation [3.12] from [3.20], we obtain the energy
equation (E, the internal energy) of the material system:
dE
Pth Pf int [3.21]
dt
G
The masses are subjected to external forces F j (j=1,2); we assume that gravity
does not directly intervene. The viscous friction system is assumed to have no mass
and the heat released by the friction heats the two masses which are assumed to be at
the same temperature. The dynamic equation of motion for the masses in the
reference frame of the inertia center can be written:
G G G G G G G G
mJ 1 Fext1 F f W mJ 2 Fext2 F f W
in which the tension W A of the elastic link and the viscous friction force F f ,
aligned with the axis Ox, are, by definition, the forces applied on each mass:
d x 2 x1
Ff f f A
dt
By adding the terms of the two equations after multiplication of each by its
G
corresponding velocity V k k 1,2 , we obtain the kinetic energy equation. The
power of the internal forces can be immediately calculated:
W F f V1 V2
G G
Pf int W A f A 2 [3.22]
dE
dt
W A f A P
2
th [3.23]
dS
T f A 2 Pth [3.24]
dt
We see that in this entropic form of the energy equation the mechanical terms
have been eliminated and all that remains is the irreversible part of the motion
which is transformed into heat. The dissipation function fx 2 is a heat source which
is always positive. It appears in equation [3.24] as an internal entropy source.
We will see these developments (sections 3.1 and 3.2) once again when we study
flowing continuous media, albeit with a formalism which is naturally more complex.
The questions posed and the results expected from a study, an experiment or the
operation of a device or system can vary considerably. Here are some examples:
– in a water treatment station or in a chemical reactor, we are naturally
concerned with the product being treated; the practical problem is thus to design
walls, materials and diverse processes so as to obtain the desired result concerning
the product which is treated;
– in meteorological applications, the objective is to predict the weather at a given
place and time, i.e. to predict the motion, and the physical and chemical properties
of large air masses (velocity, temperature, humidity, presence of pollutants, etc.);
– for a boat, a plane or a vehicle in motion, the essential properties are the
external forces exerted on the solid boundaries in contact with the flow when the
vehicle is displaced at a given velocity. The same is true for the flow of a river or
fluids in an industrial pipe network for which suitable constructions are necessary
(dams, turning vanes, pipes, open channels, pumps, turbines, etc.).
The study of a physical problem begins with a definition of its variables. The
description of moving matter involves the localization of a material particle which is
identifiable in a given reference frame by means of coordinates. The physical
properties of this particle are associated with it. In particle mechanics, we give
120 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
numbers to the different particles studied and to the physical quantities which
characterize them. We thus define the trajectory of a particle as an ensemble of the
successive positions which it occupies over the course of time.
When studying the physics and mechanics of continuous media, this means of
description is no longer suitably adapted, since the set of the material particles of a
continuous medium is not denumerable. We thus need to identify them with respect
to a continuous ensemble which is simply the ensemble of positions xi0 which this
material occupies at a given reference time. The variables g associated with the
matter are thus functions of this position xi0 occupied at an initial instant and of time:
g g ( xi 0 , t )
Fluids in motion are generally described using Eulerian variables, the observer
reference frame being associated with the solid boundaries. A considerable difficulty
thus appears, as the formulation of the laws of thermodynamics and mechanics
requires the balance of extensive quantities associated with matter. In the following
sections we will write these balances by “following matter” over material domains
represented using Eulerian variables.
dx1 dx 2 dx3
[3.25]
u1 ( xi , t ) u 2 ( xi , t ) u 3 ( xi , t )
dx1 dx 2 dx3
dt [3.26]
u1 ( x i , t ) u 2 ( xi , t ) u 3 ( xi , t )
fluctuating wind
trajectory
streakline
EXERCISE – Find the equations for the streamlines, the trajectories and the
streaklines of the following 2D velocity field: u = constant, v a cos Zt t. Interpret
the results.
dg wg wg dg wg
uj or V .grad g
dt wt wx j dt wt
d
We will denote the Lagrangian derivative , which is by its very definition the
dt
D
derivative of a function of time only for a fluid particle. It is also often denoted
Dt
in fluid mechanics.
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 123
G 1 G G
where Z ro t V is the rotation vector. The vorticity vector is twice the rotation
2
vector.
dg
NOTE – The material derivative , defined in a Galilean reference frame, is a
dt
physical quantity which does not depend on the reference frame chosen for its
wg
evaluation; on the contrary, the temporal derivative of the spatial representation
wt
corresponds to an observation of the quantity g at a fixed point and it does depend
on the reference frame chosen to represent the field. Consider two Cartesian
reference frames of coordinates x j , t and ~ ~
xj,t :
~ ~
xj x j U j t; t t.
wg wg~ wg~
~ U j ~
wt wt wx j
g~ ~
xi , t .
~
where we let g xi , t
For example, the reader can verify that the field of the quantity g, steady in the
reference frame x1 , t and with spatial period O
§ 2S x1 ·
g ( x1 , t ) A cos¨¨ ¸¸
© O ¹
The convective flux of the quantity G crossing a surface S per unit time is thus
equal to:
MG
G G
³S q g .n ds
GG
³S gV .n ds M G ³6 gu j n j ds [3.30]
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 125
The volume and mass transported by the Gmatter’s motion are respectively
characterized
G by the volume flux density vector V and the mass flux density vector
U V which correspond, respectively, to g 1 and g U .
The elementary volume flux dqv and the elementary mass flux dqm are1:
GG GG
dq v V .n ds and dq m U V .n ds
The volume flux qv (or volume flow rate) and the mass flux qm (or mass flow
rate) across a surface S can be written:
GG GG
qv ³S V .n ds and qm ³S U V .n ds
G G
When the quantity G is a vector (for example the momentum m V ), the
preceding results can simply be applied to each of the components g i . We thus
G
define a flux density tensor q G of the quantity G by the relation:
G G
qGij giu j or qG g
V [3.31]
G G
The flux of the quantity G crossing the surface S is thus the vector M GS :
G G
M GS ³S qG nds
G ³D g ( xi , t ) dv
The laws of physics imply the balance of the extensive quantities (mass,
momentum, etc.) associated with the matter which, in a flow, is in motion. It is
therefore necessary to calculate the variation of the quantity G associatedG with a
material domain D in motion using the usual Eulerian representation. n designates
the unit normal to the surface 6 directed towards the outside of the fluid domain D.
1 We shall use the usual scalar notation qv and qm for volume or mass fluxes which evidently
are fluxes and not flux densities; confusion is not possible, flux densities being at least
vectors.
126 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The extensive quantities are associated with the matter and the balance of the
quantity G must be performed on a material domain. Consider (Figure 3.5a) the
domain Dt occupied by the matter at instant t, of external surface 6, and then the
domain Dt G t occupied by the matter at time t G t . Between these two
instants, the material domain is displaced such that it leaves 6 over the section 6
whereas it is displaced towards the interior of Dt over the surface 6 (Figure
3.5b); let D0 be the volume common to Dt and Dt G t . Let G D1 and G D2 be
the additional parts of D0 in D(t) and Dt G t generated by the surfaces 61 and 62
G
and the vector displacement VG t . The (positive) amounts of the quantity G
GG
contained in each of these domains are, respectively, ³6 gV .nGtds and
1
GG
³6 gV .n Gtds .
2
G GD1 G
n nG
V
x3 D ds
GD2 6 1
O 6 6 2
D0
x2
x1 G
n
(a) (b)
GG G (t G t ) G (t )
GG
GG
³D0 >g (t G t ) g (t )@dv ³61 gV .nGtds ³6 2 gV .nGtds
By regrouping the surface integrals, taking the limit as G t o 0 , and applying
Ostrogradski’s theorem, we obtain:
dG
³Dq
wg
wt
GG
dv ³6 gV .n ds
§ wg
³Dq ¨¨
G·
div gV ¸¸dv [3.32]
dt © wt ¹
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 127
dG wg § wg w gu i ·¸
³Dq dv ³6 gu i ni ds ³Dq ¨¨ dv [3.33]
dt wt © wt wxi ¸¹
dG
The notation in equation [3.32] or [3.33] indicates a Lagrangian derivative.
dt
Formula [3.33] shows that the flux of the quantity G across the surface 6 can be
interpreted as due to the integration over the volume of the local volume source
G
div g V .
dG wg w
³Dq dv ³6 gdq v ³Dq U g dv ³6 gdq m
dt wt wt
Let us take the elementary case where g 1 . The quantity G is the volume of
the domain D. For a small domain of volume G v , we have:
d G v G
divV .G v
dt
G
The quantity divV is thus the local velocity of the volume expansion
1 d G v
.
Gv dt
G G
If the quantity G is a vector (for example the volume momentum U V ), the
preceding steps can simply be applied to each of the components gi. We thereby
G
define a tensor flux of the quantity G by the relation:
G G
qGij giu j or qG g
V , (with
: Cartesian product).
G
Consider the domain D bounded by the surface 6 S1 S S A ; dW is the
elementary arc of the curve C which encloses the surface S; we take the normal in
G G G G G
the direction V dW , on the lateral surface element VG t dW swept out by dW
during time G t .
G G G
VG t n B
G
ds V
C S S1
G
dIJ SA
G
The flux of B leaving the closed surface 6 at time t can be written:
G
dM S wB G G G
G GG
G
³S .nds ³C B. V dW ³S V .n divBds
dt wt
sui / st z 0 or sg / s t z 0
In Lagrangian variables, the idea of a flow’s unsteadiness does not have any
direct meaning.
Following the note made in section 3.3.3.1, the flow can only be steady in a
given, particular reference frame.
shape or form can be deformed easily without stresses, on condition that the
corresponding action occurs slowly.
In a fluid stresses are thus associated with the structure of the velocity field.
However, velocity fields corresponding to changes of reference frame, or to
displacements, will not be associated with stresses.
The study of the local structure of a velocity field at any time is made by
G G G
considering two neighboring points M and M dM at the respective coordinates xi
and x i dxi (Figure 3.7) whose velocities are u i x j and u i x j dx j .
x3 G G
M dM
G G G
V M dM
M
G G G
V M
x1 x2
The study of the velocities at these two points will allow the nature of the motion
of the matter to be determined. We perform a Taylor expansion about the point
G
M, at coordinates xj:
wu i
ui ( x j h j ) ui ( x j ) h j o( h)
wx j
sui 1 su suj ¬ su ¬
; %ij 1 sui j
:ij %ij with: :ij i [3.37]
sxj 2 sxj sxi ® 2 sxj sxi ®
§ 0 : 21 :13 ·§ h1 · § Z 2 h3 Z 3 h2 ·
¨ ¸¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
: ij h j ¨ : 21 0 : 32 ¸¨ h2 ¸ ¨ Z 3 h1 Z1 h3 ¸
¨ :
© 13 : 32 0 ¸¹¨© h3 ¸¹ ¨Z h Z h ¸
© 1 2 2 1¹
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 131
with:
Z1 : 32 Z2 :13 Z3 : 21
G G
The preceding expression : ij h j , written in vector form Z h , expresses the
K
velocity field due to the instantaneous rotational velocity vector Z :
G 1 G
Z rotV [3.38]
2
We can easily verify that the diagonal terms of the tensor H ij are expansion (or
compression) rates, the other terms corresponding to shear (or angular) expansion
rates. By considering for example the velocity field >u1 x 2 , u 2 u 3 0@ we see
that the deformation generated comprises a transverse motion of the segment MM'
(Figure 3.8a) with respect to the velocity.
x2
x2+dx2 M' u1+du1
x2 u1 M u1 M' u1+du1
M x1
x1 x1+dx1 x1
G
The volume expansion rate divV (section 3.3.3.3) is furthermore always the
trace of the matrix Hij, i.e. the sum of the linear expansion rates following the three
axes. We will leave it to the reader to verify this.
132 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
This definition corresponds with the idea of a fluid as defined in fluid statics
(section 2.2.1.1). In keeping with what has already been said, the viscous stress
tensor depends only on the strain rates, and not the deformations. There exist “visco-
elastic” bodies in which these two kinds of stress generation can co-exist. We will
not cover the more complex cases ([FRE 64], [GER 94], [TAN 00], [COI 97]),
limiting our attention to the study of viscous fluids.
The properties of fluids may thus depend on their history, or on the way we
excite them (this is the case for quicksand, yoghurt stirred with a spoon, soils
liquefaction, etc.), and the chemical transformations which they undergo (cooking of
food, polymerization during the generation of plastics, for example). Such behaviors
have significant practical importance, as they are often encountered in the chemical
industry, in the food industry and in many other natural phenomena. The complete
representation of these properties is a difficult problem which is beyond the scope of
this book; we will here limit ourselves to the presentation of just some of the laws
governing the complex viscous behavior of simple 1D flows.
The general form of the relation between the viscous stress tensor and the strain-
rate tensor must be invariant in changing reference frames (in particular, geometric
space is homogenous and isotropic). Moreover, a fluid is often a body with isotropic
physical properties (with the exception of liquid crystals, nematic and smectic
liquids, etc.), so the relationship between the viscous stresses characterized by the
tensor Wij and the strain rates characterized by the tensor Hij should not have any
favored direction. This means that the two tensors should have the same principal
axes. The general expression of the laws governing non-linear fluid behavior, which
obeys the necessary invariance in changing reference frames, is beyond the scope of
this book and we will limit ourselves in a first instance to the study of 1D flows, and
then to a more general study of Newtonian fluids which correspond to the linear
approximation of irreversible thermodynamics. For other cases the discussion
becomes quite complex and the reader should refer to texts concerning the rheology
of non-Newtonian fluids ([FRE 64], [GER 94], [TAN 00], [VER 97]).
Finally, recall that the action of the stress tensor on matter is equivalent to the
existence of the volume source divV (see section 2.1.3.2) which can be written:
Macroscopic forces in a fluid are either forces induced by a force field at the
microscopic level (intermolecular forces), or the result (or manifestation) of
momentum transfers at the molecular level (thermal agitation). For an ordinary fluid
at macroscopic rest, the effects of molecular forces and thermal agitation reduce to
pressure forces.
u+du
M2 P
c
A c
u
M1 P'
Let us propose a simple model, supposing that the molecules are exchanged
between two layers separated by a distance equal to the mean free path O. Let c be
the mean transfer velocity of molecules towards the plane P (mean quadratic
velocity). A molecule of mass m moving from the lower layer to the upper layer
arrives with a momentum deficit equal to mdu . Now, over the distance O, the
variation of the velocity is equal to O du dy . The mass flux of the molecules, per
unit surface, arriving from the lower layer into P is equal to nMc 2 U c 2 (where
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 135
n is the volume number of moles), where the factor 1/2 comes from the simplifying
assumption that half of the molecules move from the lower to the upper layer. This
results in a force per unit surface, exerted by these molecules on the plane P, equal
1 du
to U c O . We note that the friction force increases with the temperature in
2 dy
the same way as the mean velocity does.
In other words, the viscous stress W is proportional to the velocity gradient, and
the order of magnitude of the proportionality coefficient (the dynamic viscosity P
defined in section 3.4.3) is:
1
P| U cO [3.41]
2
The preceding rationale can be rigorously applied in the context of kinetic gas
theory. It cannot be directly applied to liquids in which intermolecular forces act
directly between the fluid layers. The effect of viscous friction is thus directly
related to these forces and to the geometry of the molecules, particularly when these
are complex (long macromolecules which may be oriented, stretched or broken
under the shearing action of a velocity gradient). Furthermore, these mechanisms
show that an increase in temperature, on account of the increased thermal agitation,
will decrease the effect of these intermolecular forces and thence the level of viscous
friction.
3.4.2.1. Introduction
We consider here the flow of fluids of constant specific mass in which the
acceleration is everywhere equal to zero. The trajectories and streamlines are thus
straight lines traveled over at constant speed by fluid particles which possess a
uniform motion. The conservation of the mass requires that these straight lines be
parallel, all convergence or divergence of these lines obviously implying an
acceleration or deceleration of particles in the medium which is supposed
continuous. The corresponding dynamic equations are obtained by writing, as in
136 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
fluid statics, that the sum of the external forces acting on the fluid is zero. In the
presence of a mass force of density gi and using expression [3.39], we obtain:
wp wW ij
U gi 0 or U g grad p div W 0 [3.42]
wxi wx j
If the force g derives from a potential U, we can, in such flows, replace the
pressure with the driving pressure p g p U 0 gz (z, vertical upwards coordinate;
see section 2.2.1.4.1):
wp g wW ij
0 or grad p g div W 0 [3.43]
wxi wx j
As the axis Ox is taken parallel to and in the same direction as the velocity u(y,z)
of the flow, the strain-rate tensor in Cartesian coordinates is reduced to two
components:
1 wu 1 wu
H xy H yx H xz H zx
2 wy 2 wz
Let us assume that for a fixed flow geometry, the shear velocities do not lead to
normal and transverse stresses (no effect analogous to a Poisson coefficient in
elasticity). All that remains therefore are the viscous shear stresses, Wxy and Wxz.
Using these assumptions with the equations for viscous fluids, we see that there is
no variation of the driving pressure in the directions Oy and Oz. There remains only
a single equation in the direction Ox for the force balance:
wp g wW xy wW xz
0 [3.44]
wx wy wz
We can immediately see that as the viscous stresses are only functions of the
coordinates (y,z), the driving pressure is necessarily a linear function of the
direction x. The gradient dp dx is equal to the ratio 'p g / L , where 'pg is the
pressure drop observed over the distance L (for example, in a tube (Figure 3.10)).
Supposing that we know the driving pressure, then equation [3.44] contains two
unknown viscous stresses which can only be calculated if the physical law which
relates them to the velocity gradient is given.
Flows of this type will often involve plane or cylindrical boundaries aligned with
Ox, and whose viscous properties are independent of physical factors which are a
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 137
function of the x-direction. These flows are fully immersed, i.e. without free
surfaces.
dp g wW
0
dx wy
dp g
W y const [3.45]
dx
dp r
W r const [3.46]
dx 2
Under the assumption that there is no variation of the driving pressure in the medium,
the viscous stress W is constant. The flow can thus only be produced by the viscous
entrainment of the fluid due to friction on some cylindrical walls which are moving at a
different velocity. In the 2D plane, a Couette flow is produced between the two plane
surfaces (Figure 3.10a); such a flow is also generated by two circular cylinders
undergoing axial displacement, but these configurations are of little practical interest.
The flow between two fixed planes or in a cylindrical tube requires a driving
pressure gradient.
138 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
In the preceding cases, the viscous stress distribution is independent of the laws
of viscosity. In particular, these results will be valid for turbulent flows for which
there is no local physical law for the stresses ([COU 89], [MAT 00], [TEN 72]).
When a fluid is purely viscous, the phenomenological law takes the form:
Substituting this relation into the expression for the viscous stress distribution
[3.45] or [3.46], we obtain a differential relation which permits the calculation of the
longitudinal velocity distribution u and of the mass flux across a cross-section. The
volume flow rate in a circular cylinder can therefore be obtained by integration over
the cross-section; for example, for the problem of revolution in the circular cylinder
of radius R:
R
qv
³ 2Srudr
0
O
x
The practical realization of such a flow involves two co-axial cylinders, one of
radius R, which is fixed, and a second, of radius R+e, which is animated by a
rotational motion of angular velocity Z about its axis (Figure 3.10b). The moment of
the torque measured on the fixed cylinder gives the value of the viscous stress.
y
u y V
e
The Couette flow allows us to obtain in a direct and simple manner the viscous
law of a fluid for viscometric flows. As the general law for the viscous behavior of
fluids is of a tensorial nature, the preceding relationship is a simplified law, which is
uniquely valid for this kind of flow.
Due to the tensorial nature of the viscous stresses and strain-rates, there may
exist transverse effects associated with a 1D effect (normal stresses for a shear
velocity). This is comparable to the properties of solids (Poisson coefficient in
elasticity). This type of effect is mainly manifest in liquids with complex structures.
Furthermore, elastic effects may occur for relatively weak stresses in viscoelastic
bodies; these may or may not be time dependent: the body may present the
properties of a solid for a stress whose modulus is less than some level W, beyond
which it becomes liquid (Figure 3.11b and Figure 3.11c). In what follows we will
only discuss some simple cases from the vast domain of rheology.
W W W
These effects are obviously associated with local modification for the particles or
macromolecules which are more or less in contact at the microscopic level. The
explanation for thixotropy is schematically as follows. In suspensions of solid grains
in liquid, the grains, after a sufficiently long duration of immobility, finish by
coming into contact with one another; this leads to solid friction. After a certain
level of agitation (vibration, flow) and the resultant stresses imposed on the
ensemble, all solid-solid contact has been undone, and a lubrication occurs such that
the grains now slide over one another when a velocity gradient is imposed. This
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 141
The Ostwald-de Waele fluid. Behavior is no longer linear for fluids containing
molecules with complex structures or particles in suspension and of strong
concentration:
n 1
W m u' ( y) u ' ( y) [3.49]
When the viscous stress increases faster than the velocity gradient (n>1) the fluid
is said to be dilatant or rheothickening (curve 3 of Figure 3.12); in the opposite case
(n<1), it is known as pseudoplastic or rheofluidifying (curve 4 of Figure 3.12). The
first case occurs in concentrated suspensions of solid particles which are in contact
with one another, when the velocity gradients are steep. The second situation is
observed in flows of polymers of high molecular mass, whose linear molecules are
more or less intertwined and trap a certain quantity of water. Under agitation, the
velocity shear aligns the molecules along their axes, thus freeing the trapped water.
W
(2)
(3)
(1)
W
(4)
u'(r)
0
W d W0 u' y 0
[3.50]
W ! W0 W Pu ' y B W 0
This law is used in particular for the flow of pastes and certain types of mud.
§ 5 ·
P P 0 ¨¨1 c ¸¸
© 2 ¹
We will consider the flow of a fluid in a circular tube of radius R (using the
notation of Figure 3.13). The flow, directed in the positive direction along the axis
Ox, leads to a constant negative axial pressure gradient, corresponding to a drop in
the driving pressure equal to 'p g for a length L of the pipe.
Physics of Energetic Systems in Flow 143
r
R
SWrL
x
pg(0)Sr 2 O u(r) 2
pg(L)Sr
pg(0) L pg(L)=pg(0)-'pg
The velocity distribution can be calculated using equation [3.46], along with the
phenomenological law for the viscous fluid. Using physical law [3.47] in relation
[3.46], we obtain an expression for the derivative u’(y) as a function of the radius r
and the pressure gradient; integrating and taking the velocity equal to zero at the
wall ( r R ), we obtain a parabolic velocity distribution. The mass flow qv can be
obtained as a function of the pressure gradient by integrating the velocity over a
cross-section.
We define the mean mass flux velocity uq using the mass flux qv:
qv
uq
S
u
dp r 2 R 2 [3.51]
dx 4P
We can deduce the volume flow rate qv in the tube and the flow velocity uq as a
function of the pressure gradient (Poiseuille’s law):
dp SR 4 'p SR 4 qv 'p R 2
qv uq [3.52]
dx 8P L 8P SR 2 L 8P
144 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
– Bingham fluid. Using the relationship between the stresses and the velocity
gradient for the fluid ([3.50]), the velocity profile can be calculated as for Newtonian
fluids. We find a velocity distribution comprising a uniform central section
(corresponding to a bulk displacement) and two half-parabolas (Figure 3.14b).
solid core
Figure 3.14. Velocity profile for (a) a Newtonian fluid and (b) a Bingham fluid
– Ostwald-de Waele model. The physical law is no longer linear for fluids
containing strong concentrations of particles in suspension:
n 1
du du
W m
dr dr
The velocity distribution thus calculated looks like a parabolic distribution, but
pointier if n is greater than 1, and flatter if n is less than 1.
We note first of all that the pressure gradient measured can be expressed using
[3.46] as a function of the wall friction Wp (which is defined as the stress exerted by
the fluid on the wall, WR ), from which we obtain:
r dp R
with: p R
[3.53]
p R dx 2
The measurement gives a relation between the flow rate qv and the pressure
gradient or, according to [3.53], between the viscous wall stress Wp and the flow rate
qv which can be written:
qv
qv W p [3.54]
We obtain a relation between the flow rate and the velocity gradient using
integration by parts on the defining relation for the flow rate:
³
R R R
³ ³
du
qv 2Srudr S ud r 2 S r2 dr
0 0 0 dr
Formula [3.53] allows us to use the viscous stress W as a variable in place of the
radius r in the expression for the flow rate, which can be written (noting that WR
=W(R)):
WR
q v W 3R
³
du
W2 dW [3.55]
3
SR 0 dr
Then, from [3.54], the relation q v W p is known; we thus differentiate the two
sides of [3.55] with respect to WR:
du 1
d q v W 3R
dr R SR 3 W 2R dW R
3q v W p dq v
u ' r R [3.56]
SR 3
SR 3 dW p
146 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Relation [3.56] between the velocity gradient u' R and the stress Wp is the
relation sought between the velocity gradient and the viscous stress.
dp y 2 e 2 dp 2e 3 qv dp e 2
u ; qv ; uq
dx 2P dx 3P 2e dx 3P
The preceding results remain valid when the thickness e varies slowly, in other
words when the planes are weakly non-parallel. These results are the basic laws used
for the theory of dynamic lubrication flows in a thin fluid film (oil or gas) of slightly
variable thickness between a moving wall and a fixed wall; such a flow generates
pressures high enough to support heavy rotating devices without solid contacts in a
bearing ([GUY 01]).
2) It is necessary to note that experimental results agree with the preceding
results provided the mass-flow velocity is not too great. In fact, the condition which
must be satisfied involves the Reynolds number Re which, for a circular tube of
diameter D equal to 2R, is written:
U uq D
Re
P
The value of the Reynolds number Re must be less than about 1,850 for the
preceding theoretical results to agree with experiments. Above this value the flow
becomes unstable and turbulent, and this entirely changes the momentum transfers,
as stated earlier in section 3.4.1.3 ([MAT 00], [SCH 99], [TEN 72])
§ 2 · wu § wu wu j ·¸ § 2 · wu
W ij 2PH ij ¨¨K P ¸¸ k G ij P¨ i
¨¨K P ¸¸ k G ij [3.57]
© 3 ¹ wx k ¨ wx ¸
wxi ¹ © 3 ¹ wx k
© j
Linear relation [3.57] introduces dynamic viscosity P and bulk viscosity K. The
latter corresponds to the friction introduced by a purely spherical expansion, for
which the diagonal terms of the strain-rate tensor are equal, and the off-diagonal
terms are zero:
wu1 wu 2 wu 3 1
divV
wx1 wx 2 wx 3 3
Thus:
G
W 11 W 22 W 33 KdivV
This relation shows that the viscosity K is indeed associated with a expansion
velocity, and that this coefficient must be positive in order to represent friction. In
what follows we will neglect the effects of bulk viscosity, which is only important
for phenomena comprising very strong expansion rates, such as shock waves, very
high frequency ultrasound, etc.
The values of dynamic viscosity under normal conditions are, for air and water:
air: P= 17.08 × 10-6 Pa.s (same order of magnitude for gases);
water: P= 1.793 ×10-3 Pa.s.
The viscosity decreases quite rapidly with temperature for liquids, because the
intermolecular forces responsible for viscosity in condensed media have a less
vigorous action on account of increased thermal agitation (section 3.4.1.3).
P
The quantity Q , called the kinematic viscosity, is expressed in m2.s-1.
U
EXERCISE –
Calculate the components of the viscous stress tensor Wij:
at all points of the flow defined by the velocity field u1=kx2, u2=u3=0;
in the vicinity of a solid boundary.
wW ij w ª §¨ wu i wu j ·º
¸» w ª«§¨K 2 P ·¸ wu k º»
«P
wx j wx j « ¨© wx j wx i ¸» wx «¨© ¸
3 ¹ wx k ¼»
¬ ¹¼ i ¬
wW ij w 2ui § 1 · w ª wu k º
P ¨¨K P ¸¸ « »
wx j wx j wx j © 3 ¹ wx i ¬« wx k ¼»
The first term of wW ij wx j is equal to P 'u i , where 'u i are the components of
'V G G
rot rotV grad divV
Replacing 'V with the above expression gives, in vector notation:
div W
§
P 'V ¨¨K
©
P·
G
¸¸ grad divV
3¹
§
P rot rotV ¨¨K
©
4P ·
G
¸¸ grad divV [3.58]
3 ¹
Usually expansion velocities are weak compared with shear velocities and only
the first term P rot rotV of divW remains:
wW ij w 2ui
P [3.60]
wx j wx j wx j
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Chapter 4
d
³D g dv ³D dv ³6 gu j n j ds ³D VG dv ³¦ qGj n j ds
wg [4.1]
dt wt
wg
The first term ³D dv of the left-hand side of equation [4.1] represents the
wt
variation rate in the amount of the quantity G contained in D, expressing an
accumulation of G in D.
The first term of the right-hand side ³D V G dv is a volume source, in other words
a creation of the quantity G, most often by means of the transformation of another
extensive quantity.
§ wg w gu j ·¸ § wq Gj ·
³Dq ¨¨ ¸
dv ³D ¨¨V G ¸ dv
¸
[4.2]
© wt wx j ¹ © wx j ¹
As balance integral [4.2] is true in any domain D, we can derive a local relation
under the usual regularity conditions of the functions considered:
wg
w gu j wq Gj
VG [4.3]
wt wx j wx j
G
When the volume quantity is a vector, g (or gi , i 1, 2,3) , we have a balance
equation for each of its components, which can be written in the vector form:
G
wg i w gi u j wqGij wg JJJG G K JJJG
wt
wx j
V Gi
wx j
or
wt
div g
V K
V G div qG
Fluid Dynamics Equations 153
The terms in equation [4.3] each have a specific form corresponding to physical
mechanisms which we have discussed earlier (section 2.1.3.3). Consider a partial
differential equation which can be written in the form [4.3]:
wf wq j
V [4.4]
wt wx j
wf
³D dv ³D V dv ³6 q j n j ds [4.5]
wt
We will interpret f as the volume density of a quantity F, the amount of which
wf
present in D is equal to ¨ f dv . The first term ³D dv of equation [4.4] represents
D wt
the variation rate in the amount of the quantity F contained in D.
On the right-hand side of equation [4.4], we have separated the terms which can
be written in the form of a divergent vector qi expressed using data or functions of
the problem, and those which cannot be written in this form. In integrating over the
domain D, the terms written in the form of a divergence have been transformed into
flux integrals of the vector qi on the external surface 6 of the domain D: they can
thus be interpreted as transfers of the quantity F by the vector qi. These transport
terms are thus the input-output of the quantity F in D, in other words quantities
gained by D from (or lost to) the exterior through the surface 6.
Terms which cannot be written in the form of the divergence of a vector having a
physical meaning consistent with the problem considered cannot be interpreted as
flux terms. Furthermore, take in this case a balance equation by integration on a
154 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wU wUu i
0 [4.6]
wt wxi
or alternatively:
dU wu i
U 0 [4.7]
dt wxi
1 dU
which shows that the variation rate of the density of a fluid particle is
U dt
wu i
compensated by the volume expansion rate .
wx i
d
³
dt D
Ug dv ³D U
dg
dt
dv [4.8]
wg w gu i w Ug w Ugu i dg
U [4.9]
wt wxi wt wxi dt
The balance equation of the quantity G can be written using the mass quantity g:
dg § wg wg ·¸ w Ug w Ugu i wq Gj
U U¨ ui VG [4.10]
dt ¨ wt wx i ¸¹ wt wxi wx j
©
wU w Uu w\ w\
0 U Uu [4.11]
wt wx wx wt
w U u w U v w\ w\
0 Uu U0 Uv U 0 [4.12]
wx wy wy wx
It is easy to verify that, in this case, the lines \ = const are streamlines of the
G
flow (we have UV.grad \ 0 ).
The mass flow between two streamlines passing through the points A and B is
G
equal to the difference U 0 \ B \ A . The arc element d A dx, dy of the curve
G
joining A and B allows the elementary vector ndA dy,dx of the normal of this
curve to be expressed, from which we can derive the mass flow:
GG § w\ w\ ·
qm ³AB UV .ndA ³AB U 0 ¨¨ dx dy ¸¸ ³AB U 0 d\ U 0 \ B \ A
© wx wy ¹
c) For a steady axisymmetric flow (where Oz is the axis of symmetry), the mass
conservation equation in a steady regime is equivalent to the following definition for
the stream function \:
156 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
w Uru w Urw U 0 w\ U 0 w\
0 Uu , Uw
wr wz r wz r wr
d) For flows with constant density U, the densities disappear from the definition
of the stream function; in a 2D plane flow, we have:
w\ w\
u1 u2
wx 2 wx1
u ( x, y , z , t ) y u1 ( x, z , t ) y 2 u 2 ( x, z , t ) ! ;
w( x, y, z , t ) y w1 ( x, z , t ) y 2 w2 ( x, z , t ) !
O C x
wv 1 dU § wu ww ·
y ¨¨ 1 1 ¸¸ O ( y 2 )
wy U dt © wx wz ¹
Fluid Dynamics Equations 157
y1 dU y 2 § wu1 ww1 · 3
or, by integrating: v ³0 dy ¨¨ ¸¸ O( y )
U dt 2 © wx wz ¹
§ 0 u1 2 0 ·
¨ ¸
H ¨ u1 2 dU dt U w1 2 ¸ O( y )
¨ 0 w1 2 0 ¸¹
©
We note the existence of shear velocities associated with a velocity field which is
quasi-parallel to the wall, and a expansion velocity which is essentially normal to
the wall.
wu wu ª wu wu º
u w y 2 «u1 1 w1 1 » O( y 3 )
wx wz ¬ wx wz ¼
wu wu wu1 y 1 dU
v y u1 ³0 dy O( y 2 )
wt wy wt U dt
Fluid expansion and unsteady flow variations involve the existence of terms of
order y near the wall.
158 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
ww ww
ª ww ww º
u w y 2 «u1 1 w1 1 » O( y 3 )
wx wz ¬ wx wz ¼
ww ww ww1 y 1 dU
v y w1 ³0 dy O( y 2 )
wt wy wt U dt
wv § 1 dU w · ª y 1 dU º
wv
v ¨ ¸«³ dy » O( y 2 )
wt wy ¨© U dt wt ¸¹ ¬ 0 U dt ¼
wv wv § w w · y 1 dU
u w y¨¨ u1 w1 ¸¸ ³0 dy O( y 3 )
wx wz © wx wz ¹ U dt
Jx
§ u wu
© 2 wx
u ww1
y 2 ¨¨ 1 1 1
2 wz
wu ·
w1 1 ¸¸ O y 3
wz ¹
y 3 ª wu1 ww1 § w w ·º§ wu ww ·
Jy « ¨¨ u1 w1 ¸¸»¨¨ 1 1 ¸¸ O( y 4 )
2 ¬ wx wz © wx wz ¹¼© wx wz ¹
Jz
§ ww
© wx
w wu
y 2 ¨¨ u1 1 1 1 1
2 wx
w ww1 ·
2 wz ¹
¸¸ O y 3
u ( x, y , z , t ) u 0 ( x, y, z, t ) y u1 ( x, y, z, t ) O( y 2 )....
w( x, y, z, t ) w0 ( x, y, z, t ) y w1 ( x, y, z , t ) O( y 2 )
wv § wu ww0 ·
¨¨ 0 ¸¸ O( y )
wy © wx wz ¹
The normal velocity component and the acceleration components can be directly
calculated:
§ wu ww0 ·
v y ¨¨ 0 ¸¸ O( y 2 )
© wx wz ¹
du wu 0 wu wu
Jx u 0 0 w0 0 O( y 2 )
dt wt wx wz
dv ª wu 0 ww0 § w w w ·º§ wu ww0 ·
Jy y« ¨¨ u 0 w0 ¸¸»¨¨ 0 ¸¸ O( y 2 )
dt ¬ wx wz © wt wx wz ¹¼© wx wz ¹
dw ww0 ww0 ww0
Jz u0 w0 O( y)
dt wt wx wz
On the other hand, in a steady flow, the transverse component v ensures the
conservation of mass in any evolution which is not strictly parallel. Examination of
mass conservation equation [4.6] shows that the term wv wy is necessary for the
existence of a longitudinal variation wu wx of the u component.
wu k G
0 (or div V 0)
wx k
Taking the previous relation into account, mass balance equation [4.7] may be
written for an incompressible fluid:
dU
0
dt
d
³
dt D
Uu i dv ³D U
du i
dt
dv ³D U f i dv ³6 V ij n j ds
Fluid Dynamics Equations 161
with: fi the force mass density (for example gravity gi) and Vij the stress tensor
(section 2.1.3.2) Transforming the surface integral of the stress tensor using
Ostrogradsky’s theorem (section 2.1.3.3), and assuming continuous and differentiable
properties, we obtain the local dynamic equations:
G
du i wV ij dV G
U U fi (i, j 1,2,3) or U U f div V [4.13]
dt wx j dt
Replacing the stress tensor with expression [3.39], we obtain the Navier-Stokes
equations:
du i wp wW ij
U U fi (i, j 1,2,3)
dt wx i wx j
G [4.14]
dV G
or U grad p U f div W
dt
In a gas flow of sufficient velocity (at least a few meters per second), the effects
of gravity are negligible and the corresponding term can be ignored. On the
contrary, pressure gradient is negligible for natural convection ([LAN 89], [SCH
99], [YIH 77]).
Case of an external force deriving from a potential U
The force fi may derive from a potential U ( f i wU i wx i ), essentially for
gravitation, electrostatic forces and a few simple cases of inertial entrainment forces
(when the equations are written in a non-Galilean reference frame). Navier-Stokes
equations [4.14] can then be written:
du i wp wU wW ij
U U
dt wx i wx i wx j
G [4.15]
dV
or U grad p U gradU div W
dt
In many cases of practical interest, the external force field is gravity which
derives from the potential gz, where z is a vertically ascending direction; we have:
G
du i wp wz wW ij dV
U Ug or U grad p U grad gz div W
dt wx i wx i wx j dt
162 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
du i wp g wW ij
U (i, j 1,2,3)
dt wx i wx j
The form of the equations shows that the cause of movement (the local resultant
of external forces) is the gradient of the driving pressure. This elimination of gravity
from the dynamic equations is only of interest if the boundary conditions can also be
expressed as a function of the driving pressure alone (section 4.4.2.4).
NOTE – The force fi does not derive from a potential in many very important
configurations, such that:
– the electromagnetic Laplace force which results from the interaction of an
G G
electric current of density j with a magnetic field B : this produces the volume
G G
force j B ;
G
– the Coriolis force in a reference
G G frame moving with an angular velocity : ,
which leads to a mass force 2: V .
We note that these two forces have a similar structure; thus, this produces some
analogous properties between flows in a rotating frame and flows of a fluid
conducting electricity in a magnetic fluid..
For a divariant fluid, we can express the pressure as a function of the specific
enthalpy h and the specific entropy s:
dp § grad p ·
dh Tds ¨ or : grad h T grad s ¸ [4.17]
U ¨ U ¸
© ¹
Fluid Dynamics Equations 163
This gives:
G
wV V2 G 1
grad rot V V grad h T grad s gradU div W [4.18]
wt 2 U
or:
G
wV §V 2 · G 1
grad ¨ U h¸ rot V V T grad s div W [4.19]
wt ¨ 2 ¸ U
© ¹
We note that despite the presence of enthalpy and entropy in equation [4.19], the
origin of this equation is purely mechanical (we have so far not considered any
energy balance).
The term div W , which represents the viscous stresses, can be expressed using
one of the forms discussed in section 3.4.3.3:
wW ij w ª §¨ wu i wu j ·¸º w ª§ 2 · wu º
«P » «¨¨K P ¸¸ k »
wx j wx j « ¨© wx j wx i ¸¹» wx i ¬«© 3 ¹ wx k ¼»
¬ ¼
In the case where the viscosity coefficients are constant, we have expression
[3.58] and the Navier-Stokes equation is written as:
G
U
dV
dt
§
grad p U gradU P rot rotV ¨¨K
©
2P · G
¸¸ grad divV
3 ¹
[4.20]
du i wp wU w 2ui
U U P [4.21]
dt wx i wx i wx j wx j
If the fluid flow has constant and uniform density, the Euler equations can be
written with the driving pressure p g p U gz :
G
du i wp g § dV ·
U ¨U grad p g ¸ [4.25]
dt wx i ¨ dt ¸
© ¹
This form of dynamic equation shows that the cause of movement (local result of
external forces) is indeed the driving pressure gradient.
du i d §¨ V 2 ·¸ wV ij
Uu i U U f i ui ui [4.26]
dt ¨
dt © 2 ¹ ¸ wx j
Replacing the stress tensor with expression [3.39] and assuming that the external
force fi derives from a potential U, we obtain, after grouping similar terms:
d §¨ V 2 ·¸ wp wU wW ij
U u i U ui ui
dt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wxi wx i wx j
or:
w §¨ V 2 ·¸ w §¨ V 2 · wp wW ij
U U ui U¸ u i ui [4.27]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wx i ¨© 2 ¸
¹ wx i wx j
dp 1 sp sh ss ¬
dh Tds or:
sx sx T sx ®
i i i
w §¨ V 2 ·¸ w §¨ V 2 · ws wW ij
U Uu i U h¸ U Tu i ui [4.28]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wx i ¨© 2 ¸
¹ wx i wx j
The reader will note that equation [4.28] is an equation of essentially mechanical
origin, even if it involves thermodynamic functions.
4.3.2.3. Applications
4.3.2.3.1. The constant density fluid
When the density of a fluid is uniform, we can introduce the driving pressure pg
previously defined in equation [4.27]. We then derive the kinetic energy equation:
w §¨ V 2 ·¸ w §¨ V 2 · wW ij
U ui U p g ¸ ui (i, j 1,2,3) [4.29]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wxi ¨© 2 ¸
¹ wx j
Note the absence of any coupling between the mechanical and the
thermodynamic phenomena for a constant density fluid.
166 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Equation [4.29] leads to the definition of total pressure pt and total driving
pressure pgt:
V2 V2
p gt pg U pt pU
2 2
If we assume that the flow is steady and the viscous stresses are zero, the first
term on the left-hand side and the right-hand side of equation [4.29] can be removed,
giving:
w §¨ V2 · d §¨ V2 ·
uj pg U 0 or pg U 0 [4.30]
w x j ¨© 2 ¹ dt ¨© 2 ¹
Bernoulli’s first theorem: in steady inviscid flow, the total driving pressure
V2
p gt pg U is constant on a trajectory or here on a streamline.
2
p gt p g
V 2 [4.31]
U
This expression shows that the driving pressure is a decaying function of the
velocity modulus.
w §¨ V 2 ·¸ w §V 2
¨
· ws wW ij
U U ui h ¸ U Tu i ui [4.32]
¨
wt © 2 ¹ ¸ wx i ¨ 2 ¸ wxi wx j
© ¹
Fluid Dynamics Equations 167
wht d §¨ V2 ·
uj 0 or : h ¸ 0
w xj dt ¨© 2 ¸
¹
V2
ht h0 h or : V 2ht h [4.33]
2
dp
dht VdV 0 [4.34]
U
p p0
J
U U 0J
1J
dp p0 dp
VdV VdV 0
U U 0 p1 J
168 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Integrating and taking as reference (p0, U0, T0) the initial or generation
conditions, where the velocity is zero, we obtain the Saint-Venant relation:
ª J 1 º
2J p 0 « § p J »
·
V «1 ¨¨ ¸ » [4.35]
J 1 U 0 « © p 0 ¸¹ »
«¬ »¼
2J p0 2
V max c0 .
J 1 U0 J 1
J p
c J rT [4.36]
U
2
V2 c2 V2 V max J 1 2
C p T0 C pT c*
2 J 1 2 2 2J 1
p
p
0
p*
J 1
V max c*
J 1
c* V
O
J J
p ª J 1 U 0 2 º J 1 ª J 1 V 2 º J 1
«1 V » «1 »
p0 ¬« 2J p 0 »¼ «¬ 2J c 02 »¼
V2 1 V4 V2 1V2
p0 p 0 0 2 ... 0 (1 ...)
2 8 c0 2 4 c02
For values of p close to p0, i.e. for small enough Mach numbers, the Saint-
Venant relation reduces to formula [4.31] for an incompressible fluid, whose
application to compressible fluid induces a relative error amounting only to M 02 4 .
Then by using Bernoulli’s theorem to air flowing at 70 m.s-1 ( M 0 # 0.2 ), error is
only 1%. For pressure calculations, Bernoulli’s incompressible relation can be used
for many industrial or domestic problems of gas flowing such as ventilation, wind
effects, etc.
4.3.2.3.4. Variation of the mass flux density and the Hugoniot relation
The mass flux density (mass flow per unit section of a stream tube) is equal to
U V. Replacing dp in equation [4.34] by its expression dp c 2 dU , we obtain:
V
dU U dV [4.37]
c2
d U V
U 1 M 2 dV [4.38]
We see that the mass flux density U V increases with the Mach number in
subsonic flows while it decreases in supersonic flows; it is at maximum for
170 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
UV
V c c* . Variations of as a function of the velocity V are shown in
U * c*
Figure 4.3 (U* is the critical density). Note that two velocity values correspond to the
preceding ratio, one subsonic, the other supersonic.
UV
1
U * c*
O c* Vmax V
VG
x
S
Sc
(a) (b)
section, etc.). We can write the conservation of mass flow USV in differential form
in this stream tube ( d U VS 0 ); taking account of [4.38], we obtain Hugoniot’s
differential relation:
d U VS § V2
¨1
· dV dS
¸ 0 [4.39]
U VS ¨ c2 ¸ V S
© ¹
On the other hand, we can always solve equation [4.39] with respect to dS/dV,
showing that the cross-section S of the tube is a decreasing function of the velocity
in subsonic flow (V<c), but increasing for supersonic flows (V>c).
As the mass flow rate USV is constant, the area S of the cross-section varies
inversely with the product U V studied earlier (Figure 4.3). The maximum mass
flux density U V occurs in the throat of the nozzle, where the cross-section is
smallest. However, this quantity U V can only take values smaller than the critical
value U* c*. So, the mass flow rate cannot exceed the critical value U* Sc c* calculated
in the throat cross-section. The mass flow rate may be obviously less than this
maximum value, the velocity in cross-section Sc then being smaller than the sound
velocity.
This configuration is characteristic of nozzles (Figure 4.4b). Note that for a given
value of the cross-section S or the quantity ȡSV, there are two corresponding
velocities, which explains the difficulty encountered when we try to solve equation
[4.39] for the velocity V. We will return to look at the consequences of this situation
in section 5.5.4.
We have seen that for a mechanical system, we can consider a dynamic moment
(section 3.2.1) taken about the inertia center of the system in a reference frame
which is parallel to a Galilean reference frame. The instantaneous rotational
172 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
G G
movements in a fluid are characterized by the vorticity vector 2Z rot V ([3.38]).
The vorticity equation can be obtained by taking the curl of the Navier-Stokes
equations [4.14]. Assuming body forces to derive from a potential, and using the
identity:
G
rot a. A
G G
a.rot A grad a A [4.40]
rot rot VG V
G
w rot V 1 §1 ·
grad U grad p rot ¨¨ div W ¸¸ [4.41]
©U
wt 2
U ¹
rot rot VG V
G
w rot V §1 ·
grad T grad s rot ¨¨ div W ¸¸ [4.42]
wt ©U ¹
Assuming a Newtonian fluid with constant viscosity and density, the vorticity
equation can be written, with [4.21]:
G
wZ
wt
G
rot Z V X 'Z [4.43]
G
For a 2D velocity field, the vorticity vector Z has only one component. This fact
leads to very important specific properties, in particular in the study of turbulence
([COU 89], [MAT 00], [TEN 72])
The reader will note that the vorticity equations in inviscid flows are identical for
homoentropic and incompressible fluids.
d §¨ §
¨e V
2 · ·
¸ dv ¸
³ U Pth Pmec [4.44]
dt ¨© D ¨© 2 ¸ ¸
¹ ¹
Pmec ³D U f i u i dv ³6 V ij n j u i ds ³D U f i u i dv ³D
w
V ij u i dv
wx j
wqTj
Pth ³D V T dv ³¦ qTj n j ds ³D V T dv ³D dv
wx j
Replacing the powers Pth and Pmec in [4.44] with their values, we obtain:
d §¨ §
¨e V
2 · ·
¸ dv ¸
wqTj
³ U Pth Pmec ³D V T dv ³D dv
dt ¨© D ¨© 2 ¸ ¸
¹ ¹ wx j
[4.45]
w V ij u i
³D U f i u i dv ³D dv
wx j
U
d §¨
e
V 2 ·¸
U fi ui
w V ij ui V
wqTj
[4.46]
T
dt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wx j wx j
d §¨ V2 ·
¸ w pu i
w W ij u i wqTj
U e U f i ui VT [4.47]
dt ¨© 2 ¸
¹ wx i wx j wx j
w ª §¨ V2 ·º ª §
¸» w « U ¨ e V
2 ·
¸u pu »
º
«U e
wt «¬ ¨© 2 ¸» wx « ¨ 2 ¸ j j
»
¹¼ j ¬ © ¹ ¼
w W ij u i
wqTj
U f i ui VT
wx j wx j
w ª §¨ V2 ·º ª § 2 · º
«U e ¸» w « U ¨ h V ¸u »
wt «¬ ¨© 2 ¸» wx j « ¨ 2 ¸ j»
¹¼ ¬ © ¹ ¼ [4.48]
w W ij u i wqTj
U f i ui VT
wx j wx j
de w U e
w U eu j wu i wqTj
U V ij VT [4.49]
dt wt wx j wx j wx j
de wu i wu i wqTj
U p W ij VT [4.50]
dt wxi wx j wx j
§1· § p·
de pd ¨¨ ¸¸ Tds dh d ¨¨ ¸¸
©U¹ ©U¹
Fluid Dynamics Equations 175
de d §1· ds p dU ds p wu i ds dh d § p·
p ¨ ¸T T T ¨ ¸
¨ ¸
dt © U ¹ U wxi dt ¨© U ¸¹
dt dt U 2 dt dt dt dt
The energy equation can thus be written in one of the following forms:
de wu i ½
U p °
dt wxi °
dh dp ° wu i wqTj
U ¾ W ij VT [4.51]
dt dt ° wx j wx j
ds °
UT °
dt ¿
wu i
) W ij [4.52]
wx j
which represents the thermal power released locally per unit volume by viscous
friction.
ds W ij wu i VT 1 wqTj
U [4.53]
dt T wx j T T wx j
ds C v § dp dU ·
¨¨ c2 ¸¸ [4.54]
dt E pT © dt dt ¹
wu i
Finally, equation [4.6] for the conservation of mass allows us to replace
wxi
1 dU
with and to obtain other forms for the left-hand side of equation [4.51]:
U dt
de wu i p dU ½
de
U p U °
dt wxi dt U dt °
dh dp °
U °
dt dt ° wu i wqTj
ds U C v § dp dU ·¾ W ij VT [4.55]
UT ¨¨ c2 ¸¸° wx j wx j
dt E p © dt dt ¹°
°
U C v §¨ dp wu j ·
¸ °
c2U
E p ¨© dt wx j ¸¹ °
¿
dT wu i wqTj wu i w §¨ wT ·
¸
UC W ij VT W ij VT O
dt wx j wx j wx j wx j ¨© wx j ¸
¹
4.3.4.1.7. Expression of the dissipation function for a Newtonian fluid
Substituting G[3.57] for the viscous tensor of a Newtonian fluid into [4.52], we
obtain ( T divV ):
Fluid Dynamics Equations 177
2
wu i wu i §¨ wu i wu j · §
¸ ¨K 2 P ·¸§¨ wu i ·
) W ij P ¸
wx j wx j ¨© wx j wx i ¸ ¨© ¸
3 ¹¨© wx i ¸
¹ ¹
2
4 P H 12 2
H 23 2
H 31 2
2 P H 11 2
H 22 2
H 33
§ 2 ·
¨¨K P ¸¸T 2
© 3 ¹
Very often, the shear velocities are much greater than the expansion velocities
and the expression for the dissipation function is simplified:
) 2
4P H 12 2
H 23 2
H 31
ª§ 2
§ wu ·
2
§ wu
2º
wu1 wu 2 · wu u · [4.56]
P «¨¨ ¸ ¨ 2 3 ¸ ¨ 3 w 1¸ »
« wx 2 wx1 ¸ ¨ wx ¸ ¨ wx ¸ »
¬© ¹ © 3 wx 2 ¹ © 1 wx 3 ¹ ¼
Equation [2.25] for the mass balance of a chemical species can be written using
G
the partial density Ui and the local velocity Vi of the component i:
wU i G
div U i Vi V mi [4.57]
wt
The volume source of mass Vmi of species i is a homogenous chemical reaction.
G
Introducing the local mass average velocity V [2.29] gives:
wUi
wt
G
div Ui V > G
V mi div Ui Vi V
G
@ [4.58]
In the case of isothermal diffusion, the mass flux density of the species i is given
by relation [2.57]. We thus obtain the diffusion equation of the flow:
ª § U i ·º
wU i G
div U i V V mi div « U D grad ¨¨ ¸»
¸ i 1,2 [4.59]
wt ¬« © U ¹¼»
178 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wc1
wt
G
div c1 V V c1 D'c1 [4.60]
Recall that for a binary mixture, diffusion is represented by the balance equation
of one species, associated with the mass conservation equation for the mixture. In
simple cases, we can consider that the creation of species 1 is due to a homogenous
reaction of order m:
V c1 kc1m [4.61]
The coefficient k for the reaction kinetics varies according to a law of the form:
§ U ·
k k 0 exp¨¨ ¸¸
© RT ¹
The partial differential equations satisfied by the preceding quantities are not
sufficient for the definition of a particular problem. We must also specify boundary
conditions of different kinds. The definition of the domain studied D constitutes the
first step. It is defined by the surface which bounds D and on which we will impose
conditions for the unknowns of the problem (boundary conditions). Because of the
particular nature of the time variable, we must also specify the initial conditions.
This adherence condition of the fluid at the wall is always very well satisfied in
ordinary conditions where the mean free path of the molecules is small compared
with the roughness. The same is not true in the study of rarefied gases, where we
must take account of the properties of the wall and introduce a slipping coefficient.
In certain cases, the walls are permeable, in other words they let some matter
pass through them. This is the case when we suck or blow through a porous
medium. In these conditions, the difference between the tangential fluid velocities
and the wall are zero at the wall. The normal fluid velocity with respect to the wall
depends on the fluid injection process. An analogous condition is encountered in the
presence of phase changes at the wall: evaporation, fusion, and other heterogenous
chemical reactions which consume or produce fluid.
The boundary conditions for thermal and diffusion problems were discussed in
sections 2.3.2 and 2.4.6, which the reader can refer to.
Finally, for flows which possess unstable zones, it is not sufficient to specify
velocity or pressure distributions: the perturbations which enter the domain must be
defined so as to fully determine the problem to be solved.
z [ ( x, y , t )
The w component of the velocity in the Oz direction satisfies the relation (known
as the kinematic relation):
d[ w[ w[ w[
w u v
dt wt wx wy
2) The physical nature of this surface must provide the conditions necessary for
the stress tensor. The pressure discontinuity p1 p 2 across the surface is given by
Laplace’s law:
§1 1·
p1 p 2 V ¨¨ ¸¸
©R R' ¹
where the quantities V, R and R’ are, respectively, the surface tension and the radii
of curvature of the free surface at the point considered (section 2.2.1.4.2).
For nearly all industrial flows of water and aqueous solutions, surface tension
does not play an important role: we can assume pressure continuity at the free
surface.
the solution may present diverse and complex characteristics. Some examples will
demonstrate the degree of these difficulties:
– a steady solution may be established after a transition period, but this solution
may depend on the initial conditions (such properties are used in fluidics when we
manipulate the eventual hysteresis of separated flow zones);
– no steady solution may exist, but a more or less complexly established
unsteady flow regime may occur, which is determined and predictable;
– the flow may become more or less chaotic while maintaining a more or less
organized unsteadiness;
– an established turbulence may be present in certain domains of the established
flow: in other words the flow, while unsteady, may have stable statistical
characteristics;
weak perturbations, which are difficult to characterize, may be present in the
initial or boundary conditions, and these may be of considerable importance for the
evolution of the flow.
Even the most rudimentary model must satisfy conservation laws for extensive
quantities. The interest in a global balance is that it allows us to observe a system
from the exterior. Balance equation [4.1] for a quantity G in the domain D can be
written by replacing the material derivative by its expression (section 3.3.3.3); it
can be written in one of the following two forms, as a function of the volume
quantity g or of the mass quantity g:
wg
³Dq dv ³6 gu i ni ds ³D V G dv ³¦ q Gj n j ds [4.62]
wt
w Ug
³Dq dv ³6 gdq m ³D V G dv ³¦ q Gj n j ds [4.63]
wt
wg
³D wt dv ³D V G dv ³¦ qGj n j ds ³6 gui ni ds
“physical” flux convective flux
The left-hand side term corresponds to the possible accumulation of the quantity
G in D. This variation of the quantity G contained in this domain is the sum of:
the production of the sources VG;
In the preceding equations, we can interpret the surface and volume integrals in
different ways:
– the surface integrals over 6 comprise inputs and outputs of the material system
contained in D, in other words we can evaluate them without knowing the internal
structure of the flow within the system;
– the volume integrals in the domain D clearly imply the internal variables of the
system for which a model is necessary.
IMPORTANT NOTES –
1) The global balance equations do not require the assumption of a continuous
medium. They can be applied to any domain D constituted by matter, continuous or
discontinuous: diverse media containing many different phases (liquid flows with
bubbles, fluidized beds for transport of pulverized media, etc.), avalanches of solid
substances (stones, snow, mud, etc.) and/or liquids (mud, etc.). The balance equation
can be directly written without assumptions concerning the differentiable properties
of the continuous medium. Only the assumption of integrability of the fluxes across
the surface 6 is necessary. Even the time differentiation assumption is not necessary:
it suffices to effect a balance of the amount of G contained in D between two
instants t1 and t2:
quantity of G
come out from 6 come out from 6
G D (t 2 ) G D (t1 ) created in D
by convection by other process
between t1 and t 2
2) In all modeling we must have a global extensive variable G(t) internal to the
wg
domain D, defined from the amount of G contained in D, such that ³D dv is
q wt
dG
equal to ; equation [4.63] can thus be written in the form:
dt
dG source of ½ inputs of ½
® ¾® ¾
dt ¯G inside D ¿ ¯G into D ¿
The expression of mass conservation for a fluid of density U inside the domain
D during its movement, can be written from [4.62], with g U :
wU
³D dv q m6 0
wt
G wu i
³6 dq v ³D div V dv ³D dv
wx i
w U u i
³D dv ³¦ U u i u j n j ds ¦ Fei
wt
w U ui
³D wt
dv ³ ui dqm
¦
¦F ext i
G [4.64]
dv
w UV G G
or ³
D wt ³
¦
Vdqm ¦ Fext
Note that in a steady flow the balance depends only on the input-output of the
domain. In unsteady flows, the first term corresponds to an eventual accumulation of
momentum in D.
Thus, as discussed in section 3.2.1, we can also perform a balance using the
moments (angular momentum). This gives:
dv OM VG dq
G
w UV G
¦ M ext
³D OM ³¦ m [4.65]
wt
G
V1
G
V1 6 D G
V2
G
V1
Let qm be the mass flow rate passing through the propulsion device. The
G
momentum flow rate parallel to the upstream velocity V1 and leaving the surface 6
is equal to:
G
³¦ V dq m G G
q m V 2 V1
186 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Very many practical problems can be treated in the same way, the changes in
momentum corresponding to the forces which can be calculated from a knowledge
of the mass flows and the velocities ([EVE 89], [GAR 06], [GUY 01], [SAG 66],
[SPU 97]).
The global form can be obtained by integrating the local form [4.27] over the
domain D. Assuming a potential U which is independent of time, we obtain:
d §¨ V 2 · d ª §V2 · º
³D U U ¸ dv «³ U¨ U ¸ dv »
dt ¨© 2 ¸
¹ dt «¬ D ¨ 2
©
¸ »
¹ ¼
w §¨ U V 2 · § 2 ·
¸dv U ¨ V U ¸u n ds wp wW ij
³D ¨ ³ ³D u i dv ³D u i dv
wt © 2 ¸ 6 ¨ 2 ¸ j j wx i wx j
¹ © ¹
w §¨ UV 2 · ª §V2 ·º
³D dv ³6 « p U ¨ U » u j n j ds
wt ¨© 2 ¹ «¬ ¨ 2
© ¹ »¼
wu i wu
³D p dv ³6 W ij u j n j ds ³D W ij i dv
wx i wx j
w §¨ UV 2 · ª §V2 ·º
« U ¨ » u j n j ds
³D ¨ dv ³6 p
¨ 2
U
wt © 2 ¹ «¬ © ¹»¼ [4.66]
wu i
³D p dv Pv6 PvD
wx i
w §¨ U V 2 ·¸ § 2·
¨ p U gh U V ¸u n ds
³D ¨ dv ³6 ¨ j j Pv6 PvD [4.67]
wt © 2 ¸¹ © 2 ¸¹
In incompressible inviscid flows, the sum of the temporal variation in the kinetic
energy of D and the flux of mechanical energy (kinetic and pressure) leaving 6 is
zero.
The integration of the energy equation over the domain D should be performed
using a form of the equation which allows flux integrals to be written. For a
compressible fluid, the form [4.48] with the total enthalpy is best suited. We obtain,
neglecting gravity:
w ª §¨ V2 ·º §
¸» dv U ¨ h V
2 ·
¸u n ds
³D «U e ³
wt «¬ ¨© 2 ¸» 6 ¨
2 ¸ j j [4.68]
¹¼ © ¹
³6 W ij u i n j ds ³D V T dv ³6 qTj n j ds
This equation has the inconvenience of not including the dissipation function ).
Using one of the forms [4.51] is preferable for thermodynamic balances, but internal
balances remain in the form of volume integrals:
w Uh § wp wp ·¸
³Dq dv ³6 hdq m ³D ¨ uj dv ³D ) dv ³D V G dv ³¦ qTj n j ds
wt q ¨ wt wx ¸
© j ¹
188 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
However, these forms become perfectly adapted for the study of thermal transfer
at constant pressure or constant volume. In such conditions, we immediately obtain,
from [4.51]:
w U g
³Dq dv ³6 gdq m ³D ) dv ³D V T dv ³¦ qTj n j ds [4.69]
wt
where for g we must use either the specific internal energy e or the specific enthalpy
h. For the usual case of a fluid of constant specific heat, the preceding equation
becomes:
w ( U CT )
³Dq dv ³6 U CTdq m ³D ) dv ³D V T dv ³¦ qTj n j ds [4.70]
wt
where, depending on the case, we used either Cp or Cv for the specific heat C.
wU i GG G § Ui ·
³Dq dv ³6 U i V .n ds ³D V mi dv ³¦ U D n.grad ¨¨ ¸ds
¸ [4.72]
wt © U ¹
wci GG G
³Dq dv ³6 c i V .n ds ³D V ci dv ³¦ D n.grad ci ds [4.73]
wt
4.6.1. Principles
4.6.1.1. Invariance of physical laws
The fundamental physical laws are described by relations between real numbers
obtained as measures of physical quantities. A measurement is a comparison
between the quantity studied and a similar quantity considered as a unit. Most units
are “derived”, as they depend on physical laws: for example, the surface unit is a
square whose sides measure one unit of length. With such choices, physical laws are
relations which comprise either dimensional coefficients which have a physical
interpretation (the speed of sound for example) and which can be expressed using
the units of the system, or non-dimensional coefficients which are independent of
the system (for example, S for the surface of a circle). There are four fundamental
units which can be arbitrarily taken for mass, length, time and temperature, and
whose choice determines a coherent system of units. No specific physical
phenomenon is used to govern the particular quantities chosen as units, and for
practical reasons we can arbitrarily choose the four fundamental units of the
international metric system (the meter, the kilogram, the second, the Kelvin).
Two problems are similar if two systems of units exist, such that the
measurements of all the quantities of one of the problems, using a given system of
units, are equal to the measurements of the corresponding quantities of the other
problem using another system of units.
choose the system of units, it is easier to write the equations and conditions of a
problem with a system of units which corresponds to the problem; the equations
obtained are non-dimensional, in other words they are independent of the units
chosen for the physical measurements: calculating the area of a circle using its
radius as a unit gives a result equal to S.
wU wUu i
0 [4.74]
wt wxi
– Navier-Stokes equations:
du i wp wz w 2ui
U Ug P (i, j 1,2,3) [4.75]
dt wx i wx i wx j wx j
w 2T
UCp
dT
dp
) H ij O
dt dt wx j wx j
[4.76]
p
rT
U
– initial conditions:
- the fluid is assumed at rest at time t=0.
The results of the problem are the velocity field, the pressure field and the
temperature field, in addition to the surface densities (friction stresses, pressure,
thermal flux density, etc.) or the global quantities (drag, lift, heat flux, etc.). These
are functions of the coordinates and the n data of the problem (U, L, U0, T0, Tw, P,
O, g, Cp).
xi ui p ~ Ut U ~ T
~
xi u~i ~
p 2
t U~ T [4.77]
L U U 0U L U0 T0
We have:
w 1 w d U d w2 1 w2 1 ~
; ~; ' '
wxi L w~
xi dt L dt wx j wx j L2 w~
xi w~
xi L2
wU~ w U~ u~i
~ 0
wt w~xi
du~ w~
p gL w~z P w 2 u~ij
U~ ~i ~ U~ ~ ~ ~ (i, j 1,2,3)
dt wx i U 2 wx i U 0UL wx j wx j
[4.78]
~ ~
U 2 d~ PU O w 2T
~ dT
U ~
p
~
~
) H~ij
dt C p T0 d t U C p T0 L U 0 C p UL w~x j w~x j
~
p rT0 ~
~ T
U U2
192 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
where the dissipation function ) H ij (which characterizes kinetic heating) is given
PU 2 ~ ~
by [4.56]: ) H ij ) H ij .
L2
wU~ w U~ u~i
~ 0
wt w~xi
2~
du~ w~p ~ 1 w~ z 1 w u ij
U~ ~i ~ U ~ ~ ~ (i, j 1,2,3)
dt wx i Fr 2 wx i Re wx j wx j
[4.79]
~ w 2 u~ij
d~
U~ ~
dT
Ec ~
p Ec ~ ~
) H ij 1
dt dt Re Re.Pr w~
x j w~xj
~
p 1 ~
T
U~ J M 02
The Eckert number and the Mach number are related by the perfect gas relation
between Cp and r ( rJ J 1C p ). We also define the Péclet number Pe = Re. Pr.
U U 0U 2 dynamic pressure
Fr |
gL U 0 gL hydrostatic pressure difference
2 2
U U0 U kinetic energy
Ec |
C pT0 U 0 C pT0 enthalpy
The Eckert number (or the Mach number) represents the influence of
compressibility on the properties of the flow whose kinetic energy is due to enthalpy
variations in the steady flow (conservation of the total enthalpy [4.33]).
The Reynolds number usually takes on very large values (from 103 to 108),
which signifies the globally weak effects of viscosity and thermal conduction in
most flows. We will see in Chapter 6 that this property is not true in zones close to
solid boundaries (boundary layers).
Note that if the viscosity or other physical properties are not constant we must
introduce further non-dimensional functions.
– for fully immersed flows of a liquid (section 4.4.2.4), we have seen that gravity
no longer has a direct effect on the flow; we therefore take the driving pressure
pg p U g z to be the only variable, gravity disappearing from the equations
and from the boundary conditions: the Froude number is no longer a parameter.
2 wu~
Cf
Re wn~ n~ 0
wT
The local thermal flux density at the wall qTp O can be written in
wn n 0
non-dimensional form of the local Nusselt number Nu:
~ qTp L
wT
Nu ~
wn n~ 0
O T p T0
Fluid Dynamics Equations 195
§ wu · § 2 wu~ ·
X ³S ¨¨ P cos - p sin T ¸ds U U 2 L2 ³S~ ¨ cos - ~
p sin T ¸ds
¸ ¨ Re wn~ ¸
© wn n 0 ¹ © n~ 0 ¹
Instead of the non-dimensional integral in the above formula, we can use the
drag coefficient Cx in the x-direction, often defined by means of the surface Sc,
projected frontal area (projection of S on to the plane perpendicular to the x-axis):
U0 U 2
X Cx Sc
2
However, we will see in section 6.6 that a problem posed with steady boundary
conditions will often have an unsteady or turbulent solution: the non-dimensional
~
solution is therefore a function of the variable t . For example, if the wake of the
cylinder discussed above comprises a preferred frequency N, the non-dimensional
frequency St = NL/U will be a function of the similarity parameters St(Re,M,...).
We can take an historic example: at the beginning of the 20th century, L. Prandtl
and G. Eiffel independently measured the drag of a sphere in a wind tunnel. They
found different drag coefficients for the same Reynolds number. This raised
196 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
w
c ui D 'c
wxi
wc
with the condition at the wall P: D kc P m .
wn n 0
w ~~ D ~~
c ui 'c
w~
x i UL
with the absorption condition for a constituent, due to heterogeneous reaction at the
wall:
wc~ kc0m 1 L ~ m 1
~ cP [4.80]
wn n~ 0 D
UL
– the Péclet diffusion number: Pe D Re.Sc;
D
Q
– the Schmidt number: Sc (Q kinematic viscosity);
D
kc 0m 1 L
– the Damköhler number: which characterizes the speed of the
D
chemical reaction.
kc 0m 1 L
Condition [4.80] shows that if the number is large compared to 1, the
D
wall concentration is zero, and the flux of the corresponding constituent is limited by
kc0m 1L
diffusion. If, on the other hand, we have 1 , we have c P c 0 and the
D
reaction speed is equal to kc 0 m : diffusion is no longer important.
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Chapter 5
The objective of this chapter is to present the general properties of the equations
which describe the flow of matter. The substantial derivative describes the physical
idea of the properties associated with matter which is in motion. It results in a
particular structure of the equations of fluid mechanics and the properties associated
with the displacement of material quantities. This leads to a specific means of posing
and numerically solving fluid mechanics problems. The corresponding mathematical
techniques which underlie the physical concepts are well known, but unfortunately
they are not widely taught; we will here recall them without providing detailed
demonstrations.
We will first quickly recall the general properties of a differential equation which
is satisfied by a scalar function:
– the order n of the equation: the greater the maximum order n of the derivatives,
the greater the complexity of the solution (n time constants correspond to n
independent solutions for a linear differential equation with constant coefficients).
We know that, in general, the solutions of a differential equation form a family of
functions which depend on the n parameters. This means that the number of
boundary conditions which must be specified in order to determine a unique solution
is generally equal to the order n;
200 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
In the preceding particular case where we impose zero conditions at two points,
the differential equation generally has a zero solution. However, there may exist
particular coefficient values for which a non-zero solution exists, and which
therefore depends on some parameter. These particular values correspond to the
eigenvalues of the differential operator. We will treat these problems in more detail
in Appendix 4.
The case of a system of coupled differential equations can amount to the study of
a higher order differential equation for one of the unknown functions after
elimination of the other unknown functions. For example, the system of two second
1 I.e. when we have mathematical properties of regularity, for the rest more or less satisfied in
application conditions of physics and mechanics.
2 We wish to say that any approximation with notable physical consequences has been made
when writing the equations for the problem.
Transport and Propagation 201
order equations with two unknown functions y(x) and z(x) can immediately be
transformed:
Deriving z'' leads to the appearance in the expression for z''' the derivatives y'' and
z'' which we replace with their earlier expression f and g, giving for z''' an expression
of the form h( z ' , z , y ' , y, x) . Doing the same for z'''', we get a similar expression
m( z ' , z , y ' , y, x) . The elimination of y, y' from the three equations:
z' ' g ( z ' , z , y ' , y, x), z' ' ' h ( z ' , z , y ' , y, x), z' ' ' ' m ( z ' , z, y ' , y, x)
Conversely the differential equation z '''' f ( z ''', z '', z, x) for the unknown
function z(x) is immediately transformed into a system of four first-order differential
equations by letting z ' ' ' u , z ' ' v, z ' w :
x i' t
fi x j , t i, j 1,..., n
can be transformed into a differential equation of order n for one variable, for
example x1; in effect, by differentiating x1' t , the two other derivatives x i' t
appear, which we replace as a function of the quantities xi (t); we thus obtain:
x1(i ) t
gi x j , t i, j 1,2,..., n
x1( n ) t
F x1 , x1' , x1' ' ,.., x1( n 1) , t :
The preceding procedure is only appropriate if the equations of the system are
suitably coupled. Otherwise, new variables Xi must be chosen, such that the
equations are coupled. We will leave it to the reader to verify this for the elementary
linear system (let: X1 = x1. + x2 and X2.= x1 – x2):
§ x' · § a 0 ·§ x1 ·
¨ 1¸ ¨¨ ¸¸¨¨ ¸¸
¨ x' ¸ © 0 b ¹© x 2 ¹
© 2¹
f ' x g x, f [5.1]
Solving the Cauchy problem involves calculating the value of the solution in the
vicinity of the value x0 of the variable x, at which the value f0 = f (x0) is given. It is
equivalent to saying that given the point (x0, f0) of the plane (x,f), we must find the
variations dx and df which it is possible to calculate from equation [5.1]:
f ' x dx df [5.2]
It is clear that the system of equations [5.1] and [5.2] with the unknown f '(x)
should be of rank 1, hence the condition:
1 g
0
dx df
The curve of the plane x, f on which the value of f extends (or is transmitted)
is therefore given by the relation:
dx df
1 g x, f
The preceding presentation may seem unnecessarily formal, but its interest is
that it can be extended to the study of partial differential equations.
Transport and Propagation 203
5.2.1. Introduction
In expressing the laws of physics in a local form, we obtain partial differential
equations, the functions representing the physical quantities depending on space and
time variables. These equations have properties which are quite different from
differential equations, because their general solution no longer comprises a family of
functions with a finite number of parameters, but a family of functions which we can
choose arbitrarily. Let us take the simple example of the equation:
w2 f
0
wxwy
f ( x, y ) M ( x) \ ( y )
This solution is only a general form of the function dependence with respect to
the variables. The choice of these functions will depend on the boundary conditions
which are specified.
As with the differential equation, we can define a Cauchy problem: for example,
for a partial differential equation with two variables x, y , the unknown function f
is given on the curve C0 of the plane (x,y) and we seek to evaluate this function in
the vicinity of C0.
We will not demonstrate the uniqueness of the solution, as this requires advanced
mathematical knowledge and precise assumptions which do not necessarily have
physical reality, for example:
– do analytical functions (indefinitely differentiable) exist?;
– what is the nature of the “relation” between distributions and physical
problems?;
– how can we verify the physical reality of a Lipschitz application (section
1.1.1.4)?
204 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
We have previously seen that the substantial derivative in the equations of fluid
mechanics describes transport of a quantity associated with matter. We will recover
this interpretation of the substantial derivative by purely mathematical
considerations.
wf wf wf
u v g ( f , x, y , t ) [5.3]
wt wx wy
The coefficients u and v are given functions of (f, x, y, t). Equation [5.3]
describes the balance of the scalar quantity F (mass, entropy, number of moles of a
chemical species, etc.) associated with the corresponding specific quantity f (section
4.2.1.2.1). The function g can be considered a source of quantity F, as it only
depends on the coordinates of the material particle and the associated value of the
function f. There is however no interaction with the neighboring particles, and
equation [5.3] does not contain any diffusive flux term for the quantity F. Balance
equation [4.3] of the volume quantity f can thus be expressed in the form [5.3].
Let us ignore for the moment the physical interpretation of equation [5.3], of
which we will here give a geometric interpretation. In the 4D space (t, x, y, z),
consider the surface S described by the equation:
) (t , x, y, z ) z f x, y , t 0
We know that the vector grad ) of components f t , f x , f y ,1 is normal to
S. The equation of the plane tangent to the surface S at the point (t, x, y, z) can be
written (designating the usual coordinates (T, X, Y, Z)):
Transport and Propagation 205
wf wf wf
T t X x Y y Z z 0 [5.4]
wt wx wy
Comparing equations [5.3] and [5.4] shows that the vector (1, u, v, g) is located
in the plane tangent to the surface S. The solutions to the partial differential
equation are thus represented by surfaces tangential to the vector field 1, u , v, g in
the said 4D space. Now the curves tangent to the vector field (1, u, v, g) can be
obtained by integration of the system of three differential equations:
dx dy df
dt [5.5]
u v g
The curves defined by system [5.5] are called characteristic curves. We note
immediately that the first two differential equations define the trajectories of fluid
particles (section 3.3.2). The third differential equation allows the unknown function
f to be calculated on these curves. We thus obtain a Lagrangian (substantial)
representation of the balance of the quantity f associated with the fluid particles.
f G C f
GC
V V D
M
O y O y
M0
S S0
x x
(a) (b)
Note that the solution of equation [5.3] amounted to the solution of a system of
differential equations with initial conditions. In the preceding 4D space, any surface
S constituted of characteristic curves (characteristic surface) is tangent to the vector
G
field V (1, u, v, g); it is thus a solution of the partial differential equation (Figure
5.1a). If a trajectory point C belongs to a surface S, then the curve C lies entirely on
S.
This property allows the definition of the ideas of input (the surface S0 on which
the initial conditions are given) and output (any surface derived from S0 by
“translation” following the characteristic curves). This introduces a dissymmetry
between the input and output. Depending on the physical context of a problem, the
ideas of input and output may correspond to upstream and downstream, or to initial
and final conditions.
5.2.3. Comments
wf wf wf
dt dx dy df 0 with : dx udt , dy vdt. [5.6]
wt wx wy
df
The balance equation g for each fluid particle describes the compatibility
dt
between relation [5.6] and partial differential equation [5.3]. The preceding
considerations show the equivalence between the Lagrangian balance formulation
in the form of differential equations [5.5], and the balance equation in Eulerian
variables, expressed in the form of partial differential equation [5.3].
3) In the presence of diffusion of the quantity F, the right-hand side of the
balance equations is not of the form g f , x, y, t , rather it contains the second order
transverse derivatives with respect to the characteristic curves: these derivatives
express an interaction between neighboring characteristic curves due to diffusion of
the quantity F. The introduction of higher order partial derivatives modifies the
properties found earlier. However, these partial derivatives are associated with a
coefficient which is often very small, and which leads to a reduction in the order of
the equation, except in singular zones (sections 6.4.3 and 6.5.3): nearly everywhere,
F is transported on the trajectories, with the source g taken into account.
In effect, we have seen that the calculation of the function f can be performed by
integration over the characteristic curves (trajectories): in order for this calculation
to be possible, these characteristic curves must obviously cross the surface S0 on
which the initial values of the function f are given.
Note that the solution of equation [5.3] is only defined in the domain D of the
space containing the characteristic curves which cross the surface S0: D is the
influence domain of the initial conditions given on S0. It is rigorously delimited.
This property is specific to all quasi-linear first order partial differential equations.
In summary, the Cauchy problem for a first order partial differential equation
was reduced to an ensemble of independent Cauchy problems for a system of
ordinary differential equations on each of the characteristic curves (trajectories). In a
transverse direction with respect to these curves, the partial differential equation
gives no information regarding the function f: the solution on characteristic curve C
has no influence on its neighboring points, except on C. The properties of the
solution in the neighborhood of a characteristic curve are uniquely fixed by the
initial conditions corresponding to this neighborhood. The solution space is thus
found to be as a bundle of fibers.
We will later return to the Cauchy problem (section 5.3.5.1) in a more local
manner, and one which is closer to the practical methods used for numerical
calculations.
[5.7]
We will adopt the position of the Cauchy problem: we assume that the value of F
is known on a curve C0 of equation M x, t 0 in the plane (x,t), and that from a
point (x0, t0) of this curve, we seek to calculate the value of the function F in its
wF
neighborhood: this is possible if we know the value of the partial derivatives
wx
wF
and at the point (x0, t0). The calculation of these is possible using data on the
wt
curve C0 and equation [5.7]. Designating the elemental arc G t , G x of the curve C0
and the growth G F of F on this arc, we have:
wF wF
Gt Gx GF [5.8]
wt wx
wF
Eliminating between [5.7] and [5.8] we have the system:
wt
§ G x · wF GF
¨B A¸ GA [5.9]
¨ G t ¸¹ wx Gt
©
Gx
If the determinant Q B A of the system [5.9] is non-zero, the unknown
Gt
wF
has a unique value. We can therefore obtain the value of F in the neighborhood
wx
of the considered point and the Cauchy problem has a unique solution. The
preceding determinant is called the characteristic determinant of system [5.7]. Its
value depends on the ratio G x G t O , in other words on the choice of the curve
C0.
Gx
Q B A 0 [5.10]
Gt
Transport and Propagation 209
The corresponding curve C0 is the characteristic curve associated with the root
O. When all the roots of the equation Q 0 are real, system [5.7] is called
hyperbolic (or totally hyperbolic).
When the characteristic determinant is zero, the system rank [5.9] has diminished
by one unit and a non-zero solution exists for system [5.9], if we have a
GF
compatibility relation between the components of the vector G A of the
Gt
right-hand side.
This relationship can be obtained, for example, from the non-zero left solutions L
(eigenfunctions) of the characteristic equation:
L B O A 0 [5.11]
Multiplying on the left side [5.9] by L and taking account of [5.11], we then
obtain the relationship sought between the components of GF on the characteristic
curve concerned:
§ G F ·¸
L¨ G A 0 [5.12]
¨
© G t ¸¹
We will examine two particular cases which show the physical interest of these
results.
210 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wU wU wu
u U 0
wt wx wx
wu wu wp
U Uu 0 [5.13]
wt wx wx
wp wp wu
u U c2 0
wt wx wx
§U· §u U 0 · § 0·
¨ ¸ ¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
Letting: F ¨ u ¸; A I; B ¨ 0 u 1 U ¸; G ¨ 0 ¸ , they can be written
¨ p¸ ¨0 U c2 u ¸¹ ¨ 0¸
© ¹ © © ¹
in vector form [5.7]:
wF wF
A B G
wt wx
wF GF
(B O I ) [5.14]
wx Gt
uO U 0
Q 0 uO 1 U u O u O c u O c 0 [5.15]
0 Uc 2 u O
L1 u O
t
§ ·
LBOI ¨
L
¨ 1 U L 2 u O L3 U c 2¸
¸ 0 [5.16]
¨ L U L u O ¸
© 2 3 ¹
L.G F 0 [5.17]
§G U ·
LG F c 2 ¨
0 1 ¨G u
¸
¸ G p c 2G U 0 [5.18]
¨G p ¸
© ¹
¬
t
B L1c
2
L2 B L3c ®
We thus obtain:
§G U · §G U ·
¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
L¨ G u ¸ 0 r U c 1¨ G u ¸ G p r U cG u 0 [5.19]
¨G p ¸ ¨G p ¸
© ¹ © ¹
NOTES –
1) Relation [5.16] for each of the roots Ocan be written in Lagrangian variables.
By means of linear combinations using initial system [5.13] of the equations of
motion describing the flow of a compressible perfect fluid, we can easily obtain the
system of equations:
dp dU d w w
c2 0 u
dt dt dt wt wx
Dp Du D w w d w
Uc 0 with : u c c [5.20]
Dt Dt Dt wt wx dt wx
~ ~ ~
Dp Du D w w d w
~ U c ~ 0 with : ~ u c c
Dt Dt Dt wt wx dt wx
This system is the expression in Eulerian variables of relations [5.18] and [5.19].
We furthermore obtain the directions of characteristic curves from the preceding
expression of derivatives in relations [5.20] [YIH 77, p.211].
2) The case of an incompressible fluid wu wx 0 can be obtained by letting the
speed of sound tend to infinity. The eigenvalues of the acoustic propagation
disappear, and only the eigenvalue G x G t u exists with the characteristic variable
GU G t 0 . The reader can verify that this result can be obtained from [5.13].
wu wv wu wu wp wv wv wp
0; U u Uv 0; U u Uv 0 [5.21]
wx wy wx wy wx wx wy wy
wF wF
and can be put in the form [5.7] ( A B G ) with:
wx wy
§ 1 0 0· §u· § 0 1 0· § 0·
¨ ¸ ¨ ¸ ¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
A ¨Uu 0 1¸ ; F ¨ v ¸; B ¨U v 0 0 ¸; G ¨ 0¸ [5.22]
¨ 0 U u 0 ¸¹ ¨ p¸ ¨ 0 U v 1 ¸¹ ¨ 0¸
© © ¹ © © ¹
Following the steps outlined in section 5.3.1 leads to the vector equation:
Transport and Propagation 213
§ G y · wF GF
¨B A ¸¸ A [5.23]
¨ G Gx
© x ¹ wx
O 1 0
Q U v O u 0 O
U uO v O 2 1 0 [5.24]
0 U v O u 1
t
§ v u 1 0 · § L1v u ·
§ v· ¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
L¨¨ B A ¸¸ L1 L2 L3 ¨ 0 0 v u¸ ¨ L1 ¸ 0
© u¹ ¨ 0 ¨ L v u L ¸
© 0 1 ¸¹ © 2 3¹
hence: L L1 L2 L3 0 1 v / u .
§ 1 0 0 ·§ G u ·
¨ ¸¨ ¸
LAG F 0 1 v u ¨ U u 0 1 ¸¨ G v ¸ U uG u U vG v G p 0 [5.25]
¨ 0
© U u 0 ¸¹¨© G p ¸¹
wU wU wu wv wu wu wp
u v U U 0; Uu Uv 0;
wx wy wx wy wx wy wx
[5.26]
wv wv wp wp wp wu wv
Uu Uv 0. u v U c2 U c2 0
wx wy wy wx wy wx wy
§ w w ·
¨A B ¸F 0
¨ wx wy ¸¹
©
¬ u 0 0 ¬ v 0 0¬
u 0 0 1 0 0 0
; B
u v
with: F ; A .
v 0 0 u 0 0 0 v 1
p 0 c 2 2
® 0 u® 0 0 c v®
v Ou UO U 0
Gy 0 U v O u 0 O
Q B A 0
Gx 0 0 U v O u 1
0 O U c2 U c2 v Ou
or:
>
U 2 v O u 2 O 2 u 2 c 2 2O uv v 2 c 2 @ 0 [5.27]
It has the same real root O v u as for the incompressible fluid, but here it is a
double root.
The two other roots satisfy a second degree equation whose discriminant can be
written:
'' >
c2 u2 v2 c2 t 0 @ if V2 u2 v2 t c2 [5.28]
These are real only if the flow is supersonic (V > c). If the flow is subsonic, the
roots and the characteristic curves are imaginary, as in the case of the
incompressible fluid. The values of the slopes of the characteristic curves are:
Transport and Propagation 215
G y uv r c 2 [(u 2 v 2 ) c 2 ]
O [5.29]
Gx u2 c2
G
The velocity V is the bisectorGof the characteristic curves; in effect, taking the
axis Ox parallel to the velocity V (i.e. v = 0), slopes [5.29] of the characteristic
curves in the plane (x,y) are opposed:
Gy c2 1
O r r
Gx u2 c2 M 2 1
where M V c designates the local Mach number defined using the local sound
speed c.
The reader can easily verify that the characteristic curves lie at an angle T with
respect to the velocity vector (or the trajectory) defined by: sin T 1 M (we have
O tan T ); these curves are thus called Mach lines.
§ v ·
¨0 U U 0 ¸
¨ u ¸
§ v· ¨ v¸
L¨¨ B A ¸¸ L1 L2 L3 L4 ¨ 0 0 0 ¸ 0
¨ u¸
© u¹
¨0 0 0 1 ¸
¨0 v U c2 U c2 0 ¸¸
¨
© u ¹
or:
v v v
U L1 L4 U c 2 0; U L1 L4 U c 2 0; L2 L3 0.
u u u
From this we can calculate L3 and L4 as a function of the two arbitrary values of
L1 and L2:
v
L1 L4 c 2 0 L2 L3 0
u
216 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
§ Gp ·
L1u ¨ G U ¸ L U u G u U vG v G p 0
¨ ¸ 2
© U c2 ¹
As this equation is satisfied regardless of the values of L1 and L2, we have the
two relations:
§ ·
¨G U G p ¸ 0; U u G u U vG v G p 0
¨ U c2 ¸
© ¹
wf A (i, A 1,..., n ; § wF ·
Ai jA gi 0 ¨¨ A G 0 ¸¸ [5.30]
wx j j 1,...; p) © wx ¹
We will now solve the Cauchy problem, in other words we will calculate the
variation G F of the function F in the neighborhood of a point M of a hypersurface
S0 of dimension p – 1 on which the values of F are given. This results in our
knowing p – 1 independent derivatives of the function F calculated following the
surface directions. The derivative of the vector function F following a transverse
direction S0 is not given, but it can be calculated from system [5.30].
wx j
The Wronskian (functional determinant) is assumed non-zero such that
w[ k
we can also write:
Transport and Propagation 217
[k
[k x j j, k 1,..., p
This gives the following relationships between the partial derivatives of F with
respect to the two sets of variables:
wf A wf A w[ k (A 1,..., n ; § wF wF w[ ·
¨ . ¸ [5.31]
wx j w[ k wx j j , k 1,... p ) ¨ wx w[ wx ¸¹
©
wf A w[ k i, A 1,..., n ; § wF w[ ·
gi ¨A 0 ¸¸
AijA
w[ k wx j
0
j , k 1,... p ¨ w[ . wx G [5.32]
© ¹
We will choose the coordinates [k (k 2,3,..., p ) such that they describe the
surface (curvilinear coordinates on S0 (Figure 5.2)). The curve of coordinate [1
crosses the surface S0 whose equation is [1 [1 [ 2 ,...[ p
0 . The derivatives
sfA sk are known from the functions fA on the surface S0.
x 3
[1 S
[3 0
[
O
x 2
x 1
where the function \ i is known from the derivatives which are already given
wf A w[ k k z 1 .
~
If the determinant of the matrix A is non-zero, system [5.33] with unknowns
wf A w[1 is of rank n and the n derivatives wf A w[1 can be uniquely determined.
The Cauchy problem thus possesses a unique solution.
~
If, on the other hand, we have A 0 , system [5.33] is of rank n – 1 and the
determination of the n unknown derivatives wf A w[1 is no longer possible.
~
Equation A
0 is a partial differential equation for the scalar function [1 x j
of p variables:
~ w[1
A AijA 0 [5.34]
wx j
We thus have a problem such as that described in section 5.2.4. The vector
w[1 wx j associated with the point M and satisfying equation [5.34] belongs to a
hypersurface (the cone C with summit M) of dimension p – 1 of the geometric space
(x1,…, xp). At the point M, this vector is the direction of the surface normal S0 of the
equation [1= 0; the tangent plane is normal to it, and the surface S0 is surrounded by
tangent planes whose normals belong to the cone C. This surface S0 is itself a cone
of summit M to which the characteristic curves passing through M are tangent.
~
As before, in the case A 0 , there exists a non-zero vector L such that
w[1
Li AijA 0 . Equation [5.33] thus results in a linear relation between the partial
wx j
derivatives wf i w[ k k z 1 :
ª § wf · º
Li «<i ¨ A ,..¸ g i » 0 i, A 1,..., n ; k 2,... p
«¬ ¨© w[ k ¸¹ »¼
The same reasoning can be applied for an nth order quasi-linear partial
differential equation with p variables, or for a system of such equations. For
Transport and Propagation 219
example, consider the quasi-linear second order equation whose coefficients and the
right-hand side term g depend on the function f, on its first derivatives and on the
variables xi:
w2 f
Aij g ( i,j 1,....,p ) [5.35]
wx i wx j
Suppose now that the values of the function f and of its first derivatives are given
at all points M of a hypersurface S0 of dimension p – 1. The values of the second
derivatives taken on this surface are known. We can perform the change of
coordinates described in section 5.3.3, such that the second derivatives of the
function are known on the surface S0 of equation [1 [1 [ 2 ,...[ p
0 in the
reference frame [ i . The change of variables [5.31] allows the terms of equation
[5.35] to be written in the form:
s 2f s 2 f sk sm
...(i, j 1,..., p )
sxi sxj sk sm sxj sxi
where the function \ is a function of f, of its first derivatives and of its second
w2 f
derivatives k z 1 , which are known from the initial data given at all
w[ i w[ k
w[1 w[1
Aij Aij D i D j 0; (i, j 1,..., p ) [5.37]
wx i wx j
The left-hand side of equation [5.37] is a quadratic form which represents the
equation of a second degree cone comprising the normals to the characteristic
surfaces. If it is imaginary, we have an elliptic equation. If on the other hand it is
real, the equation is hyperbolic. The preceding equation, which is easy to write,
allows us to reduce our study of the type of a differential equation to the
identification of the nature of a quadratic form. Instead of searching for the principal
directions and performing an orthogonal change of reference frame, we can follow
the simpler procedure of directly identifying a reduced form for this quadratic form.
We will look at some applications in the next section.
The compatibility relation of equation [5.36] can be written for the solutions of
[5.37]:
§ wf w2 f · (i, j 1,..., p )
\¨ f, , ,.. ¸ g 0
¨ w[ i w[ i w[ k ¸¹ (k 2,..., p )
©
5.3.5. Applications
w[1 w[1
AiA BiA 0 i, A 1,..., n [5.38]
wt wx
Gx
B iA AiA 0
Gt
d su sv du sp
0; 0
dt sx sy dt sx
dv sp d dp
0; c 2 0 [5.39]
dt sy dt dt
d s s s
with: u v
dt st sx sy
or in matrix form:
§d w w ·
¨ U U 0 ¸
¨ dt wx wy ¸
¨ d w ¸ §¨ U ·¸
¨0 U 0 ¸
¨ dt wx ¸ ¨ u ¸ 0
¨0 d w ¸¨v ¸
0 U ¨ ¸
¨ dt wy ¸ ¨© p ¸¹
¨ ¸
¨ 0 2 w 2 w d ¸
Uc Uc
¨
© wx wy dt ¸¹
wf i wf i w[1 wf w[ k
i i 1,..,4; k 2,3
wx j w[1 wx j w[ k wx j
wf i
Separating the unknown derivatives we have:
w[1
wf i
This system of equations does not have a unique solution if its determinant
w[1
is zero:
The characteristic equation can be decomposed into two first order partial
differential equations:
d[1
1) A quasi-linear equation 0 whose solution we have already studied in
dt
section 5.2.2. We have seen that the characteristic curves are the trajectories, the
corresponding characteristic surfaces being defined from these.
2) The partial differential equation:
2 2 2
§ 1 d[ 1 · § w[ · § w[ ·
¨¨ ¸¸ ¨¨ 1 ¸¸ ¨¨ 1 ¸¸ 0
© c dt ¹ © wy ¹ © wx ¹
Transport and Propagation 223
which can be easily interpreted by taking a reference frame for which velocity (u, v)
of a point M is zero at time t (this reference frame has the speed of the matter of
point M at the considered instant). In this last frame the previous substantial
d[1 w[1
derivative is equal to , so that the previous equation relation
dt M , t wt M , t
between derivatives of function [1 is written:
2 2 2
§ w[ · § · § ·
1 ¨ 1 ¸ ¨ w[1 ¸ ¨ w[1 ¸ 0
¨¨ wy ¸¸
c ( M , t ) ¨© wt
2 ¸
M ,t ¹
¨ wx
©
¸
M ,t ¹ © M ,t ¹
ª w[ w[ w[ º
showing that the vector « 1 , 1 , 1 » is located on the revolving
« wt M , t wx M , t wy »
¬ M ,t ¼
cone of summit M, of axis Ot and whose equation is:
1
2
t t M 2 x x M 2 y y M 2 0
c (M , t )
The tangent planes at point M to the characteristic surfaces are normal to the
ª w[ w[ w[ º
vector « 1 , 1 , 1 » , which makes an angle Arc tan[1 c( M , t )]
« wt M , t wx M , t wy »
¬ M , t ¼
with the axis Ot. They envelope the complementary cone of revolution whose angle
with axis Ot is equal to Arc tan[c (M , t)] and whose equation is:
c 2 ( M , t )t t M 2 x x M 2 y y M 2 0
The partial differential equations of fluid dynamics and transfer are balance
equations; we have now outlined the essential ideas which govern the manner in
which material quantities are displaced on the characteristic curves either by
convection (transport of material quantities by fluid particles) or by propagation.
224 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The latter mode results from the exchange of extensive quantities between fluid
particles, from one to the next and so on. It can be simply interpreted.
m k m k m k m k m
x
xn-1 [n-1 xn [n xn+1 [
n+1
m[n k 2[ n [ n 1 [ n 1 0 [5.40]
w 2[ [ n 1 [ n 1 2[ n
2
wx 'x 2
1 w 2[ w 2[
0
c 2 wt 2 wx 2
The propagation of waves results from interactions between the mass of the
medium and its compressibility (or what is equivalent, its elasticity). In the
continuous compressible medium, the mass and the elasticity are uniformly
distributed.
3 The reader can verify that stiffness per unit length is k'x and mass per unit length is m/'x,
so that by identifying the mass and the stiffness with corresponding properties of gas pressure
and specific mass), we obtain the value of the sound velocity c wp wU S .
Transport and Propagation 225
We can thus often obtain a quasi-linear second order partial differential equation
(i.e. linear with respect to the second derivatives) for one of the quantities of the
problem by using a system of first order partial differential equations.
For example, let us assume for the sake of simplicity that the density and
velocity variations are small enough for the linearization of equations [5.13] to be
possible in a constant entropy medium:
wU wu wu wp
U 0; U 0
wt wx wt wx
w2 p 1 w2 p
0
wx 2 c 2 wt 2
Consider the quasi-linear second order partial differential equation with two
variables:
Ar 2 B s C t D [5.41]
226 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The coefficients A, B, C and D are functions of the unknown function f and of its
first derivatives p and q:
A A f , p, q, x, y ; B B f , p, q, x, y ;
C C f , p, q, x, y ; D D f , p, q, x, y .
§ A 2 B C ·§ r · § D ·
¨ ¸¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
¨ G x G y 0 ¸¨ s ¸ ¨G p ¸ [5.43]
¨ 0 G x G y ¸¨ t ¸ ¨G q ¸
© ¹© ¹ © ¹
A 2B C
x y 0 0 or: C x 2 2B x y A y 2 0 [5.44]
0 x y
4 In order to simplify the writing in section 4.6 and in any other case when it will be useful,
partial derivatives w/wx, w/wz will be written fx, fz,, a notation that does not allow any mistake
in mathematical calculations.
Transport and Propagation 227
Gy B r B 2 AC
The directions , solutions of the preceding equation, are
Gx A
the characteristic directions tangent at each point to the characteristic curves:
In the hyperbolic case, the determination of (r, s, t), which is non-unique on the
characteristic curves, is only possible if the system of equations [5.42] is of rank 2.
There then exists a relation between D, Gp and Gq which can be obtained, as
outlined in the preceding sections, by searching for a vector L which is a left
solution of the system LM 0 , where M is the system matrix [5.43] without the
right-hand side. We find:
L G xG y, AG y,CG x
By multiplying the left-hand side of system [5.43] by L we obtain the following
relation for each of the solutions G y G x i of characteristic equation [5.44]:
§G y · §G q · § G y · §G p ·
D¨ ¸ C¨ ¸ A¨ ¸ ¨ ¸ 0 i 1,2. [5.45]
¨G x¸ ¨Gx¸ ¨G x ¸ ¨Gx ¸
© ¹i © ¹i © ¹i © ¹i
Relations [5.45] allow the function f and its derivatives (p, q) to be calculated
from place to place in the following manner. Consider the subdivision ABDEF of an
arc of the curve C0 and trace at each of the points the two families of characteristics
*1 and *2 of slope G y G x i , (i=1, 2). The different families of characteristics
obtained from A and B intersect at G (Figure 5.4). We obtain relation [5.45] on each
of the arcs AG and BG, which allows the values of pG and qG to be calculated as a
function of their values on the curve C0 at A and B. Assuming the arcs to be
sufficiently small, these relationships can be written:
228 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
§G y · §G y ·
D¨ ¸ xG x A C qG q A A ¨ ¸ pG p A 0
¨Gx¸ ¨Gx¸
© ¹1 © ¹1
§G y · §G y ·
D¨ ¸ xG x B C qG q B A ¨ ¸ pG p B 0
¨G x¸ ¨G x¸
© ¹2 © ¹2
§G y · §G y ·
the elementary arcs AG and BG having respective slopes ¨ ¸ and ¨ ¸ .
¨G x¸ ¨G x¸
© ¹1 © ¹2
Characteristics *1
M
F J
y E I
D H
B Characteristics *2
x G
A
C0 (a)
G f fG f A p A x G x A q A y G y A .
The values f, p and q of the solution of the partial differential equation can thus
be determined from place to place by the preceding procedure at any point within
the curvilinear triangle AFM, which is delimited by the arc AF and the arcs AM and
FM of the characteristic curves: in effect, it suffices for this point to be attained by
progressing along the two families of characteristic curves starting from the initial
arc AF. The inner domain of the curvilinear triangle AFM is called the influence
domain of the arc AF of the initial curve C0.
new relation on the characteristic curves comprising the axis Ox. We will return to
discuss the parabolic equation in section 5.4.5.4.
In summary, the solution of the Cauchy problem is always possible for an elliptic
equation regardless of the choice of initial data. On the other hand, the existence of
real characteristic curves or surfaces implies a propagation of function values along
these curves.
5.4.3. Reduced form of the second order quasi-linear partial differential equation
transforms equation [5.41] into another equation of the same kind. Showing
explicitly only those terms containing second order partial derivatives, we have:
fx F[ M x FK\ x ; fy F[ M x FK\ y
f xx F[[ M x2 2 F[K M x\ x FKK\ x2 ...
f xy
F[[ M xM y F[K M x\ y M y\ x FKK\ x\ y .....
f yy F[[ M y2 2 F[K M y\ y FKK\ 2y .....
230 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
[5.47]
A!x 2 2B!x !y C!y 2
A#x 2 2B#x #y C#y 2
DJ E 2 AC B M \
2
x y
M y\ x 2
which shows that the discriminant of the quadratic form retains the same sign after
the coordinates change.
Mx
M . B\ x C\ y My
M . A\ x B\ y [5.48]
D
M 2 AC B 2 A\ x2 2 B\ x\ y C\ y2
M 2 AC B 2 J [5.49]
– Hyperbolic case: AC B 2 0 .
Letting M 2 AC B 2
1 , we have D J . The reduced form of the
equation [5.41] can be written in the form of a wave equation:
§G y · Mx §G y · \x
¨ ¸ ; ¨ ¸ .
¨G x¸ My ¨G x¸ \y
© ¹1 © ¹2
D J C M y2 2 BM xM y A M x2 A\ x2 2 B\ x\ y C\ y2 0
§ B 2 ·¸
E
AM x\ x B M x\ y M y\ x CM y\ y 2M y\ y ¨ C
¨
© A ¸¹
F[K D'
where D' is a function of coordinates, and of the values of F, and of its first
derivatives.
–Parabolic case: AC B 2 0 .
We take M such that M x O1M y 0 to obtain D = 0; it follows that E = 0; and
the normal form of the parabolic equation is then:
F ... D
NOTE – As pointed out (section 5.4.1), we have verified that second order partial
differential equations no longer have characteristic curves which represent
trajectories, even though they do represent flows.
232 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Our discussion of the Cauchy problem shows us that the simultaneous presence
in a flow of subsonic and supersonic zones leads to very different modes of
transmitting information and to certain contradictions; this results in important
difficulties regarding the boundary conditions which must be imposed, which are
different in the two cases (section 5.4.5). This situation often leads to the presence of
shock waves. We will consider a simple example by studying the flow of a
compressible fluid in a nozzle (section 5.5.4).
w2 f w2 f
0
wx 2 wy 2
Constant coefficients hyperbolic equations with no right-hand side take the form
of the wave equation:
w2 f w2 f
0
wx 2 wy 2
in which the y variable is often the time. The characteristic curves are the straight
lines [ y x constant and K y x constant By performing the change of
variables x, y o [ , K , the equation can be written:
w2 f
0
w[ wK
Its general solution can be written using two arbitrary functions ) and <:
f [ , K ) [ < K )x y < x y
w2 f wf
0
2 wy
wx
5.4.5. Second order partial differential equations and their boundary conditions
5.4.5.1. Introduction
As physical problems do not usually occur in the form of a Cauchy problem, on
account of the presence of boundaries (walls or other surfaces) surrounding more or
less completely the fluid domain under study, and on which we must impose specific
234 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Problems involving heat conduction in a steady flow regime have already been
discussed in section 2.3.2. Steady subsonic flow of an inviscid fluid about an
obstacle is a Neumann problem (Chapter 6).
Elliptic problems cannot deal with propagative phenomena; they can generally
only represent steady phenomena or unsteady situations where propagation plays a
negligible role (domains which are small compared with a wavelength for example).
We will come back to discuss this point on numerous occasions.
div O gradT VT
³C O
wT
wn
dA
G
³C O gradT .n dA
³D div O gradT ds ³D V T ds
This expresses the global conservation of energy, where the thermal flux
crossing the curve C must be equal to the thermal power generated in D under
steady conditions.
Transport and Propagation 235
t y C1
M B
M
D
D C2
x A x
A B
(a) (b)
The boundary conditions associated with the wave equation can often be
considered as initial conditions. However, the direction of travel of the characteristic
236 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
curves is not important for a wave equation which is invariant if the time direction is
changed (section 1.1.1.3). Figure 5.5a shows an example of initial data for an
acoustic problem (given at time t = 0), while Figure 5.5b corresponds to velocity
data given for a supersonic steady flow in the plane (x,y) (which can be reduced
under certain particular conditions to a wave equation).
w2 f wf
[5.50]
2 wt
wx
xz0 t 0 f x ,0 0
[5.51]
x 0 t!0 f (0, t ) 1
5 The word “shock” is relative here to an initial condition and not to a discontinuity appearing
in the solution.
6 We have here a self-similar solution, i.e. which is invariant with respect to a group of affine
transformations. Flow equations, which are exact or approximate for high Reynolds numbers,
can have such solutions ([SCH 99], [YIH 77]).
Transport and Propagation 237
f ' K A exp K 2
Taking account of boundary conditions [5.51] leads to:
2 d 2
f (x, t)
¨ x 2 t
exp (-u ) du 1 erf ( x 2 t ) [5.52]
2 x 2
with: erf x
¨ 0
exp (-u ) du (erfd 1) .
Figure 5.6 shows the temperature diffusion imposed at the origin, whose
influence can be felt in a zone, whose width, in the order of X, is proportional to t1/2
(curves 1 to 4 for different increasing times). The dimensional presentation of the
problem will be treated in section 8.3.2.2.2.
1 2 3 4
0 x
0
Figure 5.6. Influence zone of a unit step function (of temperature) imposed at the origin
We thus see that the behavior of the parabolic differential equation lies
somewhere between that of the hyperbolic and elliptic equations:
– the double characteristic curve is a preferred axis for the transmission of
information;
– the form of solution [5.52] shows an instantaneous action at all points of the
axis Ox: the notion of propagation has completely disappeared;
– we have “diffusion” (transverse spreading) of the initial data about the
characteristic curve.
238 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The same initial boundary conditions applied to the wave equation would lead to
an acceptable solution for negative values of y, which is not the case here: the heat
equation describes an irreversible phenomenon, in other words the impossibility of
reversing the time direction (section 1.1.1.3).
w2 f w2 f w2 f
A 2B C D
wx 2 wxwy wy 2
can be either elliptic, hyperbolic or parabolic. The nature of the solution depends
therefore on the local coefficients value. The simplest example of a mixed equation
is the Tricomi equation:
w2 f w2 f
x 0
wx 2 wy 2
For negative values of x this equation is elliptic, while for positive values, it is
hyperbolic. It is a summary model of the situation described in section 5.3.2.3,
where, in a subsonic flow, the problem is elliptic, while a supersonic flow has a
hyperbolic character. The passage from a subsonic flow to a supersonic flow
happens in a transonic range, which may be locally represented by a Tricomi
equation (the passage from the reduced form of the elliptic equation to the reduced
form of the hyperbolic equation assumes that a coefficient changes sign when going
to zero):
y
elliptic hyperbolic
zone zone
O x
C0
Consider a flow such that it is subsonic for negative values of x and supersonic
for positive values. We assumed that the speed of sound is attained by the flow
Transport and Propagation 239
Note that the coefficients of partial differential equation [5.42] are not only a
function of the coordinates, but also of the unknown function and its first
derivatives. Contrary to the Tricomi equation, the nature of the equation and the
(associated) boundary conditions that must be associated are not easily predictable
in general, as they depend on the solution values.
The presence of shock waves may feature in the varied conditions of supersonic
flows of compressible fluids. We will show, using examples, that the existence of
characteristic curves or surfaces and the nature of the solutions to the hyperbolic
equations lead to the possibility of discontinuities.
We will first of all study two examples (1D flow of an inviscid compressible
fluid and steady supersonic flow) for which a discussion of the characteristic curves
leads to the impossibility of a continuous flow. We will then consider a steady 1D
flow of an inviscid fluid in a nozzle which is governed by a differential equation
which again shows the necessity of shocks.
J 1 J J 1 2J
p ( x, t ) p0 § p · § p ·
const; c J p U J ¨ ¸ c0 ¨ ¸
U J ( x, t ) U 0 ¨© p 0 ¸¹ ¨p ¸
© 0¹
240 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
in which (p0 , U0) are the initial conditions of the fluid for a zero velocity.
pT p R U R c R uT u R 0; pT p S U S c S u T u S 0
These relations can be used for calculation of the values (pT, uT) for pressure and
velocity at point T. At first order, we can take U R c R U S c S U c , so that we have:
1 1 ¡ 1 ¯
pT pR pS c uS uR
¯± uT uR uS pS pR
°
2¢ 2¢ ¡ c °
±
We can then deduce from thermodynamic relations with constant entropy, the
specific mass UT and the sound velocity cT at point T.
Let us consider the case where pressure and velocity take uniform values on the
characteristic curve issued from point R, which having then a constant slope c + u, is
a straight line. If R' is a neighboring point of R on this characteristic curve, at point
T and at the intersection T' of characteristic curves issued from R' and S, we have:
pT p R U cu T u R 0;
pT ' p R ' U c u T ' u R ' 0.
Taking out the first relation from the second relation, we obtain the relation on
characteristic curve of slope c + u: between points T and T':
pT ' pT U c u T ' u T 0
So, between points T and T' we obtain the relation on characteristic curve of
slope c + u:
pT ' p T U c u T ' u T 0
pT ' pT
U c uT ' uT 0
which shows that pressure, velocity and sound velocity values are the same at points
T and T'. Going on from place to place on characteristic curve of slope cS + uS
issued from S, we see that the flow properties are identical along this curve, which is
also a straight line. The corresponding flow (a simple progressive wave) is then
characterized by the propagation along axis Ox with velocity cS + uS of pressure 'p
and velocity 'u variations between the two characteristic curves going through R
and S. These variations verify the relation:
'p U c 'u
x x = c0t + OA uF
t
F R'
E R T' uC
D T
S t
C I
B H M
K uO
A G
N t t
O P Q
Characteristic curves
(a) (b)
Figure 5.8. (a) Application of the characteristics method and evolution of the
characteristic straight lines for a decreasing pressure (or a negative velocity);
(b) evolution of the velocity at the points O, C and F
Now consider the domain formed by the first quadrant of the plane (x, t) with the
following boundary conditions:
t 0:x ! 0 p x ,0 p0 u x ,0 0
t t 0:x 0 p0, t Pt u 0, t U t
242 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The domain thus defined is the influence domain of the given conditions on the
positive sides of the axes Ox and Ot. The positive side of the axis Ox is at rest at the
initial instant and we apply pressure and velocity variations at the origin x = 0, as a
function of time, which will then propagate on the Ox axis.
However, the initial state, being uniform and at rest, can be considered as a
regime of simple progressive waves. Indeed, by applying previous relations on
characteristic curves issued from points A, B, C, D, E, etc., we see that the initial
rest data are transmitted to points H, I, etc., on the straight lines issued from
previous points on all parts of the plane above the straight line x = ct + OA.
Previous results show that propagation can only proceed with simple waves for
increasing times. It can be verified that the values (pO, uO) at point O are also
obtained from place to place for all points of the characteristic curve x =cO t issued
from O, on which the fluid state is uniform. Calculation is then carried out at points
P, Q, etc., of axis Ot, and it can be seen that we have a flow with simple progressive
waves, propagating on the characteristic straight lines of a positive slope.
When the pressure and velocity variations are negative and decreasing
(expansion), the slope of the characteristic lines is a decreasing function of time
(Figure 5.8a). These divergent straight lines thus form the shape of a fan, which
involves a broadening of the wave front as it propagates; Figure 5.8b shows the form
of the temporal velocity variation at the origin O, and then at points C and F.
Transport and Propagation 243
On the other hand, when the pressure and velocity variations are positive and
increasing (compression), the slope of the characteristic lines is an increasing
function of time (Figure 5.9a). They thus form a beam of straight lines which tighten
and finally intersect. This situation leads to a compression of the wave front as it
propagates, which eventually leads to a discontinuity. Indeed, we note in this last
case that it is impossible (equation [5.44]) to have more than one characteristic curve
of each family at a given point. The result of this is that a continuous solution cannot
exist everywhere in the influence domain of the boundary conditions which are
specified. A discontinuity thus appears (a shock wave) downstream of which the
calculation of the solution can only be achieved using the conditions which result
from the shock wave. Figure 5.9b shows the form of temporal variation at the origin
O, and then at points C and F.
We have already studied this flow in section 5.3.2.3, and so we will limit
ourselves here to a qualitative discussion. Consider a uniform homentropic flow next
to a wall in a semi-infinite medium (Figure 5.10).
Bernoulli’s first theorem is valid everywhere in the flow, as are the Saint-Venant
and Hugoniot relations (section 4.3.2.3). The characteristic curves form an angle D
with the streamlines, defined by sin D r 1 M .
If the wall is convex (Figure 5.10a), the streamlines spread and the density
G
decreases while the velocity V increases (supersonic expansion, section 4.3.2.3.4).
The velocity (direction and modulus) propagates from the wall along the
characteristic of a positive slope, and which is the only characteristic of consequence
here (straight line CA, CB,… … from A, B, etc.); the Mach number thus increases
and the angle D decreases in the downstream direction. Similar to the previous
example, we see divergent characteristics straight lines.
Assuming that the quantities associated with the gas are constant in a normal
section, the Saint-Venant relation (section 4.3.2.3.3) provides an expression for the
velocity as a pressure function using the generation conditions (initial conditions at
zero velocity in the upstream domain) and in particular the velocity VE in the exit
section SE. The isentropic transformation relation ( p p const ) determines the
y
density UE in the exit plane. From this we can deduce the mass flow q m U EVE S E
in the nozzle.
However, we have shown (section 4.3.2.3.4) that a stream tube resulting from a
given set of generation conditions has a maximum flow rate q m max U cVc S c
which occurs when the speed of sound c is attained in the smallest cross-section. We
are thus faced with the following alternative:
– either the flow rate qm evaluated at the exit plane is less than or equal to qm max
and we can calculate the continuous flow in the nozzle;
– or the flow rate qm evaluated at the exit plane is greater than qm max and the
problem thus posed does not have a solution.
In the first case, the Hugoniot relation [4.39] in its differential form (section
4.3.2.3.4) shows that the velocity increases in the convergent part of the nozzle up to
a value which is at most equal to the speed of sound c* at the throat, and which then
decreases such that its value at the exit plane VE is that previously predicted. The
flow is then everywhere subsonic (V < c). Figure 5.11 shows the pressure variations
(contrary to the velocity variations) in the nozzle for regimes 1, 2 and 3 which are
entirely subsonic. For pressures pE1 and pE2, the velocity at the throat Vmax is less
than the speed of sound, while for the pressure at the exit pE3 the throat velocity is
equal to the speed of sound c*.
246 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
upstream downstream:
p = pA p = pE
Vmax or c* SE VE
jet
Vc
p
pE
pA pE1
nozzle throat 1 pE2
pE3 subsonic
2 pE4
3 pE5 turbulent jet
p* 4
5 pE6
6
pE7
supersonic jet
shock waves 7 pE sup
x
In the second case, the flow in the convergent part of the nozzle is subsonic, then
it becomes supersonic after passing through the throat where the velocity magnitude
is equal to the speed of sound c* and the critical conditions (p* and U*) are attained.
However the continuous supersonic solution, calculated using the Saint-Venant
relation in the exit plane using the generation conditions, is unique. It provides the
value pEsup for the exit pressure, which is not equal to the exit pressure imposed pE.
However, the supersonic flow in the nozzle must match the exit conditions. This
adaptation is achieved by means of a shock wave. So long as the shock wave
remains within the nozzle, it is plane (from pE3 to pE7 in Figure 5.11). For lower
pressures (pE sup < pE3 < pE7) we have a more or less complex system of shock
waves in the jet (under-expanded jet). For pE less that pE sup, the adaptation is
achieved by means of expansion waves (over-expanded jet).
The idea of characteristic curves and of propagation do not hold for the
differential equation of the 1D model nozzle. We note only the non-existence of a
continuous solution which verifies the boundary conditions at the exit. In fact, the
flow in the nozzle is governed by the models outlined in section 5.3.2.3:
– for the subsonic part of the flow, the system of partial differential equations is
elliptic and the flow is determined by the boundary conditions on all boundaries. Its
solution assumes Neumann conditions which are here known in the upstream region,
Transport and Propagation 247
on the walls and in the exit section of the subsonic flow: depending on the regime,
this is either at the nozzle exit or at the throat;
– from the throat of nozzle in the sonic regime, and up to the shock, the subsonic
flow is governed by the 2D plane mode discussed in section 5.3.2.3, the fluid being
assumed to be isentropic. The supersonic zone of flow belongs to the influence
domain of the “upstream” conditions (section 5.4.5.3) which are here situated at the
sonic throat. An exit condition cannot influence the supersonic flow, as the
information cannot move upstream due to the characteristic curves which all have
slopes r ( M 2 1) 1 2 . In these conditions no continuous supersonic solution can
account for the conditions at the exit.
The shock wave is a boundary between two spaces which cannot communicate
completely, the upstream space not being able to receive information regarding the
pressure at the exit. However, matter crosses the shock wave and the balance
equations for the extensive quantities must be satisfied through the shock.
shock wave
Similar to the case of the nozzle, the adaptation of the supersonic flow to
downstream conditions occurs by means of the shock wave.
Other domains of fluid mechanics also involve hyperbolic equations. Such is the
case for flows including a free surface (see section 6.2.6) in which we observe the
propagation of surface waves (swell in the sea) and flows of stratified fluids (vertical
distribution of density) which present similar properties. We encounter analogous
Transport and Propagation 249
p1,U1,T1 1 2 p2,U2,T2
G G
n1
V2
ds G
G V1
D n2
S
We now write the balance equations for the extensive quantities in global form
(section 4.5) in the domain D for the following quantities:
– mass (section 4.5.2):
U1V1n U 2V 2 n [5.53]
p1 U1V12n p 2 U 2V 22n
G G [5.54]
U1V1t V1n U 2V 2t V 2 n
250 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
§ V2 · § V2 ·
U1V1n ¨ h1 1 ¸ U 2V 2 n ¨ h 2 2 ¸ [5.55]
¨
© 2 ¸¹ ¨
© 2 ¸¹
U i1Vi1n U i 2V i 2 n [5.56]
V12 V22
h1 Qr h2 U i1Vi1n Qmi U i 2Vi 2n [5.58]
2 2
where, Qmi and Qr denote the mass of species i and thermal surface power released
by the chemical reaction for the mass flux U1V1n crossing the shock S, the
enthalpies hi being taken as equal to Cpi Ti for perfect gases (“sensible enthalpy”).
Such an iterative procedure presents the advantage of not involving the inversion
of a large matrix.
Transport and Propagation 251
wf wf
u 0 [5.59]
wt wx
The axes Ox and Ot are discretized with step-sizes 'x and 't such that 'x = u.'t.
We will here approximate the derivatives by formulae using the values at two points.
We calculate the partial temporal derivative using the formula:
wf 1
xn , t n > f xn , tn f xn , tn 1 @ [5.60]
wt 't
wf
We approximate the spatial derivative at the point xn by its value at the
wx
wf
instant tn-1, x n , t n 1 such that we have a simple, explicit scheme for the
wx
wf
discussion. Take as an approximation of x n , t n 1 one of the following
wx
schemes, which are apparently locally equivalent:
wf 1
– upwind scheme: x n , t n 1 > f x n , t n 1 f x n 1 , t n 1 @ ;
wx 'x
wf 1
– downwind scheme: xn , tn 1 > f xn1, tn 1 f xn , tn1 @ ;
wx 'x
wf 1
– centered scheme: xn , tn 1 > f xn1, tn 1 f xn1, tn 1 @ .
wx 2'x
Substituting these expressions into [5.59] we can calculate the value of the
function f x n , t n as a function of its values at the instant tn-1 at the points next to
the axis Ox. We obtain for the different schemes:
– upwind scheme: f x n , t n f x n 1 , t n 1 ;
– downwind scheme: f x n , t n 2 f x n , t n 1 f x n 1 , t n 1 ;
252 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
– centered scheme:
1 1
f x n , t n f x n , t n 1 f x n 1 , t n 1 f x n 1 , t n 1 .
2 2
t t t
tn tn tn
x x x
xn-1 xn xn+1 xn-1 xn xn+1 xn-1 xn xn+1
Now, equation [5.59] is hyperbolic and its characteristics are the straight lines
x ut const, which are trajectories of the uniform velocity field u. To simplify
matters, the discretization ('x = u.'t) was chosen such that these straight
characteristics pass through the points of the computation. Let us examine a
particular case of the problem, defined by the boundary conditions which
corresponds to transport at velocity u of a unit step function from the origin in a field
with zero initial values:
t 0, x 0: f (x, 0) 0
[5.61]
t p 0, x 0: f (0, t) 1
Table 5.1 indicates, on each line, the numerical values obtained by means of the
three numerical schemes for the six points on the axis Ox at the six first instants (0,
't, 2't, 3't, etc. from the bottom of the table).
Transport and Propagation 253
Table 5.1. Calculated evolution of the function f x, t for three numerical schemes
The downwind scheme cannot transmit the numerical values in the direction of
the flow. It is contrary to the physical nature of the problem studied. Regardless of
the values specified on the straight line x = 0, we will have a discontinuity between
these and the values of the function f on the neighboring points.
These examples, albeit rather rudimentary, show clearly that it is not simply by
increasing the order of the numerical schemes that we can hope to improve the
results. The material balance can only be assured by ensuring the transfer of
information along the trajectories u – ct = const.
The three families of characteristics defined in section 5.3.2.1 for this system are:
These are shown in Figure 5.15 with their domain of influence: the families C1
and C2 transport their associated characteristic variables from the axis x = 0, whereas
the family C3 leads to the propagation of its characteristic variable G p U cG u 0
at the speed – c + u from the straight line x = A. The characteristic variables are, by
their nature, “input” variables in the region where their associated characteristic
curves enter the domain. Their associated “exit” values at the other extremity of an
interval cannot be given conditions without being in contradiction with the
mathematical structure of the system of equations.
t
C3 C2 B
C1
O x
A
characteristic curve C1: G x uG t 0
characteristic curve C2: G x c u G t 0
characteristic curve C3: G x c u G t 0
We saw earlier how the values of the variables of a problem move along the
characteristic curves. The preceding example shows the difficulties which can be
encountered when we try to correctly write the boundary conditions of a flow
problem which is often posed in an open domain. The physical quantities of the fluid
entering the domain must be given. Even if we assume that there is no propagation
in directions opposed to the trajectories (incompressible or supersonic flow), we still
have to deal with three principle difficulties:
in the region where the fluid enters the domain, the velocity and pressure fields
must satisfy the dynamic equations which are used: this condition, which is satisfied
by a uniform flow, is often difficult to meet for other kinds of flow, even if they are
steady;
256 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
In this chapter we will study some general physical properties of flows which
result from the structure of the balance equations. Transport and propagation
phenomena are always present, even in systems with uniform initial conditions. The
dynamics of fluids and transfers imply coupled phenomena with multiple
interactions. In the simplest cases, non-dimensional parameters can be identified
which characterize the ratio of orders of magnitude between the terms corresponding
to two phenomena, and this ratio is generally small or large with respect to 1. The
dynamics of fluids and transfer is thus the domain of perturbation phenomena which
lead to singular structures.
After examining the vortex properties, we will discuss flow properties associated
with uniform initial conditions which lead to a relative simplification due to the
existence of a potential. The third part of this chapter will deal with the study of
orders of magnitude and perturbation problems. Quasi-1D approximations in pipes
and boundary layers are then discussed. The last part will be dedicated to a short
presentation of unsteady phenomena in flows.
6.1.1.1. Definitions
G 1 G G
These are associated with definition [3.38] of the rotation vector Z ro t V
2
G
given in section 3.3.4. Let us recall that vorticity vector 2Z (section 4.3.3) has
G
obviously the same properties as Z . At a given instant, we call:
258 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The divergence of the rotation vector is clearly zero, and the flux of the vortex
vector across any closed surface is also zero.
G
6.1.1.2. Circulation of the velocity vector V
Let *AB be the circulation of the velocity vector along an arc AB:
G G
* AB ³AB V .dl
In the case where the curve C is closed, the circulation *C is equal to the flux of
the vector rot V across a surface S relying on the contour C (Stokes’ theorem):
G G G G
*C ³C V .dl ³S 2 Z . n ds [6.1]
The circulations īC1 and īC 2 along the two closed curves C1 and C2 situated on
the same tube of rotation which they move around the same number of times are
equal.
In effect, let D be the inner domain of a tube of rotation which is bounded by two
surfaces S1 and S2 whose contours on the rotating tube are, respectively, the closed
curves C1 and C2. The flux of the vortex across the lateral surface of the tube and
across the surface 6which bounds the fluid domain D is zero; the result of this is
G
that by orientating, continuously along the tube, the normals n across the surfaces S1
G
and S2, we have equality of the fluxes of the vector Z across the two surfaces, and
consequently across all sections of the vortex tube. This results in the equality of the
circulations īC1 and īC 2 .
The intensity of a vortex tube is defined by the circulation value of the velocity
vector along a closed curve encircling the tube once counter-clockwise.
The circulation *C can be calculated by following the matter. Using result [3.36]
of section 3.3.3.4 concerning the material derivative of the integral of the flux of the
General Properties of Flows 259
G G
conservative vector field B ( divB 0 ) across the material surface S of fluid in
movement, we can express the material derivative of the circulation *C in the form:
G
d *C
d t
2
d
dt
G G
³S Z . n ds 2 ³S
§w Z
¨
¨wt
G
ro t ZG VG ·¸¸ . nG ds [6.2]
© ¹
G
2Z rot V r G
rot rot A
G G
grad divA ' A
G
' A
G
The components of the vector A in Cartesian coordinates satisfy the Poisson
equation 'Ai 2Z i whose solution is:
1 dv'
Zi x'j
avec : R 2 ¦ x
3
x 'j
2
R x , x
Ai x j ³D ' j
2S j j i 1
G G
1 G r
Vr ³D Z dv
2S r3
which is the formula of Biot and Savart for a magnetic field, where the current
density is equivalent to the vortex, and the velocity corresponds to the magnetic
field. Note that this result, which is purely kinematic, is not related to any
assumption regarding the nature of the fluid or the flow.
G G
1 The vector A is notGdefined in a unique way; we can add any gradient G at A without
changing the values of V r . Thus, we choose this gradient vector so that divA 0 .
260 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
r
V
r0 r
(a) ( b)
Z r02
r d r0 V Z r; r t r0 V
r
The velocity induced outside the vortex tube decays as 1/r, whereas it grows
linearly with r on the inside of the vortex tube (Figure 6.1b).
G G § dZ
dZ wZ G G wZ i wZ i ·¸
.§¨ grad Z ·¸ .V ¨ i uj
dt wt © ¹ ¨ dt wt wx j ¸¹
©
G G
We can write the following identities for the arbitrary vectors A and B [HAR
98]:
G G
rot A B ©
G
¹
G
© ¹
G G
§¨ grad A ·¸ . BG A . divBG §¨ grad BG ·¸ . A BG . divA
General Properties of Flows 261
G
or, in this case ( divZ 0 ):
G G
rot Z V §¨ grad ZG ·¸ .VG ZK . divVG §¨ grad VG ·¸ . ZG
© ¹ © ¹
G G §
div Z
V ¨ grad V ¸ . Z
©
G· G
¹
G
From expression [3.37] for grad V as a function of the tensor H of the strain-
rates and of the anti-symmetric tensor : , we can derive the relation:
G G G
grad V . Z H . Z ; hence:
G G
rot Z V §¨ grad ZG ·¸ .VG ZK . divVG H . ZG
© ¹
G G
G
div Z
V H . Z
G
G Z
We can associate the volume quantity Z with the mass quantity ; taking
U
account of the mass conservation equation (see section 4.2.1.2.1 and formula [4.9])
leads to (Helmholtz):
G G
wZ
G G
div Z
V U
d §Z ·
¨ ¸ [6.4]
wt dt ¨© U ¸¹
Equation [6.5] has the form of a balance equation of a volume vector quantity
(equation [4.3], section 4.1.1.2). It can be interpreted as a balance of the rotation
G
vector Z , considered as a volume density of an extensive quantity (with which we
G
can associate the mass quantity Z U ).
1
grad U grad p grad T grad s
U2
As for the viscous stresses, their role is essential in diffusing the rotation, as we
will see in an example (section 6.1.2.4.1). We should furthermore note that the
creation of a viscous flow (Poiseuille flow, boundary layer, etc.) from a non-viscous
flow is accompanied by the creation of vorticity as a result of the adherence
condition at the wall, which creates a shear flow in the vicinity of the wall (section
3.4.2.5), which is necessarily rotational. For the sake of simplicity, we will not give
detailed expressions of the viscous stresses here.
G
For the case of an incompressible Newtonian fluid ( divV 0 ) with constant
viscosity and specific mass, we have div W
P rot rotV (section 3.4.3.3) and we
obtain the following form of equation:
JG JG JJJ
s $ JJJG JG JJG JJJG d$ JG JGG
rot ( $ V ) v+$ or: %.$ v+$ [6.6]
st dt
General Properties of Flows 263
For an inviscid fluid which is homentropic or with constant specific mass, the
preceding equations are simplified:
G
°
° G wt
wZ
G
rot Z V 0
® wZ G [6.7]
° div
G G
Z
V U
d §Z ·
¨ ¸
G
H .Z
°¯ w t dt ¨© U ¸¹
Let us first of all examine the effect of the first component Z1 of the rotation
vector on itself. The corresponding equation can be written:
d$1
$1.%11 ...
dt
Now consider the source term Z1H 21 in the equation for the component Z2:
d$ 2
$1.% 21 ...
dt
wu1
The strain-rate H 21 amounts to a shearing of the type (section 3.3.4). We
wx 2
therefore see here the creation of the component Z 2 , along the axis Ox2, by the
264 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
x2 Z
Z1 u1
Z1 Z2
x1
Z1
u1 x1 u1
(a) (b)
These properties are true for the three spatial directions; their effect is the
creation and maintenance of the 3D character of rotational flows.
If the fluid is compressible, the second term of material derivative [6.3] contains
G G G
the term Z .divV which translates a reduction of Z proportional to the
G
expansion divV , leaving the angular velocity constant in a material volume. This
term is contained in the first term of vorticity equation [6.5] written with the mass
G
quantity Z U .
§ H 11 H 12 0 ·§ 0 ·
¨ ¸¨ ¸
Z j .H ij ¨ H 21 H 22 0 ¸¨ 0 ¸. 0
¨ 0
© 0 0 ¸¹¨© Z ¸¹
In the 2D case, the rotation vector (or the vortex) satisfies the scalar equation:
d Z
Q 'Z [6.8]
d t
General Properties of Flows 265
For an inviscid fluid, scalar equation [6.8] for the vorticity is an equation
describing the transport of vorticity by the matter:
dZ
0 [6.9]
dt
Let us examine the case of a vortex system of revolution about the axis Oz and
whose velocity field, parallel to the plane Oxy and of zero radial component, has a
tangential component equal to VT (r, t ). The vortex vector field Z r, t , parallel to
Oz, is a function of r and t. Equation [6.8] can be written:
wZ
Q 'Z [6.10]
wt
or, in plane polar coordinates:
wZ Q w § w Z·
¨r ¸ [6.11]
wt r w r ¨© w r ¸¹
The reader can easily verify that equation [6.11] has a class of solutions2 in the
form t n f K where we have introduced the new variable K r 2 4 Q t . The
function f K satisfies a differential equation which depends on the parameter n.
The circulation *r, t of the velocity vector along the circle centered on the
origin and of radius r is equal to the flux of the vector 2Z across this circle:
2 These solutions are “self-similar” like solution [5.52] (see footnote 5 in section 5.4.5.4).
266 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
r § u ·¸
2
r 2 4Q t K
*r , t 2t n ³0 f ¨ 2S rdr 8S Q t n 1 ³0 f v dv 8S Q t n 1 ³0 f v dv
¨ 4Q t ¸
© ¹
const
f f '
Integrating a second time, taking the constant of integration to be zero such that
the circulation remains constant for infinite K, the vorticity tending therefore to zero.
This immediately gives the desired solution:
A A § r2 ·
Z r , t exp K exp¨ A const
t t ¨ 4Q t
© ¹
ª § r 2 ·º
*r , t 8 S A Q «1 exp ¨ ¸»
« ¨ 4 Q t ¸»
¬ © ¹¼
Its value is constant and equal to 8 S A Q for sufficiently large r. The velocity
VT(r,t) can be calculated from the circulation:
*( r , t ) 4Q A ª § r 2 ·º
VT (r , t ) «1 exp ¨ ¸»
2Sr r «¬ ¨ 4 Q t ¸»
© ¹¼
diminishes under the effect of viscosity which has no further real effect for a radius
a little greater than that at which the maximum is located.
Z V Z
t t
G
V
r r r
(a) (b) (c)
Figure 6.3. (a) Vorticity zone, (b) diffusion of the velocity and (c) of the vorticity
For a fixed radius r, when t increases, the circulation and the velocity decay so as
to tend to zero as time tends to infinity: the rotation initially concentrated on the axis
diffuses over time across the entire fluid under the action of viscosity. Defining the
radius Rv t of the viscous core using the condition that this contains 99% of the
circulation of the velocity vector (exp(Ș) = 0.01 or K = 4.605), we have:
Rv 4.29 t .
NOTES –
1) The notion of circulation on a closed material curve C is essential: in effect, it
deforms during its displacement with the matter. It can eventually be divided into
two curves C1 and C2 when passing an obstacle (Figure 6.4), but it cannot be
transformed into a third curve C3 (Figure 6.4). The sum of the circulations
īC1 and īC 2 over the curves C1 and C2 is equal to the circulation *C over the
curve C, whereas the circulation *C 3 over the curve C3 can take on any other value.
We will use an elementary example (section 6.2.5.2.2) for which the circulations
īC, īC1 and īC 2 are zero, whereas *C 3 is non-zero. This property is related to the
structure of the surface S interior to C3 which is not simply connected (to put it
simply, it contains a “hole”) and the vector field is not continuously differentiable on
the interior of C3 .
2) Lagrange’s theorem does not express the transport of the vorticity vector by
the matter; it only expresses a more global property. For the reasons given above, we
G
say that the vector field Z which satisfies equation [6.7] is “frozen in the moving
medium”.
General Properties of Flows 269
C3
C C2
C1
Figure 6.4. Evolution of closed material curves in the flow around an obstacle
3) The reader will note that once again we recover here a property of flow-
information transfer over characteristic curves associated with convection.
6.2.1. Introduction
ui
wM
wx i
or : VG gradM [6.12]
with: h the specific enthalpy (for a perfect gas: h C p T ) and U the potential of the
gravitational forces ( U gz , height z being taken on a vertically ascending axis).
270 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
s! V 2
gz h const [6.13]
st 2
We note that equation [6.13] is valid everywhere in the domain of study and for
an unsteady flow, contrary to Bernoulli’s first theorem, which can only be applied in
a steady flow over a streamline. For an incompressible fluid, it can be written:
s! V 2 ¬
gz p const [6.14]
st
2 ®
1 dh wu i § 1 dh G ·
0 ¨¨ divV 0 ¸¸ [6.16]
2
c dt wx i © c 2 dt ¹
§ 2 ·
1 d ¨ wM grad M
'M ¨ gz 0 [6.17]
c 2 dt ¨ wt 2
© ¹
General Properties of Flows 271
For the flow of a compressible fluid, we can in general neglect the gravitational
term and potential equation [6.17] becomes:
§ 2 ·
1 d ¨ wM grad M
'M ¨ 0 [6.18]
c 2 dt ¨ wt 2
© ¹
or, by developing:
1 §¨ w 2M w 2M wM · 1 wM wM w 2M w 2M
2 0 [6.19]
c 2 ¨© wt 2 wtwx j wx j ¹ c 2 wx i wx j wx i wx j wx i wxi
where, by introducing the usual notation for the velocity components u , v, w along
the axes x, y, z :
§ 2· § 2· § 2·
¨1 u ¸M ¨1 v ¸M ¨1 w ¸M 2 uv M 2 vw M
¨ xx ¨ yy ¨ zz xy yz
© c 2 ¸¹ © c 2 ¸¹ © c 2 ¸¹ c2 c2 [6.20]
wu 1 u v w
2 2 M zx 2 Mtt 2 2 Mtx 2 2 Mty 2 2 Mtz 0
c c c c c
The potential equation for the flow of an incompressible fluid which can be
obtained by letting the velocity sound tend to infinity in [6.17] reduces to Laplace’s
equation:
w 2M
'M 0 [6.21]
wxi wx i
Equation [6.19] or [6.20] is of the type studied in section 5.4. Writing explicitly
the velocity components ui wM wxi and the Mach number M V c , equation
[6.19] can be written:
1 §¨ w 2M w 2M ·¸ u i u j w 2M
2u j 'M 0
c 2 ¨© wt 2 wtwx j ¸¹ c 2 wx i wx j
272 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
1
D 2
t
2D j D t u j
ui u j
D j D i D iD i 0
c2 c2
1
2
D t D j u j 2 D iD i 0
c
1 w 2M
'M 0 [6.22]
c 2 wt 2
Considering now only steady solutions, the potential equation can be written:
w 2M 1 wM wM w 2M
0 [6.23]
wx i wxi c 2 wx i wx j wx i wx j
G 2
§ ·
¨ OA. V ¸ OA
2
0 [6.25]
¨ c¹¸
©
G
This equality shows that the projection of V c on OA must be equal to OA. The
existence of the non-zero vectors OA is possible only if M V c is greater than 1,
in other words if the flow is supersonic. We recover the result already obtained in
section 5.3.2.3. We deduce from [6.25] the value of the angle E between the normal
to the characteristic surface and the velocity direction:
cos E cV 1M
The velocity thus makes the complementary angle T with the characteristic
surface; and so the result of section 5.3.2.3 is recovered ( sin - 1 M ).
6.2.5.1. Introduction
We will now examine some elementary solutions in simple examples of potential
equations. We will first consider the case of an incompressible fluid. The velocity
potential satisfies Laplace’s equation. Subsonic flows verifying an elliptic equation
have similar properties, but are modified by the compressibility of the fluid
([YIH 77]).
The second case studied is the acoustic wave equation, which can be obtained
via linearization and a suitable referential change in equation [6.18] and which
represents the local properties of all second order hyperbolic equations.
w\ wM w\ wM
u v [6.26]
wy wx wx wy
are Cauchy relations between the derivatives of the real and imaginary parts, M and
\, of an analytic function F z of the complex variable z x jy :
F z Mx, y j\ x, y [6.27]
The function F z is the complex potential of the flow considered. Its derivative
F ' z with respect to z is the complex velocity of the expression:
F ' z u jv [6.28]
If the closed path C does not surround any poles of the function F ' z , then the
function F z is uniform: it takes on the same value after any excursion of the
variable z on the contour C. The flow across C and the circulation of the velocity on
C are zero. If C contains a pole of F ' z , then the value of the function F z
increases by * jq v with each excursion around C (see an example of the vortex in
section 6.2.5.2.2).
As the velocity field is determined by the Laplace equation, the pressure is given
by Bernoulli’s second theorem [6.14].
A A A
F z ln z ( ln r jT ) F ' z [6.30]
2S 2S 2S z
³C F ' z dz * jq v jA [6.31]
C1 M y y
ur
C2 T ut
O x x x
When the quantity A is real, application of formula [6.31] over a closed contour
C2 containing the origin leads to a volume flow rate q v A , while the circulation *
of the velocity is zero on all closed curves. The function F z represents the radial
flow caused by a source (positive A) or a sink (negative A) of volume flow rate qv.
The potential F z and the complex velocity F ' z can be written:
qv qv qv
F z ln z ( ln r jT ) F ' z [6.32]
2S 2S 2S z
We deduce from this the velocity potential M, the stream function \ and the
radial and tangential components, ur and uT, of the velocity vector:
qv q vT wM qv 1 wM
M ln r \ ur uT 0 [6.33]
2S 2S wr 2S r r wT
The potential lines are circles centered on the origin O and the streamlines
(# const) are straight lines lying on radii from the origin O (Figure 6.5b).
j* * j*
F z ln z (T j ln r ) F ' z [6.34]
2S 2S 2S z
We can deduce from this the velocity potential M, the stream function \ and the
radial and tangential components, ur and uT, of the velocity vector:
* * wM 1 wM *
M T; \ ln r ; ur 0; uT . [6.35]
2S 2S wr r wT 2S r
The potential lines are straight radii coming from the origin and the streamlines
are circles centered on the origin.
General Properties of Flows 277
NOTES –
1) The values of the volume flow rate and circulation can be easily found from
the components of the velocity by direct calculation; we will leave it to the reader to
verify this.
G
2) The vorticity Z of the irrotational point vortex is zero at all points, except at
the origin where it takes on the value of a Dirac impulse, a multiplying factor
excepted. The circulation * can be alternatively written as the flux of the rotation
vector across the surface S enclosed by the curve C. The flux is only non-zero for
surfaces containing the vorticity impulse.
3) When the source, the sink or the vortex are placed at z and not at the origin,
the variable z in the functions F z and F ' z is replaced by z z 0 .
The potential and the complex velocity of the superposition of a source and a
sink with the same flow rate or of two vortices of opposite circulation positioned at
the points A and A’ of coordinates (0, ± a) (Figure 6.6a) can be obtained from
equation [6.30]:
F z
K
ln
za K
ln rA
r A ' j T T ' ; F ' z
K
.
a
[6.36]
2S za 2S S z a2 2
y y
M
r' r
T
A' A x A' T' O A x
(a) (b)
F z
K
2S
ln z 2 a 2 K
2S
ln r r ' j T T '; F ' z
K
.
S z a2 2
z
.
When the axis Oy is a streamline which can be “solidified” (solid boundary with
free-slip condition) we have a representation of the flow associated with a vortex or
a source in the presence of a plane wall. These interesting specific cases (Figure 6.6)
are obtained respectively with:
two vortices of opposite circulation whose stream functions derived from
* r
[6.35] are equal to \ ln and for which we obtain the axis Oy for r r ' ;
2S r'
two sources of equal flow rate whose stream function (derived from [6.33]) is:
qv
\ T T ' and for which we obtain the axis Oy for T T ' S .
2S
The velocity potential M, the stream function \ and the radial and tangential
components, ur and uT of the velocity vector can be derived:
The potential lines (respectively the streamlines) are circles centered on the axis
Ox (respectively Oy) and tangent to the axis Oy (respectively Ox).
General Properties of Flows 279
Some particular values of the velocity components allow us to outline the form
of the streamlines. In particular, on the circle r R , we have: uT R 2U sin T
and on the axis Ox (T = 0 or S), ur is positive (negative) for r > R ( r R ): there
exist two points A and A’ of zero velocity stagnation points, (section 6.2.5.2.5) of
the flow on the cylinder (Figure 6.7a).
R2 j* R2 j*
F ( z) U (z ) ln z; F ' ( z) U (1 ) [6.38]
z 2S z 2 2S z
280 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
y y
U U
M
r
T
A O A' x A O A' x
(a) (b)
y
y
A
A
O x O x
U U
(c) (d)
For * ! 4S RU , the points of zero velocity are the solutions of the equation
F ' z 0 ; letting z j y a , we find for ya two roots, only one of which is external
to the circle of radius R (Figure 6.7d).
2S 2S
D ³0 p c cos T .RdT 0; L ³0 p c sin T .RdT U *U
Regardless of the form of the obstacle, these results are true for the drag
(d’Alembert’s paradox) and for the lift (Kutta-Joukowski theorem [YIH 77], [PAR
98]).
Comparisons with experiment
In the case where * = 0, this theoretical pressure distribution on the cylinder
(Figure 6.8, curve a) can be compared with experimental results. In Figure 6.8, we
p pf
have shown pressure variations C p (difference between the wall
UU 2 2
pressure p and the pressure p f in the uniform flow normalized by the dynamic
pressure U U 2 2 ) as a function of the angle T (defined in Figure 6.7a).
Cp
1
S S 0 O S S T
c
– b -1
a
-2
-3
upstream face downstream face upstream face
The values of the preceding calculation are relatively close to those measured on
the upstream side of the cylinder, up to the angular position where a separation of
the flow from the cylinder occurs and a wake is formed (section 6.5.3.7). The
pressure measurements at locations situated on the wall where the flow has
separated illustrate a strong flow dissymmetry between the upstream and
downstream faces, which leads to a non-zero value for the drag (whence
d’Alembert’s paradox given to the “theoretical” result). The difference, which is
quite small, between the calculation and the measurement on the upstream face of
the cylinder comes from the fact that an inviscid fluid flow is not produced about the
cylinder, rather it is produced about the ensemble constituted by both the cylinder
and its wake.
282 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The non-zero drag force D exerted by the fluid on the cylinder can be explained
by the presence of the wake on the downstream face, on which a pressure force is
exerted which is greater than that exerted on the upstream face. This force, known as
pressure drag, is obviously proportional to the dynamic pressure U U 2 2 . The value
of the separation angle D (and therefore of the drag) is different ([SCH 99], [YIH
77]), depending on where the boundary layer (section 6.5.3) is laminar (subcritical
flow, Figure 6.8, curve b) or has become turbulent (supercritical flow, Figure 6.8,
curve c).
The lift due to the circulation (Kutta-Joukowski theorem) is indeed observed for
wing profiles and for cylinders in rotation. However, the question as to the
mechanism by which the circulation has been created has not been discussed. The
latter is created by the beginning of the fluid movement about the airfoil as a result
of viscous stresses on the wall (see section 6.6.4.1). However, the Kutta-Joukowski
theorem is satisfied, and the effect of the lift is a curved trajectory for bodies being
in rotation (the Magnus effect); this phenomenon is used in games with balloons and
balls (the balls are “cut”).
The lift of a stationary circular cylinder can also result from actions which
generate dissymmetries of the wake by modification of viscous effects in the vicinity
of the wall (dissymmetric sucking of the boundary layer).4
F z Kz n K r n cos nT jK r n sin nT
F ' z nKz n 1 nKr n 1e j n 1T
The straight lines T S n are streamlines terminating at, or issuing from, the
zero velocity point z 0 (for negative n). The case n 2 corresponds to the usual
stagnation point of a flow (points A and A’ of Figures 6.7a, Figure 6.7b and point A
in Figure 6.7d). The case n 3 corresponds to a higher order stagnation point
(point A in Figure 6.7c). Taking viscosity into account in these flows is possible
with self-similar solutions of the boundary layer where n can take on any value
([SCH 99], [YIH 77]).
4 A ship with “sails”, “l’Alcyon”, has been built using this principle by Y. Cousteau and L.
Malavard.
General Properties of Flows 283
M x i , t
f OM .n ct f x i ni ct [6.40]
G G
(ni: direction cosines of the unit vector n normal to the plane wave ( n 1 )).
The velocity and the pressure fluctuation p' can be found from solution [6.40]
and from a linearized version of Bernoulli’s second theorem [6.13]:
wM
ui ni f ' x i ni ct ; V ui ui f ' ; p' U U cf ' xi ni ct U cV
wt
G
Taking the axis OX parallel to the normal n , the quantity x i ni of the problem of
the function f is equal to X, and the function f can be written M x i , t f X ct .
This form reveals the transmission without signal deformation (velocity potential,
velocity or pressure). We note that if f X ct is a solution of [6.40], the same is
true of g X ct which propagates in the opposite direction.
1 w 2M 1 §¨ w 2 rM 1 w 2 rM ·
'M 0 [6.41]
c 2 wt 2 r ¨© wr 2 c 2 wt 2 ¹
1 1
M r , t f r ct g r ct
r r
In the case where g { 0 , the expressions for the pressure and the velocity are:
wM Uc wM 1 1
p U f ' r ct ; u f ' r ct f r ct
wt r wr r r2
The expression for the velocity of spherical waves differs from the expression
1
for plane waves by the term f r ct , which dominates in the vicinity of the
r2
origin r 0 (nearfield term). We have, for the volume flow rate qv:
wM
q v r , t 4S r 2 4S >rf ' r ct f r ct @
wr
1 § r· Uc § r ·
M Q¨¨ t ; p Q ' ¨¨ t
4S r © c¹ 4S r © c¹
liquid. If the movement of the liquid is considered irrotational, the velocity potential
Mx, y, z , t satisfies Bernoulli’s equation:
2
wM V p
gz co nst [6.42]
wt 2 U
v
w ]
u
x
wu wv ww
0 [6.43]
wx wv wz
allows the magnitude of the w component to be determined: the first two terms being
of order V/L, we obtain w | Ve L . The vertical component of the velocity w is of
G
second order with respect to the velocity V . The component w can be calculated by
integration following z of equation [6.43]:
§ wu wv ·
w z ¨¨ ¸¸ [6.44]
© wx wv ¹
z2
– a small term of order 'I associated with the w component which can be
2
written using [6.44] by expressing u and v as a function of I:
w z 'I [6.45]
The free surface is a material surface; its vertical velocity w z ] is the material
derivative of the height ] of the fluid particle being on this surface (kinematic
condition):
d] w] w] w]
wz ] u v
dt wt wx wy
d]
] 'M [6.46]
dt
p U gz p a U g] [6.47]
s* u 2 v 2
g const [6.48]
st 2
We replace ] in [6.46] with its expression taken from [6.48] in order to obtain
the potential I:
1 d §¨ wI V 2 ·
'I 0 [6.49]
g] dt ¨© wt 2 ¹
Comparison between the corresponding equations [6.15] and [6.46] of these two
problems shows that the height ] is analogous to the density U. However, the
expression for the velocity of sound c 2 J p U kU J 1 of the compressible fluid
and that c 2 g] of the free surface indicates an exponent J equal to 2 for the
equivalent compressible fluid.
§1 1· § w 2] w 2] ·
G pV p pa V ¨¨ ¸¸ V ¨ ¸ V ']
©R R' ¹ ¨ wx 2 wy 2 ¸
© ¹
p U gz p a U g] G pV p a U g ] V ']
s! V 2 p s! V 2
gz g ' const
st 2 st 2
which, associated with [6.46], gives a complex system which we will not study here
(see [YIH 77]).
288 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The preceding considerations result from the fact that a derivative is the ratio
limit of finite increases of the function and the variable, when the latter tends to
zero. It is clear that to within a factor of at most a few units, this derivative is equal
to the ratio of the finite increases in the region considered.
Take the elementary example of the mass-spring oscillator with one degree of
freedom:
[6.50]
The term kx of given order of magnitude kxm is in the same order as at least one
of the other two terms of the equation which are, respectively: O mx m W 2 and
O f x m W .
Let us first suppose that f x is small compared to kxm which is then of the same
order as mx :
mx m
mx | k x | k xm W | mk
W2
The characteristic time W necessary for the amplitude to vary from zero to xm is
of order m k and we also have f mk .
If, on the other hand, mx is small, then it is the term fx which balances kx ; we
thus have:
f xm
f x | kx | k xm W | f k
W
The characteristic time W necessary for the amplitude to vary from zero to xm is of
order x f / k, with f mk ; equation [6.50] thus reduces to:
[6.52]
x x x
x O x O x
Figure 6.10. Evolution of the oscillator in the plane (x, x ): (a) oscillator with a small
damping; (b) damped oscillator; (c) aperiodic motion (strong damping)
It then remains to study the influence of the small term neglected in each case:
this is a perturbation problem which we will discuss a little later (section 6.4). In the
first oscillatory case, we study the influence of friction with the balance equation for
the mechanical energy derived from [6.50] by multiplying by x and integrating
between 0 and t. We have, taking account of the initial conditions:
mx 2 t kx 2
kx 02
³0 f x 2 dt [6.53]
2 2 2
t
4) dissipated energy ³0 f x 2 dt is an increasing function of time; the result of this
is that the velocity must tend to zero if the integral is to remain finite; we can write
equation [6.53] in the form:
t
§ mx 2 kx 2 ·
t
³0 f x 2 dt ¨ [6.54]
¨ 2 2 ¹
© 0
Let Wa be the damping time of the oscillations; let x m denote the maximum of
the velocity at the beginning of the movement which is considered only lightly
damped; this leads to the following orders of magnitude:
2
t 2 2 mx m
³0 f x dt | W a f x m |
2
m
From this we can derive the order of magnitude of the damping time: W a | .
f
It should be noted that the preceding considerations are concerned with orders of
magnitude which do not require an exact expression of equation [6.50]; they are in
fact valid for any equation whose terms have the orders of magnitudes posed above.
Therefore, an approximate knowledge of results do not require complex
mathematical procedures above and beyond the numerical discussion about
monomes (“rule of three”). By this procedure, which needs to be completed by a
discussion of perturbation problems, we can identify the important terms in a system
of equations, in other words, the dominant physical phenomena in each of the zones
of the problem domain. The order of magnitude of the unknown quantities can also
be deduced from this analysis.
which we will use here can be generally applied, insofar as we suppose that we
ignore the exact solution of the equations, and that the particularities of the equation
linearity and the coefficient constancy are not used. The method consists in
searching for a global condition which can be obtained by integrating the equations
over each interval of the study. We then represent the form of the solution by a
plausible function in which the main unknown value is a parameter which we can
deduce from the preceding global condition. We will first apply this technique to the
preceding example of the oscillator.
x0 x0 ; x 0 0; xW 0 [6.55]
x (t ) x t
x0 x m
O W t O W W t
(a) (b)
Figure 6.11. (a) Law of motion during the first quarter of a period;
(b) variation of the velocity during half a period
Taking these conditions into account, the integration of equation [6.51] between
0 and W gives the global condition:
W
m x W k ³0 xt dt 0 [6.56]
2
k
! ! 0 with ! 0
1, ! 1
0 and ! 0
0 [6.57]
m
General Properties of Flows 293
W 2k
M 1 ³0 M K dK
1
0 [6.58]
m
M 1K 2 [6.59]
W 2k
1 0
3m
W 2k
M0 , M1 0 [6.60]
m
3K 2 K3
M K 1 [6.61]
2 2
5 W 2k
3 0
4 m
294 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The simplest polynomial satisfying the conditions [6.55] and [6.60] is of fourth
order:
W 2 k §¨ K 2 5K 3 K 4 ·¸
M K 1 2K 3 K 4
m ¨© 2 6 3 ¸¹
hence:
W 2k W 2k 7
M 1 2 and ³0 M K dK
1
6m 40m 10
As the form of the curve representing the function M depends on the unknown
parameter W 2 k m , we obtain, by substituting into [6.58] a second order equation:
2
1 §¨ W 2 k ·¸ 13 W 2 k
2 0
40 ¨© m ¸¹ 15 m
which has roots 2.497 and 32.16. It is easy to see that the second value is not
suitable, M having to be positive on the interval [0,1]. With the first value, the
calculation of the period gives:
m m
W 1.58 T 4W 6.32
k k
The use of boundary conditions taken from the equation for the second
derivative thus leads to an improvement (error less than 1%). It should be noted
however that it is not possible to further improve the results of such a method, which
only uses local data at the extremities of the interval considered.
of the variation of total mechanical energy: this is equal to the variation of maximum
2
kinetic energy mx m 2 , x m (t ) being the maximum velocity value at each stretching
value of the mass m equal to zero. During a half-period 2W (notation as in the
preceding section) contained between two instants t and t + 2W where the elongation
is zero ( x x m ), equation [6.54] translates this mechanical energy variation:
§ mx 2 · 2 p 1W
1 t 2W
G ¨ ¸ mx 2 ³t f x 2 dt [6.62]
¨ 2 ¸ 2
© ¹ 2 p 1W
Suppose as before that the amplitude of the velocity x m varies only slightly and
that it can be considered as a constant during the half-period, while the velocity
variation is symmetric with respect to the instant W (Figure 6.11b). The law for the
velocity xt x 0 M K results from the choice of the preceding function M K :
! t
x t
x0 ! t
x m with: x m x0 ! 1
! 1
Taking the time origin at the beginning of the half-period, at the instant where
x 0 , and designating the velocity amplitude by x m , gives, after substitution into
[6.62]:
2
m t 2W 2 f x m W
³0 M K dK
1 2
G x m2 ³t f x 2 dt [6.63]
2 M 1
2
Relation [6.63] is a finite difference equation with a step 2W for the amplitude
x m , which we can replace with the differential equation:
1 2
2
m d xm
2
f xm with:
¨0 !
d
2 dt ! 2 1
or:
m d x m
x m 0 [6.64]
D f dt
296 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The differential equation [6.64] can be solved as before using a global method.
We will here simply note that it represents a first order damped system with time
constant W a m D f .
It remains to calculate the constant D. From the parabolic law of motion [6.59]
we have:
2m
The exact solution for the damping is W a . The error is a little greater than
f
for the calculation of the period: this is because a given approximation is always
better for a function M than for its derivative M .
6.4.1. Introduction
x x 1 H x0 0
(1+ H)[1-exp(-t)]
x x
1+H
H
Ho 1
1
1-exp(-t / H)
1-exp(-t) Ho
5 We assume that the domain of study corresponds to an time interval bounded a priori in
order to ensure uniform convergence.
298 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
xt H xt a x0 0 x 0 1 [6.66]
x0 t a x 0 0 0 x 0 0 1
x1 t x 0 t x1 0 0 x1 0 0
x2 t x1 t x 2 0 0 x 2 0 0
..............
x p t x p 1 t x p 0 0 x p 0 0
..............
The solution of the preceding system can be calculated immediately from place
to place and we thus obtain a series development of the solution:
t2 t4 t3 t6 t5
x0 a t, x1 a , x2 a ,
2 4! 3! 6! 5!
[6.67]
t 2 p 1 t 2 p 1
...., xp a , ........
>2 p 1@! 2 p 1!
However, a development including many terms is not of much interest,
particularly if we consider the computational methods used by computers.
Furthermore, if the parameter Htakes on values which require many terms of the
development, the principal properties of the unperturbed equation are significantly
modified: in other words the unperturbed equation is no longer a sufficiently
representative model for the mathematical and physical properties of the solution for
these values of H.
For example, we easily recognize that [6.67] is the series development of the
solution which is here easy to calculate directly:
sh t H
x
a
H
>cht H 1@
H
General Properties of Flows 299
x f t , x, H x0 a
We have:
H2
f t , x, H f t , x,0 HfH t , x,0 fHH t , x,0
2
f t , x0 Hx1 H 2 x2 ..,0 HfH t , x0 Hx1 H 2 x2 ..,0 H2
2
fHH t , x0 Hx1 ..,0
f t , x0 ,0 H > fH t , x0 ,0 x1 f x t , x0 ,0@
ª 1 x2 º
H 2 « x2 f x t , x0 ,0 fHH t , x0 ,0 x1 fHx t , x0 ,0 1 f xx t , x0 ,0 » H 3....
¬« 2 2 ¼»
x 0 f t , x 0 ,0 0 x 0 0 a
x1 x1 f x t , x 0 ,0 f H t , x 0 ,0 x1 0 0
1 x12
x 2 x 2 f x t , x 0 ,0 f HH t , x 0 ,0 x1 f Hx t , x 0 ,0 f xx t , x 0 ,0 x 2 0 0
2 2
The first differential equation corresponds to the zero perturbation for H. We note
that the successive differential equations are linear for the corresponding unknown
function, with a right hand side which only depends on the previous solutions. The
300 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
equation linearity facilitates their numerical resolution. However, the expressions for
the differential equations can quickly become complex.
§ ·
x ¨ ¦ a n H n ¸ xt , H bt x0 A [6.68]
¨ ¸
© ¹
d
x(t, %) x0 (t) %i xi (t)
i1
f
However, it is more interesting to take D H ¦ a i H i as the perturbation
i 1
parameter and to seek a solution of the differential equation:
x a 0 D H xt , H bt x0 A
i
x i ao xi (t)=- aj xij (t) xj (0) 0
j 1
The system obtained is far simpler for ~ x i than for xi. The preceding example is
apparently rudimentary. However, it translates the fact that the model has attributed
an important role to the parameter D, rather than to H which was chosen in order to
establish the model. It is clear that we can have a better development with the
parameter D than with H. This problem of parameter choice is often encountered in
order to best represent the range of solutions, for example, for solutions of boundary
layer equations ([SCH 99], [YIH 77]). The term b(t) of [6.68] can depend on
Hwhich must therefore express as a function of D.
The method can be applied to partial differential equations. We will later see
some examples of this (section 6.4.2.6). Suitable variable changes also allows the
modification or simplification of the differential problem (section 8.5.3.2).
The practical limits of the preceding method are determined by the convergence
of the entire series, but even more by the speed of convergence of the series
obtained. Methods for accelerating the convergence can be used here ([ABR 65]
p. 16, [BRE 91]).
The successive differential equations obtained are linear equations which all
have the same linear operator, the right hand sides being known at each stage from
the preceding solutions. Numerical solution is thus simplified. The computation of
higher order terms of the solution by means of analytical developments, is generally
difficult in practice, on account of its complexity.
[6.69]
t u § y z· U D2 D 2 wp
f t
~ ~
t u~ ~y , ~z ¨¨ , ¸¸ H
T U ©D D¹ PT P U wx
where D and T are, respectively, a reference length for the cross-section and a unit of
time to be defined.
wu~ §~ w2 w2 ·
f t ' u~;
~ ~ ¨' ¸
H ~ [6.70]
wt ¨ w~
y 2 w~z 2 ¸
© ¹
z
u
y
x
C
Assume Hto be small and consider that equation [6.70] is the result of a regular
perturbation of this equation for H = 0. We seek the solution of [6.70] in the form
f
u = İ i ui . Substituting into equation [6.70] and identifying terms following the
i =0
increasing powers of H, we obtain the system:
It is immediately verifiable from place to place that the functions u~i are variables
of separated functions and that they are proportional to the successive derivatives of
f(t):
f
¦ g i ( ~y , ~z ) f (i ) t
~ ~
u~ ( ~
y, ~
z, t ) [6.71]
i 0
The functions g i ( ~
y , ~z ) are solution of the system:
The preceding equations can be solved successively with increasing i, and the
first equation corresponds to the Poiseuille flow (section 3.4.2.5). Let H = 1, which
amounts to taking T D 2 Q as a unit of time. The expression for the velocity
becomes:
f
¦ f (i ) t g i ( ~y , ~z )
~ ~
u y, z , t Uu~ ( ~
y, ~
z, t ) U
i 0
The volume flow rate can thus be easily expressed as a function of the successive
derivatives of the pressure gradient:
f
¦ f (i ) t ³S g i ( ~y , ~z )d~s
~ ~
qv UD 2 ³S u~ ( ~ z , t )d~
y, ~ s UD 2
i 0
~ ~ ~
Defining the dimensionless coefficients Gi ³S g i ( y , z )ds , it can be written in
the form:
f
UD 2 ¦ Gi f (i ) t
~
qv
i 0
Let 'p(t) be the driving pressure loss for the length L; the pressure gradient can
wp 'pt
be written in the form: and we have:
wx L
i
D 2 §¨ D 2 · w i § 'p ·
f (i )
~t ¸ ¨ ¸
¸ wt i ¨© L ¸¹
P U ¨© Q ¹
304 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
From this we can derive an expression for the volume flow rate as a function of
the pressure loss and its temporal derivatives:
i
D4 f § D2 · w i § 'p ·
qv ¦ Gi ¨¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
¸ wt i ¨© L ¸¹
P i 0 © Q ¹
~ 1 w §~ w ·
For example, in the case of a circular cross-section C ( ' ~ ¨¨ r ¸¸ ) of
r w~
r © w~ r¹
radius r 1 , we easily find:
1 1 3 r 4 ¬
g0 r
1 r 2
; g1 r
r ;
2
4 16 4 4 ®
1 19 r 6 ¬
g2 r
3r r ; ...
2 4
256 9 9 ®
For the example considered, we can show that we have convergence of the series
if the series of the general term f n t 4 n converges. Recall, however, that, from
~
a mathematical point of view, the solutions established for the partial differential
equation does not require the existence of derivatives for the given function f t .
The preceding results can equally be obtained by means of a Laplace transform
(Appendix 1) in the asymptotic approximation for large periods of time.
solid, with constant physical properties, subjected to a heat release of volume power
P(t) and whose external wall is maintained at constant temperature T = 0.
The thermal conduction equation for this solid and the associated boundary
conditions:
wT
UC P(t ) O 'T ; with: (y, z ) C : T (y, z , t) 0
wt
6.4.3.1. Introduction
In section 6.4.2 we assumed that the differential equation could be solved with
respect to the first derivative such that the unperturbed equation (H=0) possesses a
differentiable solution. This is not the case if the coefficient of the derivative tends
to zero with H faster than the other coefficients. Let us examine the elementary
example of the following differential equation in which the parameter H is now the
coefficient of the derivative x (t ) :
For H to tend to zero, it is easy to follow the evolution of the solution towards its
discontinuous limit (Figure 6.12b) made up of the half-line (x = 1, t > 0) and the
origin O. Letting H equal to zero in equation [6.72], we obtain the solution x 1
which is valid nearly everywhere, and we can no longer satisfy the initial condition
posed at the origin for this part of the solution (called the external solution). We note
that the family of functions xt , H does not converge uniformly towards its limit for
H = 0.
The external solution can also undergo a regular perturbation due to the small
parameter H. For example, the solution of the following differential equation:
x x 1 H x0 0
306 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
does only differs from the preceding equation by the coordinate 1 + H of the
horizontal asymptote.
Ignoring the results of the last example, let us apply the methodology described
above:
1) We first look for the external solution by supposing that the unknown function
has variations of the order of one on the intervals of the same order of magnitude.
To O(H), differential equation [6.73] reduces to:
x(t ) 1D t
The interval sought of scale G must be situated at the origin. In effect, if this was
not the case, we would have between this interval o(1) and the origin a finite interval
on which the results of the external zone would be applicable; the function x would
be equal to 1+Dt and would not therefore be zero at the origin, which would imply
that nothing had been solved. The only reasonable possibility is therefore to place
our small interval G in the neighborhood of the origin.
3) The order of magnitude of G can be obtained by supposing that the term H x' is
of the same order as that of the variations of x, i.e. of the order of 1:
H x t x(t ) 1D t
H
| |1 | 1 DG
G
We can deduce from this that G H , and we need to study the behavior of the
solution in an interval of amplitude H close to the origin.
4) We perform the change of variable:
t
K xt X K
H
X K X (K ) 1 X 0 0
308 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
X K
A 1 e K
It tends to A when K tends to infinity.
5) We now have two pieces of the solution (Figure 6.14b) which we need to
match. This procedure appears relatively empirical and we will consider only small
values of H. We see that as H tends to zero, the value 1 DH of the external solution
for x = H tends to 1. We therefore adopt the following simple matching rule.
The limit of the internal solution F(K) for K becoming infinite is equal to the
limit of the external solution x(t) when t tends to 0:
lim X K lim x t
Kof t o0
This rule provides the boundary conditions which were missing for the internal
solution and leads to a value of 1 being assigned to the constant A. We thus obtain
the internal solution:
X ( ) 1 e with: t / %
x H x x 0
y G
v V
M u
d
z O x
The basic assumption of a viscous quasi-1D flow is that the cross-section and
direction of a stream tube vary quite slowly (Figure 6.15). The thickness d of the
domain of study is small compared to its length L (d << L). We consider the
coordinate on a curve oriented along Ox, more or less parallel to the stream tubes
(the axis of a pipe, jet or wall, etc.) and the orthogonal coordinates in cross-sections
310 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
orthogonal to Ox. The local coordinates defined by the curvilinear abscissa x and the
orthogonal coordinates y, z in cross-sections constitute a coordinate system which
is locally Cartesian. These assumptions allow us to write the balance equations in
Cartesian form in this zone.
We furthermore assume that the variations Gf of the quantities f studied are more
or less of the same order of magnitude over the distances d and L.
6.5.1.2. Approximations
The following properties result from the preceding assumptions:
1) Partial derivatives of a quantity in the directions y or z are an order of
magnitude greater than the corresponding axial derivative in the direction Ox. In
effect wf wx | Gf L and wf wy | Gf d lead to:
wf d wf w2 f d 2 w2 f
| and |
wx L wy wx 2 L2 wy 2
This results in vectors of the form k grad f (for example, the thermal or mass
G
flux densities q G , etc.) are perpendicular to the axis Ox and that we only take into
G
account the two components k wf wy and k wf wz of the flux density q G .
G
2) The diffusion term div q G of the balance equation of a scalar quantity G is
therefore reduced to the sum of the transverse derivatives w q Gy w y and
w q Gz w z .
3) The transverse components v and w of the velocity are small compared with
the axial component u ( v u and w u ). In effect, assuming the flow to be
incompressible, the volume balance can be written:
wu wv ww
0
wx wy wz
If variations of the cross-section exist, the transverse velocity is not zero, but it is
very small, in order to ensure the inclination of the velocity with respect to the axis
Ox, of order d/L. Assuming the 2D problem (w = 0) in order to simplify matters, the
two derivatives wu wx and wv wy have the same value (sign excepted). An order of
magnitude analysis shows that:
General Properties of Flows 311
wu U wv v
| | |
wx L wy d
The result of this evaluation of the velocity components is that the dominant
terms of the viscous stress tensor are the tangential components P wu wy and
P wu wz (friction forces in the Ox direction).
4) The material derivative of a scalar quantity conserves its general expression
in the quasi-1D approximation.
dg wg wg wg
Consider the material derivative u v of the quantity g. The
dt wt wx wy
two convection terms are of the same order:
wg Gg wg d Gg Gg
u |U v |U U
wx L wy L d L
5) On the other hand, an analogous order of magnitude calculation shows that the
small value of the transverse components of the velocity leads to the transverse
accelerations dv/dt and dw/dt being negligible with respect to the axial acceleration
du/dt.
wq Gy
wg G
div Vg U
dg
VG
wq Gz
[6.74]
wt dt wy wz
ª wu wu wu wu º wp w § wu · w § wu ·
U« u v w » U fx ¨P ¸ ¨¨ P ¸¸ [6.75]
«¬ wt wx wy wz »¼ wx wy ¨© wy ¸¹ wz © wz ¹
312 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
du ª wu wu wu º wp g w 2u
U U« u v » P [6.76]
dt «¬ wt wx wy »¼ wx wy 2
Finally, as the transverse accelerations dv/dt and dw/dt are negligible with
respect to the axial acceleration du/dt, the viscous stress terms of the transverse
equations are equally negligible with respect to the corresponding term in the axial
dynamic equation. The transverse equations reduce to:
wp g wp g
0
wy wz
de wu i ½
U p °
dt wx i ° 2 2
§ wu · wu w § wT · w § wT ·
¸ P §¨¨ ·¸¸ V T
dh dp °
U ¾ P ¨¨ ¸
¨O ¸ ¨¨ O ¸¸ [6.77]
dt dt ° © wy ¹ © wz ¹ wy ¨© wy ¸¹ wz © wz ¹
ds °
UT °
dt ¿
2 2
§ wu · wu
) P ¨¨ ¸ P §¨¨ ·¸¸ [6.78]
¸
© wy ¹ © wz ¹
the instant t depends only on data from the past or the upstream region. This
explains the fact that the state of the matter in the cross-section depends on its
anterior state on the trajectory; the diffusion term of quantity G only provides a
limited action in this section, the suppression of the conduction term wq Gx wx
amounting to the suppression of all flux in the upstream direction.
The velocity components u and v are the unknowns of dynamic equation [6.76].
The demonstration of the parabolic character can be effected by introducing the
stream function \ such that the mass conservation is satisfied:
u w\ wy v w\ wx
du ª w 2\ w\ w 2\ w\ w 2\ º wp g w 3\
U U« » P [6.79]
dt «¬ wtwy wy wxwy wx wy 2 »¼ wx wy 3
In equation [6.79] the derivations with respect to x and t are of order 1, whereas
the derivation with respect to y is of order 3, which indicates the parabolic character
with respect to the variables x and t.
We will successively examine two categories of problem in which the data are
different.
314 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
u(x,t) Gx dA x
GD
G6 L
S(x)
C 6L
The geometric elements of the pipe are given, such that integration of the
dynamic equation leads to a relation between the volume (or mass) flow and a
pressure difference between two cross-sections. Calculation of the velocity
distribution (or of a quantity G) in a cross-section is an internal problem posed in
the interior domain of the stream tube 6 (Figure 6.16).
sections of abscissas x and x + Gx of the lateral surface G6L (Figure 6.16).
Formula [4.62] for the global balance of a volume quantity g can be written:
wg
³Dq dv ³6 gu i ni ds ³D V G dv ³¦ q Gj n j ds [6.80]
wt
General Properties of Flows 315
x Gx
³6 gu i ni ds ³S guds x ; ³D V G dv G x.³S V G ds
G
The density flux q G is essentially normal to the lateral wall (section 6.5.1.2) for
irreversible changes (viscosity, conduction, diffusion) and the integral ³6 q Gj n j ds is
equal to G x.³C q Gw dA taken over the contour C of the cross-section (qGw is the flux
density of G, normal to the wall).
³S
wg
wt
ds
w
wx
³S ugds ³S V G ds ³C q Gw dA [6.81]
In the place of the volume quantity g U g , let us take the massive quantity g;
we obtain:
w U g
³S
wt
ds
w
wx
³S U ugds ³S V G ds ³C q Gw dA [6.82]
6.5.2.3. Applications
Taking g 1 , we have the volume flow rate q vS ³S uds across S.
wU wq m
³S ds 0 [6.83]
wt wx
w U u
³S
wt
ds
w
wx
³ S
U u 2 ds S
wp g
wx
³C W w dA [6.84]
w §¨ U u 2 ·¸ w ª §¨ U u 2 ·¸ º
³S ds « ³ pg uds » PvS [6.85]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wx «¬ S ¨© 2 ¸¹ »¼
with: PvS ³S )ds , the power dissipated by viscosity per unit length of the pipe.
The different forms of the energy equation seen in section 4.3.4 can be integrated
over the surface S (or in the domain GD), but it is not possible to write down an
energy flow in the cross-section, except if we use initial formula [4.68] of the
balance equation which contains the flow of total enthalpy
*ht = ¨ [h (V 2 / 2)]dqm across the section S.
s
w W ij u i
Furthermore, the integral over GD of the term can be transformed into a
wx j
surface integral, which is zero, as we have already said.
w ª §¨ u 2 ·º w
³S « U e » ds Mht ³S U f x uds ³S V T ds ³C qTwdA [6.86]
wt «¬ ¨© 2 ¹»¼ wx
Recall that the power of an external force field is often negligible for a perfect
gas. The expressions for the internal specific energy e and the specific enthalpy h for
a perfect gas can be written:
Cv p Cp J p
Ue U CvT p ; Uh U C pT p
r J 1 r J 1
General Properties of Flows 317
w U CT
³S
wt
ds
w
wx
³S U uCTds PQS ³S V T ds ³C qTw dA
[6.87]
where, depending on the case, we used either Cp or Cv for the specific heat C.
1
the mean temperature Tm (C = const): Tm ³ U uT ds
U muq S S
These quantities are often called the average mixing values (or mean mixing
values), as they correspond to the intensive value represented by the variable g under
the assumption that the flow of G across the section S would directly fill a volume
where it should be mixed without any external input. The preceding definition of Tm
supposes that the specific heat is independent of the temperature.
In cases where the same quantity contributes differently to several mean values,
we introduce a suitable coefficient, for example:
1
the momentum coefficient E: E u q2 2
³ U u ds
UmS S
318 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
3 1 3
the kinetic energy coefficient D: D u m ³ U u ds
UmS S
These mean values and the preceding coefficients allow the equations for the
quasi-1D model of flow in a pipe to be written very simply in a form analogous to
the 1D slice approximation with uniform properties in the cross-section (see section
4.3.2.3.4). However, the system of differential equations obtained only determines a
solution if the preceding coefficients constitute data, which must be chosen more or
less empirically from assumptions derived from the velocity, temperature or
concentration profiles.
We will leave it to the reader to verify that in a laminar flow we have the
following values:
uniform flow: D = E = 1;
Poiseuille flow in a circular tube: D =2; E = 4/3.
In industrial pipe systems, the values of D and E are often of the order of 1.1 to
1.3 ([ASH 89], [IDE 99]). If the differences between the local velocity u and the
mean velocity uq are small, the reader can verify that we have approximately6
E 1 3D 1 .
w §¨ U uq ·¸ w ª§¨ U uq2 ·¸ º
2
E « pg D qv » PvS [6.88]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹ wx «¨© 2 ¸¹ »
¬ ¼
U u q2
p tm p U gh D .
2
6 Let u u q u ' and neglect the term in u ' 3 in the calculation of E
General Properties of Flows 319
w §¨ Uuq ·¸
2
wp
E qv tm PvS
¨
wt © 2 ¹¸ wx
Integrating along the axis in the domain D included between two cross-sections
S1 and S2 gives:
w §¨ U uq ·¸
2
³D E dv qv ptm 2 ptm1 PvD [6.89]
wt ¨© 2 ¸¹
This equation is a model which reveals the inflows and outflows for the studied
domain of the pipe; it is particularly useful in steady flows for evaluating the
mechanical energy dissipated, using measurements of velocity distributions in the
sections S1 and S2 [IDE 99].
wu~ w~
p 1 ~~ wu~ j
u~ j ~ i ~ 'u i ; 0; i, j 1,2,3 [6.90]
wx j wx i Re w~x j
Under the usual conditions, the Reynolds number is very large compared to 1,
~
and the term 'u~i is weighted by a coefficient which is very small compared to 1.
This therefore appears to be a perturbation quantity whose nature we will study
using the procedure outlined in section 6.4.
320 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wu~ w~
p
u~ j ~ i ~ (i, j 1,2,3)
wx j wx i
These are one order less, and require weaker boundary conditions than the
Navier-Stokes equations. It is clear from a physical point of view that we must
abandon the adherence condition, since the viscosity no longer exists, and the fluid
can therefore slide over the walls. We thus find ourselves in the singular
perturbation situation described in section 6.4.3.
The subsequent velocity evolution on the wall streamlines of the inviscid fluid
lead to a non-zero sliding velocity which increases downstream of the point A. It is
then in the neighborhood of the wall that the viscosity must necessarily act.
The length of this zone is in the order of obstacle dimension L and its thickness
G is necessarily o(L), otherwise we are back in the preceding situation. We must
therefore study a thin zone in the vicinity of the walls where we can make the
approximation of a quasi-1D flow. We will here consider a plane 2D flow over an
obstacle placed in a flow of uniform velocity U (Figure 6.17), and we will allow the
radii of curvature of the walls to be large compared with the thickness G.
General Properties of Flows 321
U y y
§ wu wu · dp w 2u wu wv
U ¨¨ u v ¸ P ; 0 [6.91]
© wx wy ¸¹ dx wy 2 wx wy
§ wu wu · U U 2 w 2u P U
U ¨¨ u v ¸| | P |
© wx wy ¸¹ L wy 2 G2
322 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
1 2
G L | P U UL Re L [6.92]
§ w\ w 2\ w\ w 2\ · dp w 3\
U¨ . . ¸ P [6.93]
¨ wy wxwy wx wy 2 ¸ dx wy 3
© ¹
The order of the derivatives with respect to x is less than the order of the
derivatives with respect to y in equation [6.93] which is parabolic: the distribution of
the velocity at a given abscissa x0 only depends on the upstream conditions of the
external velocity ue(x), corresponding to values of x less than x0.
y 0 u x ,0 vx,0 0
We must now match the boundary layer and the external inviscid fluid flow. We
proceed in a first approximation as per section 6.4.3.3 by writing that the velocity at
the outer edge of the boundary layer is equal to the velocity u e x of the inviscid
fluid on the wall in the absence of a boundary layer:
y
of u x, y o u e x [6.94]
G
The velocity u e x and pe (x) satisfy Bernoulli’s theorem on the wall for an
inviscid fluid:
u 2 x U2
p e x U e pf U [6.95]
2 2
where pf designates the static pressure in the external uniform flow of velocity U.
General Properties of Flows 323
Finally, we must fix the initial upstream condition for the velocity distribution at
a given abscissa often taken as the origin x = 0. As we have explained in section
6.5.3.3, the stagnation point A of the flow of a inviscid fluid over the obstacle
(Figure 6.17) is the departure point of the boundary layer that can be easily
calculated in this zone where its thickness is quite small ([SCH 99], [YIH 77]).
The solution previously obtained in section 5.4.5.4 for the heat equation is of the
same kind as that of the boundary layer, with time replaced by the x coordinate. The
zero-velocity condition imposed on the wall leads to viscous diffusion of the viscous
stress and of the vorticity. This results in an augmentation of the boundary layer
thickness as an abscissa function, as indicated by the order of magnitude
1 2
G L | P U UL Re L found earlier [6.92].
§ v ·
u u e exp¨¨ 0 y ¸¸ [6.96]
© Q ¹
y ue ue
v0
G | Q v0
x
v0
We note that in the case where we have blowing rather than suction ( v0
positive), the solution is not acceptable: the boundary layer no longer exists if the
blowing is sufficiently strong ([SCH 99], [YIH 77]).
u~ uU v~ vRe1 2 U ~
x x/L ~
y yRe1 2 L u~e u e x L U
This gives:
Equations [6.97] do not contain the parameter Re U UL P . This results in the non-
dimensional solution being independent of the Reynolds number. So, all bodies which
have the same form have identical velocity distributions u~e ~
x at the wall; they therefore
General Properties of Flows 325
have the same boundary layer development. We note however that the Reynolds number
comes into play as soon as we recast the problem using dimensional data for the
coordinate y and notably for the thickness of the boundary layer (formula [6.92]).
Close to the wall, the weak kinetic energy no longer plays an appreciable role
and the variations of the viscous stresses are opposed to the pressure gradient in the
boundary layer equations. The flow which is nearly purely viscous close to the wall
results from two causes:
1) The pressure gradient leads to a tendency of the flow towards decaying
pressures as in a Poiseuille flow (section 3.4.2.5). The velocity curvature profile at
the wall is equal, according to [6.91] and [6.95] to:
w 2u 1 dp e U du
ue e
wy 2 P dx Q dx
y 0
When the flow external to the boundary layer u e x increases with the abscissa
x, the longitudinal pressure gradient is negative and the velocity curvature profile
has a constant sign (Figure 6.19a). In the opposite case (Figure 6.19b), the sign of
the curvature of the profile changes, and this can lead, close to the wall, to a flow
which is reversed with respect to the external flow u e x .
x x
(a) dp/dx < 0 (b) dp/dx > 0
wake
S
R rotational
(a) (b)
Figure 6.20. (a) Separation with reattachment in the boundary layer (profiled obstacle);
(b) separation and creation of an open wake (unprofiled obstacle)
There therefore exists a back stagnation point S in a viscous flow where the
friction stresses on the wall are zero (Figure 6.20a). In fact, the flow, which is
reversed with respect to the main flow, comes from a rotational zone which can be
manifested in two forms:
– either a relatively thin rotational zone is generated within the boundary layer,
but reattaches at point R (Figure 6.20a); following what was said above, this can
only happen if the effect of the pressure gradient is sufficiently weak for the viscous
entrainment to constitute the dominant effect. This is the case for profiled obstacles
whose reducing section in the downstream direction is very gradual;
– or a completely open wake can be generated downstream of an obstacle which
is not profiled (Figure 6.20b).
Note that the position of the separation point is independent of the Reynolds
number, provided the velocity distribution of the inviscid fluid at the wall does not
depend on the Reynolds number either. This is the case for the irrotational inviscid
fluid around a profiled obstacle which is not modified (to second order) and
obviously does not depend on the viscosity. For the unprofiled obstacle, the real
velocity field is different from the field calculated in an inviscid fluid on account of
the presence of a rotational wake which is fed from downstream; however, if we
assume that the structure of this wake is independent of the Reynolds number, we
see that it is consistent to assume that the position of the separation point is also
General Properties of Flows 327
6.6.1. Introduction
The fields to which matter is subjected are furthermore always due to actions at a
distance performed by other material elements: a gravitational field is caused by the
presence of mass, an electric field results from the presence of charges, an
electromagnetic field is due to electric charges in movement at either the
macroscopic or the microscopic scale. A field is described by functions of space-
time variables in a reference frame (known as the laboratory reference frame)
associated with a flow device or an object moving with respect to a fluid (vehicle,
plane, etc.). There are numerous situations for this observer in which the velocity
fields and the material quantities are not functions of time, but only of space. The
corresponding phenomena are therefore steady. This terminology only has meaning
in reference to this privileged reference frame, the quantities attached to the
material particles being always functions of time (Lagrangian representation).
However, these steady phenomena, when they exist, always arise as a result of
the evolution of a transitional regime. Thus, in many situations, the transitional
regimes do not lead to steady flows and we observe complex phenomena which we
will describe very briefly here.
We will leave aside questions related to the existence and to the uniqueness of
solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations, the understanding of which requires a
more advanced course in mathematical analysis. In this domain many questions
328 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
remain open, and the physical aspects of the phenomena which we describe in this
textbook demonstrate the formidable complexity of such an eventual theory.
For a flow and the associated transfers to be steady, it is necessary for the
boundary conditions describing the corresponding problem to be steady; in
particular, actions on the flow by fixed elements in this reference frame should be
independent of time. For example, the flow between upstream and downstream
infinite reservoirs at constant pressure and connected by a nozzle (section 5.5.4) can
be independent of time if the system is described in the reference frame of the
nozzle. However, before being observed at a given flow rate, the flow was created
from a zero pressure difference and it followed an evolution through the following
states: a subsonic regime with increasing velocity, then a sonic regime and finally a
supersonic regime with the progressive appearance of a shock wave which descends
in the divergent part of the pipe until the pressure gradient is stabilized.
The solution of the problem defined by the steady boundary conditions is not
always unique. The nature of the boundary conditions to be used is often a source of
considerable difficulty (section 5.6.3). Consider for example the flow between two
cross-sections S1 and S2 (S1 > S2) in a divergent pipe (Figure 6.21). Under the
assumption of an inviscid incompressible fluid and with the approximation of the
flow by slices, Bernoulli’s theorem can be written:
U12 U 22
p1 U p2 U
2 2
p1 p2 1 1
qv r with: B 2.
BU
2
2S2 2S1
There exist two opposite flow rate values for this steady flow. We will see later
that only one of these is really acceptable in the context of the preceding
assumptions.
Let us now perform an experiment with a plane pipe whose divergent has a
sufficiently large angle (of the order to 10 degrees or so). Here we observe that the
steady flow follows one of the walls while it separates from the other. The flow
chooses the wall to follow as a result of particular circumstances of the transitional
General Properties of Flows 329
regime. For example, in the configuration in Figure 6.21a, we have included in the
walls two suction orifices A1 and A2 which are not activated in the steady regime
and which we can use in order to create a small additional transitional depression in
order to “suck” the flow towards a chosen wall. This suction does not need to be
constant: once the flow has attached to one of the walls, it will remain so after the
suction has been stopped. Such flows with two stable positions can be used to
control flows in fluid circuits (fluidics command and control).
p2 suction orifice A 2 p1
S2 suction orifice A1 S1
(a) (b)
For the two preceding flows, the pressure is nearly constant in each of the
sections S1 and S2. Writing the boundary conditions for the steady flow of a viscous
fluid leads to considerable difficulties, because there no longer exists a velocity
potential and we know that we cannot independently specify the entry and exit
conditions of a flow since the transport properties on the trajectories are dominant
(section 5.6).
Figure 6.21b shows another configuration where two flow structures in a pipe are
possible depending on whether the flow reattaches or not on an obstacle placed on
its wall. The existence of reattachment is also related to the transitional regime
which leads to the fully established flow. Examples of the same kind exist for sheets
of water over spillways, which may flow above cavities either ventilated (i.e. filled
with air) or not ([CHA 04] p. 399, [JAI 01] p. 264).
The preceding problems are examples of systems presenting hysteresis (the state
of a system depends on its history). From a physical point of view, we can note that
we have here a “retroaction” in the upstream direction which leads to the existence
of a memory for the flow.
330 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
6.6.3.1. Relation between pressure and flow rate in a fixed stream tube
Depending on the imposed conditions, pressure can be the cause or the
consequence of movement of a fluid. Aside from cases where the viscosity plays a
dominant role (low Reynolds number flows), the pressure (or the driving pressure
depending on the case) balances the acceleration, and for steady flow of an inviscid
fluid, Bernoulli’s first theorem treats the pressure (or the total enthalpy) as a
component of the total mechanical energy which is conserved for a fluid particle.
This local property no longer exists in unsteady flows.
Consider the flow of an inviscid fluid of constant density whose fluid trajectories
are fixed; they are thus coincident with the streamlines (and the emission lines). A
stream tube is therefore a surface on which the inflow and outflow of fluid occurs
over the cross-sections S1 and S2 with velocities V1 and V2 (Figure 6.22). The
assumption of incompressibility leads to a volume flow q v t SV circulating in
the stream tube which is independent of the cross-section used to evaluate it; we will
treat it thus as a variable. Let us apply kinetic energy theorem [6.85] to the interior
domain D of the stream-tube element limited by the surfaces SL, S1 and S2 (Figure
6.22); we have:
w §¨ V 2 · §
¸dv ¨ p U V
2 · §
¸V .nds ¨ p U V
2 ·
¸V .nds
³D ¨ U ¸ ³S 2 ¨ ¸ ³S1 ¨ ¸
0
wt © 2 ¹ © 2 ¹ © 2 ¹
In the slice approximation of the flow, the quantities are uniform in all cross-
sections, and after simplification by qv, we immediately obtain:
dq v L dA § U 22 U 12 ·
U U ¨ ¸ p p
³ ¨ 2 ¸ 2 1 0
dt 0 S © 2 ¹
dA 1 §¨ 1 1 ·
L
¸
Let: A ³0 and B
¸
US 2 U ¨© S 2
2
S12 ¹
The relation between the flow rate qv and the pressure difference p1 p2 can be
written:
dq v
A B q v2 p1 p 2 [6.98]
dt
This equation shows that the pressure is balanced by two acceleration terms, one
dq
unsteady, A v , and the other, B q v2 , corresponding to the steady flow,
dt
proportional to the square of the flow rate and independent of the direction of the
flow. This separation is related to the Eulerian description of the phenomena, and
from a physical point of view there are not two kinds of acceleration for the fluid
particles. As we have already said (section 3.3.3.5), this description is always
associated with a favored reference frame resulting from the existence of boundary
conditions on the particular surfaces which are here the sides of the stream tube.
A
dq v
dt
B Q 2t q v2 [6.99]
We see that:
dq v
– if the instantaneous flow rate qv is greater than Q(t), the derivative is
dt
negative: the flow rate qv decays and approaches the value Q(t);
This property leads to the flow rate being bounded if the positive quantity Q is
bounded. If Q(t) tends to a limit for infinite t, the same goes for the instantaneous
flow rate qv if the latter remains always greater than – Q. Under the assumption of
constant pressure difference p1 p2, we see that the transitional regime does not
allow the solution q v Qt p1 p 2 B to be attained.
The inviscid fluid model does not apply for negative flow rates, and the viscosity
must be introduced. The study of viscous fluid flow between two infinite divergent
planes can be performed (the Jeffery-Hamel exact solution of the Navier-Stokes
equations). We find that a separation occurs for a Reynolds number which tends to
General Properties of Flows 333
infinity, even if the angle of the planes tends to zero ([SCH 99], p. 104). In these
conditions, the uniqueness of the solution is not assured.
We define the efficiency of these transformations using the kinetic energy flow
3
D U Su m 2 between the inflow and outflow sections (section 6.5.2.4) and the
mechanical power q v p1 p 2 provided or recovered by the pressure difference.
Whereas a pipe with a convergent section in the flow direction transforms pressure
into kinetic energy with good efficiency, the inverse effect in a divergent pipe occurs
with a non-negligible dissipation. For a given ratio S1 / S2 of the sections S1 and S2,
the efficiency is close to 1 in a converging flow for a short length A whereas in a
divergent pipe, the efficiency goes through a maximum of the order of 0.7-0.8 for an
angle of about 7º. A compromise must be found between a small angle and a large
length over which there exists a notable viscous dissipation, and a larger angle
leading to the formation of a separated flow at the wall, whose kinetic energy is
nearly entirely lost.
initial conditions which lead to a rapid divergence of the velocity field at the
following approximation. This is an important and unfortunately common difficulty.
(a) (b)
(c) (d)
Figure 6.23. Real flow around a circular cylinder placed in a uniform steady velocity field
Figure 6.23 shows the evolution of this flow as the Reynolds number increases.
For values of the Reynolds number small compared to 1, the flow is symmetric
(Figure 6.23a); the dissymmetry between upstream and downstream increases with
the Reynolds number; for larger values (of the order of 0.2-20) we observe the
appearance of a fixed zone of reversed flow just downstream of the cylinder
(attached wake (Figure 6.23b)) comprising two symmetric vortices). For values
greater than 20 (Figure 6.23c), we observe the emission of alternate vortices at a
well-defined frequency. Beyond values of Re of the order of 1,000, the periodicity
of the vortices is attenuated (Figure 6.23c) and random fluctuations appear.
The circulation is in fact created during the transitional regime of the flow. It is
due to the viscosity of the fluid. Consider a fluid initially at rest about a profiled
body at incidence. In the initial acceleration regime of the flow around the body, a
dissymmetry appears between the intrados (the under-side) and the extrados (the
336 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
upper-side) of the profile which generates at the trailing edge (downstream of the
boundary layers) a sheared viscous flow at the origin of a vortex, which grows
(Figure 6.24a and Figure 6.24b) until it separates from the obstacle and is carried
away by the flow (Figure 6.24c). The viscosity is only important for a small zone
and Lagrange’s theorem can be applied in the inviscid fluid external to the ensemble
of the obstacle and the vortex. As the circulation is initially zero, it remains so: the
vortex carries away the circulation *, and the opposite circulation – * is established
about the obstacle.
Figure 6.24. Creation of circulation by initial emission of a vortex around a profiled body
(a) (b)
T1
(c) (d)
exact equalities between real (or complex) numbers, which represent the physical
quantities studied. Now, these are never known exactly and this exact knowledge is
furthermore neither practically obtainable nor necessary. We work with
approximations or mathematical representations (transformed signals) which are
more convenient to use. The values themselves can be synthesized by a
transformation procedure allowing their number to be reduced. The representation
of physical quantities is thus a basic problem associated with our knowledge of the
phenomena of interest. These considerations can apply both to space and time
variant quantities. In what follows we will reason in terms of a temporal
representation of a signal, but the problems discussed are analogous regardless of
the nature of the representation and the number of variables.
The idea of continuous phenomena has only really been used by some modern
calculation methods. The first analog calculators produced a physical representation
of the equations, the adjustment of the variables and parameters being achieved by
modification of physical quantities (for example, voltage for electronic calculators
or pressure for hydraulic and pneumatic systems). With numerical calculation, we
operate using numerical values, which requires equations to be discretized.
7.2.1. Introduction
based. The quantities measured are primarily the pressure, the velocity, the
temperature and the concentration of a constituent.
For steady flow, a measurement which is less and less frequently employed
consists of using liquid manometers, based on hydrostatics laws, to find the
difference in height 'h between the free surfaces in two tubes implying a pressure
difference equal to Ug'h, or between two free surfaces if the two tubes
communicate directly, or, between the pressure taps in the liquid. We measure here
a difference of level (a length), but the real difficulty comes from the accurate
identification of the position of the free surface and the effects of surface tension
(section 2.2.1.4.2).
Figure 7.1. Probes for pressure (a), (b) and (c) and driving pressure (d) measurements
The pressure measured by a probe is the surface force on the sensitive member
of the probe. Pressure measurement at a point in a fluid requires in principle that the
probe is positioned such that it does not itself create a perturbation: it must therefore
be carried with the matter in movement. This is clearly unrealistic, unless some
342 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
optical means of pressure measurement could be made – and this is generally not
possible. In practice, it is only possible to use some instrument, which is integrated
into a solid surface. It is thus necessary to extract the pressure and transmit it to the
sensitive surface of the probe by means of a pneumatic or hydraulic link.
7.2.3.1. Introduction
On a wall, the velocity of a fluid in motion is equal to that of the wall. It is
obviously only of interest to measure the velocity at points at the heart of the flow.
When making direct measurements of velocity, it is necessary to consider individual
fluid particles, of a given size, and to obtain an electrical or optical signal which
results from a phenomenon associated with the velocity of this fluid particle.
Velocity measurement devices (anemometers) which allow direct measurement are
mainly laser Doppler anemometers, cup anemometers, etc.). Indirect measurement
of velocity can be obtained by means of pressure measurements by application of
the laws of fluid mechanics (Pitot tubes, total pressure probes, etc.) or from
calibrated thermal measurements (hotwire anemometers). The same is true for
measurements of the flow rate, which are not generally made by directly measuring
the volume or mass which flowed during some given time.
C1
V V
C2
(a) (b)
L S
f
Z
V
(a) (b)
Figure 7.3. (a) Principle of anemometric measurement by ALD (L, laser; S, beam-splitter and
focusing lens; Z, fringes in the measurement zone; P, photodetector centered on the zone Z);
(b) bias in ALD measurement in a non-homogenous flow seeding
In the steady flow of an ideal incompressible fluid for which Bernoulli’s theorem
is valid, the difference in driving pressure between two points whose velocities are
respectively equal to V and 0 is equal to:
V2
'p g U
2
V V V
L
A A
A A
L
By placing the total pressure tube inside a streamlined cylindrical tube (Figure
2.4d), the flow quickly returns to a uniform state (after 5 or 6 external diameters);
lateral orifices L placed on the external wall will measure the static driving pressure
pg (or static pressure in a gas) and the difference in pressure between the two tubes
provides a direct estimate of the dynamic pressure UV 2 2 . This device, known as a
346 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Hot wire anemometry is based on a very different principle: the thermal power
evacuated by a heated body is an increasing function of velocity. If the body is
electrically heated, this power can be known by means of a measurement of
intensity. It can be used in a flow in which velocity fluctuations exist with very
small hotwire diameters (1 to 5 Pm) whose thermal inertia is compensated by a
suitable supply (constant temperature anemometer). It is thus possible to measure
velocity fluctuations whose frequencies may be as large as 1,000 to 2,000 Hz. With
two or three differently inclined hotwires it is possible to measure the instantaneous
velocity vector. We therefore have in the hotwire anemometer a powerful means of
knowing the velocity fluctuations provided these remain smaller than the mean
velocity, as it is clearly not possible to distinguish the velocity direction from a
thermal power measurement alone.
V2
C pT C p Ta
2
It is also possible to introduce streams of smoke into the air or to inject colored
dyes in a liquid medium. This kind of injection requires certain precautions (suitable
injection velocity, density of colored dye equal to that of the liquid medium, etc.).
Diverse particles can also be introduced and entrained by the flow (which has not at
some point stopped to observe the flow structures visible in a river, a gutter, etc.).
However, it is important to remember that this kind of visualization is Lagrangian,
and it shows streaklines which may be very different from the streamlines and
trajectories (section 3.3.2).
g (x1,t )
g (x2,t )
g (xi t 1) , g (xi,t 2)
t
g (xp,t)
t t t g (xi,t n)
1 2 n
7.2.7.1. Introduction
Errors, which occur in the measurement of physical quantities, arise as a result
of diverse factors. It is first of all necessary to appreciate the experimental
conditions, which lead to an experiment always being of an approximate nature. The
control of experimental conditions (temperature and velocity, etc.) are factors which
can significantly diminish these errors, although without eliminating them. In other
words, the data of a problem are only known within the bounds of some uncertainty.
Measurements are always accompanied by errors of various kinds, depending on the
kind of methods that are used:
- with analog devices errors come from the sensitivity of the components which
are used, parasite phenomena (influence of temperature, etc.), dry friction in devices
with moving parts, aging of components, etc.;
- the numerical treatment of an electric signal introduces no error (with the
exception of rounding errors); it does however introduce errors in the signal
acquisition to be treated (sampling and digitization mainly: for example, the
digitization on 8 bits leads to an additional uncertainty equal to ½8 in absolute
value).
Because they retain many decimal places, numerical devices are too often
considered to be capable of a precision that they do not necessarily provide. They
constitute most often only the last visible phase of a complex process of
measurement, the precision of which is not representative: the precision of the
numerical presentation is not directly related to the uncertainty on the quantity
measured and the error in the measurement of a voltage by means of a measurement
system having a numerical display is not simply the digit of the last decimal place.
352 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Gs s a' G a s b' G b
We draw the reader’s attention to this last point, which is very important in
practice. It is indeed regrettable that these elementary ideas are so often completely
forgotten in the beginning of higher level education.
Let us note that depending on the content of the mathematical expressions, the
uncertainties may be partially compensated or notably worsened, as we will see in
the following example, where we evaluate a quantity s (a, b) from measurement of
signals a and b each of which has the same uncertainty 'a . We will leave it to the
reader to calculate the relative uncertainty which results in s in the two following
cases:
a2 § 2a · a2
2/ s a (answer: ' s ¨¨1 ¸¸ ' a 'b )
b © b ¹ b2
In the second case, we see that if b is equal to 2a, the measurement of a does not
cause any uncertainty in s (to second order). The function s thus presents an
extremum with respect to the variable a, making it stationary. The situation is thus
quite optimal for measuring the quantity s. In general, expression [7.1] shows that
the lower the sensitivity of the quantity measured to the variations of the
measurement parameters, the better the precision of the measurement. Note that
systems that are close to instability are particularly sensitive to perturbations and
that the measurement of associated quantities is thus particularly difficult.
These elementary ideas are sufficient in simple cases. However, they must be
completed in the case of complex measurements requiring a large number of
unknowns and of quantities to be measured.
Let us assume that the evaluation of a vector quantity X is performed via the
measurement of another vector quantity B of the same size. The vector of unknowns
X and the vector of given data B are assumed to be related by a linear system in
which the square matrix A models the measurement process:
AX B [7.2]
As we are here interested in discussing errors that are assumed small, the linear
system can always be obtained by linearizing the equations about the experimental
conditions and the matrix A is constant. It is invertible (otherwise the measurement
is not meaningful). The precision which can be obtained for the solution X A 1 B
depends on the sensitivity of the system: if a small variation in the right-hand side
GB leads to a large variation of the solution, we must expect poor precision in
obtaining the solution. We quantify the idea of sensitivity by means defining the
condition number N p A of the matrix A by the relation:
354 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
N p A A p A 1
p
The symbol . p
designates a matrix norm defined most often by means of a
vector norm. For example, the norm A 1 of the matrix A is the maximum value
taken as the sum of absolute element values of each column of A. A norm . p
satisfies the conditions:
AB p
d A p
B p
; OA p
O. A p
; A.B p
d A p. B p
Using this condition, the reader can easily verify the following inequalities:
GX p
GB p
1 d A p . A 1 ; d A p . A 1
p X p p B
p
§1 D·
A ¨¨ ¸¸ [7.3]
©0 1 ¹
hence:
§ 1 D ·§ b1 · § b1 D b2 ·
X A 1 B ¨¨ ¸¸¨¨ ¸¸ ¨¨ ¸¸ [7.4]
© 0 1 ¹© b2 ¹ © b2 ¹
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 355
On the other hand, for D 100 , we have an ill-conditioned system and small
variations of measurement B can lead to large variations in solution X. The reader
can easily verify that, for the preceding example, changing the vector B from:
§100 · §100 · §0· §100 ·
¨¨ ¸¸ to ¨¨ ¸¸ will cause solution X to change from ¨¨ ¸¸ to ¨¨ ¸¸ : a variation of
© 1 ¹ © 0 ¹ ©1¹ © 0 ¹
1% in the modulus of the inputs data B leads to a variation of a factor of 100 in the
vector X, which has also rotated by 90°. They can also calculate the relative
variation GX 1 X 1 of the solution and that of the right-hand side, in addition to
the amplification factor of the relative error between B and X.
Poor conditioning can be improved by a suitable change in the way the equation
is written. The system of the last example [7.3] is optimal. The system of the last
example [7.3] can be written in the solved form [7.4] whose conditioning is optimal.
The accuracy problem has not been resolved however, as we see that it is the
quantity b 1 Db 2 which must be measured directly with good precision. Changing
the way the system of equations is written without changing the measurement
method clearly improves nothing.
of another quantity with good accuracy and it will be necessary to change the
measurement method.
c+U c-U
A B
U
W
O t
However, it is important not to measure the propagation times of the two signals,
but rather the time separation W; for this the two signals should be emitted
simultaneously, and the time difference can be measured for example by starting a
stopwatch when the first signal arrives. Proceeding in this way, errors of
discretization and digitization which are only concerned with a reduced value W
rather than much larger values will be avoided (in accordance with the ratio c/U). If
the measurement were performed by means of analogous measurement devices, the
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 357
conclusion would be the same, as these have a relative accuracy, which is associated
with the scale of the measurement.
In general, methods which involve ensuring that the quantity measured is zero in
conditions very close to those in which we operate are known as zero methods. The
electric-bridge methods used (Wheatstone bridge, etc.) to measure impedance are
well-known zero methods.
7.3.1.1. Introduction
We have seen in the preceding chapters how a physical system can be
represented by a continuous medium or modeled by associating components in a
state of thermodynamic equilibrium. We have limited ourselves to thermodynamic
aspects without really discussing the “quantity of information” necessary for
knowledge of a system. This idea is quite difficult to define, as it depends in fact on
the complexity of the system, the degree of approximation which can be tolerated in
this knowledge, the sensitivity of the system towards perturbations and the way the
information is structured. We have only indicated that the number of variables
necessary is greater as the thermodynamic imbalances are more pronounced.
The solutions of the theoretical model and the physical quantities of the
corresponding experiments possess the same properties of continuity and
differentiation. The representation of these solutions and quantities is the first
practical problem to be solved. In what follows, we will limit ourselves to a
function of one variable, which is for instance a temporal signal.
358 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Continuum model
Boundaries conditions equations Hf=D
Solution f
of model (Navier-Stokes, for
example)
Thus, experiments have for a long time consisted of measuring certain local or
global quantities which allow the validation of the model of the system studied. The
appearance of computer techniques has not really changed this manner of
proceeding, but it has allowed us to increase to an extraordinary extent the power of
the means by which we compute quantities in the model. Progress in analog and
numerical electronics has also allowed instantaneous measurements that were
previously unimaginable. We thus find ourselves today confronted with an
enormous quantity of information contained in the results of numerical
computations or measurements, which need to be processed in as rational a manner
as possible. These new technologies have radically changed both the way in which
results are represented and used. Beyond these practical aspects, the comprehension
of physical phenomena has been profoundly modified. An analogous mutation was
produced at the beginning of the 19th century with the introduction of the Fourier
series.
Finally, the problem representing a function arises both from the point of view
of analysis and storage of measurement data, and that of the analytical or numerical
resolution of modeling problems. The numerical calculation of solutions of
differential equations was obtained either by performing finite difference
calculations or by means of tables, these having been calculated for discrete values
of the variables. In practice, these procedures required important and careful effort;
only the use of numerical tables was familiar to the physicist or engineer who was
mostly happy to calculate a numerical value by interpolation between two values of
a table.
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 359
Depending on the objective in mind, the nature and the quantity of the
“information” which we intend to conserve and use, we proceed differently. In fact, we
often find ourselves confronted by a double problem of storage and/or of interpreting
information contained in a physical signal. Conserving billions of numerical values
without understanding what they represent is not very helpful; this operation has a
certain associated cost, even if this is becoming less and less. In certain difficult and
expensive experimental cases, it is of interest to conserve large masses of data, which
is possible using modern equipment, in the hope that we will know how to extract
pertinent information which we do not know how to extract at the moment of the
experiment; but the difficulty is storing the data in a suitable form.
([BAH 01], [CAS 06], [JAC 91], [MEA 91], [PRI 91]). We will here only give certain
general indications, which should allow the reader to appreciate the information
processing problems that arise in the treatment of physical phenomena encountered in
acoustics, fluid mechanics and thermodynamics.
The analytical representation of a signal s(t) thus consists of defining the class of
functions used and the parameters that characterize this particular function. In
general, predefined elementary or special functions allow a particular synthetic
knowledge, which a numerical representation does not provide. Knowledge of their
properties often allows interpretations of the solution thus obtained and reasoning
regarding the relations of cause and effect by means of known analytical properties.
It is thus possible to derive particular properties or other analytical forms without
any numerical computation in the context of the theories used. These analysis
possibilities only exist if the analytical representation comprises only a handful of
coefficients: the properties of a full series are too general to be useful, except if they
represent known functions or if they are defined by laws of recurrence.
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 361
f t t 0 n
s (t ) ¦ s ( n) t 0
0 n!
f § 2Snt 2Snt ·
s (t ) ¦ ¨¨ a n cos bn sin ¸¸
0 © T T ¹
1 T /2 2 T /2
a0 ³ s t . dt an ³ s t . cos2Snt / T dt
T T / 2 T T / 2
2 T /2
bn ³ s t . sin 2Snt / T dt
T T / 2
1 T 2
³ s t dt
T 0
a 02
1f
¦ a n2 bn2
2 1
This property can be interpreted as a conservation of energy: the energy of the
signal during time T is equal to the sum of the energies of the harmonics (Parseval’s
theorem).
There exist many other basis functions sets on a finite interval: Bessel functions,
Legendre and Tchehychev polynomials, etc. (see mathematical texts). The interest
in these is often related to the nature of the considered problem. Certain functions
such as real decaying exponentials are particularly useful for the study of damped
systems, but they do not form an orthogonal basis set. Finally, basis functions are
not necessarily continuous, as we will see in a later example (section 8.3.2.3).
Let us recall that a power series is associated with a function independent of the
value of its radius of convergence and it is characterized by the infinite sequence of
coefficients. Because of this, calculating the value of a function thus represented is a
normal mathematical operation, even if the series diverges. The simplest way to
obtain the values of the developed function s(t) is to numerically calculate the sum
of the series when possible. In the case of series divergence (or poor convergence),
there exist procedures which allow the divergence problem to be contoured or the
speed of convergence to be improved in order that its sum be efficiently calculated
(analytical prolongation, Euler algorithms, Cesaro or Féjer sums for Fourier series,
etc. The interested reader should refer to mathematical texts ([ABR 65] p. 16, [BRE
91], [PRE 07])).
coefficients, the result of the integral transform T of the function s(t) is the function
Ts(Q) of the variable Q; as the information provided by the function is greater than
that contained in a denumerable sequence of coefficients, we see that the conditions
for applying integral transforms are far broader than those of series developments.
We can often associate an integral transform with a series development. The integral
transforms can comprise complex values.
An integral transform can often be inversed, in other words there exits another
integral transform T –1 whose result T –1(T (s(t))) is equal to the original function
s(t). The exact or approximate reconstruction of the initial signal is the obvious
condition for using an integral transform to store a signal. This condition is not
necessary for its analysis.
f,g ! 1 T
C fg with : f , g ! ³0 f (t ) g (t )dt
f 2
! g 2
! T
In the usual definition, we consider the infinite interval T by taking the limit. In
practice, this coefficient is always calculated on as large a finite interval as possible.
An integral transform is thus a factor excepted no more than the ensemble of
correlations between a function s(t) and the family of basis functions g Q , t .
f 2S jQ t
Fx (Q ) ³ f x(t ) e dt
Re>Fx (Q )@ Im>Fx (Q )@
f f
³ f x(t ) cos 2SQ t dt; ³ f x(t ) sin 2S Q t dt
§ Im>F x (Q )@ ·
F x (Q ) Re>F x (Q )@2 Im>F x (Q )@2 M >Fx (Q )@ Arctg ¨ ¸
¨ Re>F (Q )@ ¸
© x ¹
f 2S jQ t
x(t ) ³ f Fx (Q ) e dQ
Fx(Q) and x(t) are two different and equivalent representations of the same
quantity, respectively in frequency space and in the temporal domain.
1 Q
Fx ( at ) (Q ) F x (t ) ( )
a a
Fx (t W ) (Q ) e 2S jW Q Fx (t ) (Q )
f
³ f G (t )dt 1 with: t v 0, (t) 0
It satisfies:
f 0 .
f
³ f G (t ) f (t )dt
f 2S jQ t
FG (t ) (Q ) ³ f G (t )e dt 1
f W
f
³ f G (t W ) f (t )dt
From the relation of translation of the timescale, we obtain its Fourier transform:
f 2S jQ t
FG (t W ) (Q ) ³ f G (t W )e dt e 2S jW Q
f 2S jQ t
FG(1Q N ) (t ) ³ f G (Q N ) e dQ e 2S jN t
f
FG(1Q ) ( ³ f G (Q ) e 2S jQ t dQ 1
Fexp(2S jN t ) G (Q N )
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 367
8) the Fourier transforms of the functions cos 2SN t and sin 2S1 t are the half-
sum and the half-difference of two Dirac distributions centered on the frequencies
+D and -D.
The function A cos 2 S 1 t M , continuous in temporal space, is thus
represented by only three numerical values A, 1 and M in frequency-space;
9) the Fourier transform of the product of two functions x1(t) and x2 (t) is equal
to a convolution product Fx1 (Q)*Fx2 (Q) of the Fourier transforms Fx1 (Q) and Fx2
(Q), and vice versa;
10) Parseval’s theorem expresses that the energy of a signal s(t) is conserved by
the Fourier transform:
2 2
³ f st dt ³ f Fs Q dQ
f f
Es
f pt
L f ( p) ³0 e f (t )dt
1 1 du
H t * xt VP ³ f xu .
f
[7.5]
St S t u
1 The notation VP means that the integral has to be understood in terms of Cauchy principal
value; notation * indicates the convolution product of two functions.
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 369
The Hilbert transform of cos 2SQt is equal to sin 2SQt ; in general, the effect
of the Hilbert transform is to introduce a phase lag of S / 2 in the initial harmonic
function. For any real signal xt , we can associate the complex analytical signal
D x t :
D x t x(t ) jH (t ) [7.6]
xt ReD x t >
Re a (t )e jMt @
The instantaneous frequency Q i is defined as the derivative of the instantaneous
1 dM
phase Q i . . The idea of instantaneous frequency is only meaningful for
2S dt
functions that are close to harmonic functions, in other words for relatively
narrowband signals. We will note that these signals possess two very different
timescales, one rapid timescale corresponding to a “carrier” and another much
slower scale that characterizes a modulation. Figure 7.8 shows an example of a
signal modulated in amplitude (a) or in frequency (b).
t t
(a) (b)
7.3.4.5. Cepstrum
The principle of cepstrum consists of taking the logarithm of a spectral density,
and then performing an inverse transform. Ordinary products and convolution
products are respectively transformed into sums and products; a harmonic
370 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
1 T 2 t T 2
37(t ) ®
¯0 t T 2 T 2 t
f 2S jQ t
Fx 3T (Q ) ³ f 3T (t ) x(t ) e dt Fx (Q ) * F3 T (Q )
two Diracs (Figure 7.9a): the spectrum of the cosine convolved with the transform
of the gate of duration T is comprised of two cardinal2 sinusoids centered on the
frequencies r n of the two preceding Dirac distributions (Figure 7.9b). Considering
that the width of the central peak of the cardinal sinusoid is characterized by its first
zero, the widening of the Dirac function peak is equal to 2/T, which is, for a window
which records 10 periods, a widening in frequency of 0.1n on either side of the
frequency n.
Fs3
2 /T T
-n +n Q -n +n Q -n +n Q
(a) (b) (c)
Figure 7.9. Fourier transform of: (a) cos 2 nt; (b) 3T (t ). cos 2S nt with
1/T << 2n; (c) 3T (t ). cos 2S nt with 1/T = 2n
We see that the shorter the window, the wider the frequency band obtained: an
insufficient observation will reduce the accuracy of the Fourier transform by
“clouding” the signal. We note that as a recording which does not disturb the
spectrum should be applied with a window which is the inverse transform of the
Dirac distribution, in other words the unrealizable infinite width time window,
which we wanted to avoid.
According to the usual Rayleigh criterion, we consider that the frequency peaks
become unidentifiable if the first zero of the cardinal sinusoid centered at the
frequency +n is found at the frequency –n (Figure 7.9c), i.e.:
1/ T d 2 n
³ f f W G t W dW f t .
f
2 We obtain:
372 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The Fourier transform is thus only a correlation performed between a signal and
a family of harmonic reference signals. This observation allows a simple physical
interpretation of the widening of peaks, which results from the use of a finite
window. In effect, the correlation between two harmonic functions is zero over an
infinite time, unless their frequencies are equal. However, the same correlation will
be increased, as the window size become progressively smaller and as the
frequencies are nearer. We will leave it to the reader to verify these observations.
In reality, the widening of the Dirac spectrum by the cardinal sinusoid function
is not limited to the central peak of this function and the smaller but non-negligible
amplitudes of the lateral lobes can also lead to a net increase in the width of the
spectrum obtained. This last inconvenience is a problem, in particular for analyses
of acoustic signals on account of the sensitivity of the ear (the logarithmic decibel
scale clearly leads to a smaller scale of the amplitude variations). As the energy of
the secondary lobes is quite weak, we try to re-center it on the main lobe, even if
this means widening it slightly. This can be achieved by replacing the gate function
3T(t) by a window function ) T (t ) , which leads to much smaller amplitudes of the
lateral spectrum peaks than those obtained with a rectangular window:
f 2S jQ t
Fx)T (Q ) ³ f ) T (t ) x(t ) e dt Fx (Q ) * F)T (Q ) [7.7]
1
't.'Q t [7.8]
4S
In this inequality 't and 'Q are respectively the duration of the energy content of
the temporal signal and the width of the frequency band in which the energy is
contained; 't is of the order of T/2 and 'Q is analogous to the quantity 2/T defined
above for the rectangular gate. The equality is obtained for a Gauss window, which
corresponds thus to an optimum of the preceding minimization criterion. The
limitation of the preceding principle is related to the basic uncertainty of quantum
mechanics, but the physical analogy is far from complete, the interpretation of
quantities being very different in the two domains.
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 373
7.3.4.7.1. Introduction
The Fourier transform with a window function can also be interpreted as an
integral transform whose kernel is the product ) T (t )e j 2SQt of the complex
exponential e j 2SQt by the window ) T t . In other words, we no longer perform a
Fourier transform over a limited duration; rather, we perform a transform with a
function g t ,Q ) T (t )e j 2SQt that is different from the complex exponential. Such
a function is often called a wavelet.
1
Gx D , Q e t / 4D e j 2SQt xt dt
f 2
³f
2 SD
window width. It is clear that by proceeding in this way, the physical idea of
frequency is no longer so clear. If the window comprises little oscillation, then it is
its size that will be the pertinent variable for the transform.
t t t
We define the transform Ts (a) of the signal s(t) by the wavelet h(t/a):
1 / 2 f
Ts a a ³ f s(t )h t a dt
A simple wavelet is the “Mexican hat” wavelet, which is the second derivative
of the Gauss function:
1 § 2 · t 2 / 2a 2
ht , a ¨1 t ¸e
2S a ¨© a2 ¸
¹
Figure 7.10 shows the window variations for a timescale analysis (windows a
and b) and for a time-frequency analysis (windows b and c).
Diverse problems arise in the choice of wavelets and in particular for the
reconstruction of a signal from its transform ([ALL 04], [FLA 77], [MIS 07], [STR
96]).
representation is better suited to periodic (or nearly periodic) signals. For other
signals the preceding representations are numerically ill-conditioned.
Let us take the example of a centered signal of length 100 and which comprises
two sequences of oscillation (Figure 7.11) separated by a sequence in which the
signal is zero. Its representation by means of a Fourier series on the interval [-50,50]
(after change of time origin) is theoretically possible, but it will require a series with
so many coefficients that if will not be very useful.
x(t)
t
–50 0 50
The use of a Fourier transform in the same window will hardly be more
satisfactory. The use of a Fourier transform with window functions would be even
worse on account of signal attenuation towards the window edges. Furthermore, the
(complex) transforms will not indicate in a simple manner the fact that the signal
comprises two sequences of different frequencies at distinct instants, rather than a
uniformly distributed frequency content. We can also think of performing two
Fourier transforms on the separate intervals, but such a procedure is directly related
to the signal structure and so cannot be easily generalized.
The most direct representation thus consists of recording the signal by means of
a window function which is centered on the instant W, and then performing a short-
time Fourier transform. We are thus led to perform sliding transforms, which allow
the identification of the spectral content of signals contained in the window ) (t - W).
This sliding Fourier transform is expressed:
f 2S jQ t
F x) (Q , W ) ³ f )(t W ) x(t ) e dt
Sonograms (often known as spectrograms) are very often used for the analysis of
complex signals; Figure 7.13 shows the sonogram of an acoustic signal
corresponding to the word “shah”. We can note that the ensemble of letters “sh”
corresponds to higher frequencies than the ensemble “ah”.
The explanations which have just been provided for the time-frequency analysis
can be transposed to timescale analysis. This domain is more common in image
treatment; the interested reader should see specialized texts on this subject. The
principle of time-frequency representation can be applied in two dimensions, the
frequency or scale spectra being thus functions of two variables.
378 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
These notions of fast and slow scales are not however so easy to define. Let us
consider the example of a signal s(t), which is the sum of two harmonic signals of
close frequencies N 0 GN and N 0 GN :
1
s (t ) cos 2SN 0 GN t cos 2S N 0 GN t cos 2SN 0 t. cos 2S GN t
2
s (t ) cos 2SN 0 GN t t.
The amplitude spectra of amplitude and frequency modulated signals are nearly
similar, but the temporal signals and the phase spectra have very different structures.
This comparison illustrates the difficulty of reconstructing, with its detailed
characteristics, the time signal which corresponds to an amplitude or energy
spectrum: theoretically only the temporal and complex spectral representations are
completely equivalent. More generally, a signal similar to a harmonic signal of
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 379
On the other hand, turbulence frequencies have a continuous spectrum and the
temporal separation of phenomena is hazardous in proportion to the degree of non-
linearity of the turbulence mechanisms. Furthermore, the corresponding flows can
nonetheless be subject to temporal variations at a slower scale due to influences
other than that of the turbulence.
x(t)
0 t
Intermittency is encountered in many flows; for example, Figure 7.16 shows that
a fixed observer at the horizontal level N will perform measurements characterized
by intermittency for liquid packets in a water jet (a), the external turbulent zones of
a boundary layer (b), or ascending currents in clouds which are carried by the wind
(c).
U U
N N N
F
Figure 7.16. Intermittency phenomena in: (a) a liquid jet; (b) in the frontier zone of a
turbulent boundary layer; (c) in atmospheric flow with cumulus
Figure 7.17 shows the sonogram of a sound recording of a water flow that issues
from a floater tap in which a rapid liquid jet bursts in an air pocket which is trapped
at the top of a vertical pipe before filling a reservoir. The impact of the liquid
packets on the walls is particularly loud and is translated by dark regions on the
sonogram. When the air pocket is purged, all that remains is the sound produced by
the turbulence in the water which is much less noisy, and the sonogram is thus a
relatively uniform shade of gray.
The interest of digital techniques lies in the ease of adaptation and the near
infinite possibilities: any modification in the treatment of a signal is performed
through the modification of a computer program, on the contrary, the modification
of an electric analog circuit can only be achieved through modifying the physical
properties of the components, some of which may be variable by construction
anyway.
382 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The techniques used in practice are often mixed for different reasons:
– as the initial signals are often continuous, it is necessary to construct a table of
numerical values which we wish to retain by sampling (this is the job of the analog-
to-digital converter);
– the signals which result from a treatment are often destined to be used to act on
analog materials which require a certain power (power amplifiers, actuators,
loudspeakers, etc.); the discontinuities of the numerical values must therefore be
interpolated by means of a digital-to-analog converter which delivers a continuous
electrical signal.
³f f W G t W dW
f
f (t )
k f
I_I_I T (kT ) ¦ G t-kT , k integer
k f
We thus have:
k d d
s(kT ) ¨
k d
d
tCkT
s(t)dt, k integer
The sampling of temporal signals is a complex operation ([BAH 01], [BEL 00],
[CAS 06], [HIG 93], [MAD 98], [MAX 96]).
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 383
t
k f 1 k f 2S j T k
I_I_I T (t ) ¦ G t-kT ¦ e k integer
k f T k f
Using the previous second expression of function I_I_I T (t ) and results from
section 7.3.4.2.1, it is easy to obtain:
1 k f 1
F I_I_I Q ¦ G (Q kf 0 ), k integer, f0
T f 0 k f T
k N f
s (kT ) ¦ ³ f G t-kT s(t )dt , k integer
k N
t
k f 2Sj k 1 k f
Fs. I_I_I ¦ Fs * F ( e T ) ¦ Fs Q * G Q - kf 0
T k f f0 k f
1 k f
¦ Fs Q - kf 0 k integer
f0 k f
The Fourier transform of the sampled signal is the transform of the signal s(t)
which is completed by a periodization on the frequency axis, with a period equal to
f0 = 1/T.
The result of this, given that any signal will contain parasite noise of various
origins and different characteristics, is that it is necessary to suppress the higher
frequencies vis-à-vis Shannon’s theorem. This is the role of low-pass filters
positioned before the analog-to-digital converter; these filters are called anti-aliasing
filters (as they prevent energy at frequencies higher than the Shannon limit from
appearing in the lower frequencies, this being due to the partial overlapping of two
successive periods of periodized spectrum). We cannot discuss these problems in
greater detail; the interested reader should refer to texts on signal processing.
3 A usual and equivalent statement of Shannon’s theorem is that a signal comprising only
frequencies up to p Hz must be sampled at 2p Hz at least, so as not lose any information.
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 385
This difficulty is also encountered in the frequency domain for the identification
of one or several isolated peaks (harmonic oscillations) if the central frequencies of
the peaks are not equal to one of the frequencies of the sampled spectrum obtained.
It is for this reason that if we want an accurate measure of a spectrum’s peak
amplitude (a sound spectrum for example), it is important to choose window
functions which broaden the peak, while at the same time suppressing the secondary
lobes of the Fourier transform of the window ([BEL 98], [HIG 93], [MAD 98]).
7.3.7.1. Introduction
Files containing raw numerical values can be extremely large, even after
transformation. Images for example, in comparison with sound and text, consume an
enormous quantity of data when digitized. Experimental modern measurements also
produce large quantities of numerical data. It is thus necessary to reduce the size of
the files for storage by exploiting the power of processors, and it would not be
appropriate to discuss signal representation without recalling certain specific
386 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
text is not a random sequence of letters, but rather a sequence of words which we
sort and store in a dictionary, indexing them by order of their appearance in the
dictionary. The compressed file is thus the dictionary, and the text is encoded with
the order numbers of the words used. While the words of a text are easy to read,
numerical structures (sequences of similar bytes) of an image file must be sought
with a suitable algorithm. It is also possible to establish a partial dictionary by not
encoding isolated values, which are not recognized as part of a repeated structure.
This method is applicable to all types of files.
– the Huffman method, which is entirely statistical, is based on the fact that in
language, all the letters are not used with the same frequency. In French, for
example, the probability of encountering the vowel “a” is 17.3%, whereas that of
encountering the consonant “w” is 0.05%. Now, letters are encoded on 8 bits
(ASCII characters). In general, a byte file contains variable occurrences for the
different bytes which are possible, while the Huffman method consists of encoding
the bytes encountered in a source file with variable binary lengths such that the most
frequent data are encoded on a very short binary length, rare bytes being represented
by a binary length which is greater than the average. The few bits lost on the rare
bytes are quickly recovered for the more frequent bytes (“a” is 346 times more
frequent than “w”). As the number of bits encoded is now variable, it is necessary to
establish a criterion that allows us to distinguish between successive encoded
elements. The encoded file will finally comprise the used source code file and the
encoded message. Its establishment requires the implementation of a suitable
algorithm; data reading, in other words the reconstruction of the initial file, is
performed by means of a decoding algorithm (decompression).
The Huffman method is applicable to all kinds of file (text, image, music, etc.)
since it can establish a table of byte frequencies when the file is read. Despite its age
(it dates from 1952), this method remains competitive, as research has improved its
capacity to compress data.
Data compression is thus based on quite general properties [SAY 00]) either due
to purely arithmetic statements, or to some general structural property, such as the
oscillatory phenomena for music, speech data, or the specific occurrence of letters in
a text. Obviously, a Fourier transformation will not have any value for compression
of text file data.
7.4.1. Introduction
7.4.2.1. Introduction
Sound amounts to pressure fluctuations that propagate in a fluid medium. Their
origin may be due to internal fluid mechanisms (aerodynamic sound for example),
or to the vibration of solid surfaces which are in contact with the fluid, or to the
interaction of fluid with solid surfaces. The structure of a sound field depends both
on the production mechanism and the conditions of propagation. Sound signals are
complex and very often contain important information whose scientific analysis can
be difficult. We will here limit our discussion to audible sounds whose spectral
content is contained between 20 Hz and 20 kHz.
Audible sounds have the particularity of sending the human brain a signal with
which a sensation is associated; this is then compared to memories and eventually
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 391
s (t ) acos 2Z t cos 3Z t
ª 1 º
s 2 t a 2 «1 cos Z t cos 4Z t cos 6Z t cos 5Z t»
¬ 2 ¼
The signal thus obtained does not contain the initial frequencies 2n and 3n which
are replaced by the harmonics 4n, 5n, 6n, and the sub-harmonics of the frequency n.
However, the spectral composition in relative value is here independent of the
amplitude a. In general this is not the case, and the global amplitude variation of a
sound signal modifies the spectral content as soon as the non-linear operation is not
simple. The reader can easily verify that the spectral composition of the signal
s 2 D s depends on the constant value D.
This leads to the human ear hearing frequencies that do not have any physical
existence: this is the question of the “missing fundamental”, the ear hearing the
previous sub-harmonics ([BER 90], [KIN 82]). Navier-Stokes equations being non-
linear, turbulence evolution is a strongly non-linear dynamic process in which
frequencies associated with turbulent fluctuations are increasing (turbulent energy
cascade [MAT 00]).
content of sounds perceived by the human ear does not vary significantly if we
modify the sound level; this can be easily verified by listening to music on a high-
quality system (except at very low sound level). However, the elementary
calculations of the last section show how the ear can hear sounds whose frequencies
do not exist in the sound spectrum. This phenomenon has been known for a long
time in music, where suitable harmonic combinations can lead to the belief in the
presence of a fundamental frequency that does not exist. The interested reader can
see texts treating psychoacoustics and musical acoustics. Fourier analysis of sound
differs from the perception that the ear can have of sound; in what follows we will
leave aside the problem of sound sensation, and we will limit our results to the
physical analysis performed using time-frequency techniques.
7.4.3.1. Introduction
Consider the example of a piece of music one minute long; we know that the
complete reproduction of the sound signal perceived by the ear of a listener needs to
be sampled at least 40 kHz, in order that no information be lost (for high-definition
listening for example). A minute of music is represented by at least 40,000 x 60 =
240,000 numerical values. It is this ensemble of values that we record on to an
ordinary audio CD. In fact, we record two channels in stereo (one for each ear) and
we sample at 44.2 kHz instead of the 40 kHz necessary according to Shannon’s
theorem. From the scientific point of view, such a numerical table can be considered
as a complete musical score.
The listener or the musician does not perceive this table as such, but he feels the
impressions, which do not really correspond to such a quantity of information. The
reaction time of the brain is much less than the sampling time of a piece of music, as
a consequence of which a certain number of modifications to the numerical table of
values can be made without the listener noticing. In fact, the listening apparatus is a
natural receiver which is adapted to the reception of ambient sounds: acoustic
vibrations are perceived by the organs of the inner ear, which transforms these into
electrical signals that are transmitted to the brain, via an analog measurement
“device” (or rather “evaluation” device). The brain performs an analysis of the
sound signal and deduces information (origin and causes of the sound, etc.); this is
an expertise which is based on pre-training (memories of similar sounds already
encountered) and the brain tries then to identify the global sound structures in a
complex ensemble and to compare these to “known” sounds. We thus recognize the
music of a piano, the firing of a cannon, the sound of a train, etc. We will now
describe the physical mechanisms of musical sounds and the analysis methods
which allow us to characterize these.
394 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Let us now take the example of traditional classical music. The primary acoustic
source excites the rest of the musical instrument, which is generally larger, and whose
role is to “filter” the excitation, in other words to transform it without creating
additional vibrational energy. The resonant parts of the instrument are the apparent
acoustic source for the listener, which can be referred to as secondary source (Figure
7.18a). These allow the localized oscillatory energy to be transformed into acoustic
energy that propagates through the air (in fact we are dealing here with an impedance
adaptation mechanism (see horns in [KIN 82]). Furthermore, we know the importance
of certain construction details of a musical instrument for the quality of the sound that
is obtained. The essential role of the instrument is to provide a very weakly damped
filter which supports oscillations of very small amplitude and the equations for which
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 395
are thus linear with coefficients which are independent of time, at least as long as the
instrument geometry is not changed.
From a mathematical point of view (Chapter 5), the main mechanical energy of a
wind instrument is contained in the part of the solution associated with the
convective characteristic curve, the sound corresponding to the propagative
characteristic curves.
Then, the listener listens to these sound vibrations in a given environment, which
also possesses particular reverberation properties. Finally, the vibrational
characteristics of the energy-creation zone are far from being the same as those of
the sounds which we hear: the final sound signal which results from these
successive operations, between which there may be retroaction, at least so far as the
primary and secondary sources are concerned. More exceptionally, this retroaction
may exist between the surrounding environment and the primary source, as seen, for
example, in the Larsen effect between a loudspeaker and a microphone connected to
the same sound system.
pharynx
microphone
larynx and
vocal chords
primary acoustic source Secondary
(Acoustic energy creation) acoustic sources
(a) (b)
The human voice is a musical wind instrument (Figure 7.18b). The initial
mechanical energy of the airflow coming from the lungs produces an oscillatory
energy in the larynx in the vicinity of the vocal cords (the primary acoustic source)
which comprise vibrating obstacles. The secondary source in contact with the
outside environment is an “acoustic filter” comprising the nasal and buccal passages
396 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
and the pharynx. Important geometric modulations with slow variations are
produced by movement of the lips in particular, and of the tongue, and this
constitutes a considerable complication compared with the instrument that produces
fixed sounds. The acoustic filter thus realized is not representable by a linear
constant-coefficient differential equation system.
Let us return to our musical signal, represented by 44,200 numerical values per
second. We need a means of easily recognizing functions that are a priori not so
different from harmonic functions, which are in fact wave-packets. Time-frequency
analysis (section 7.3.5) is thus well adapted to this interpretation. As each note of a
musical instrument is quite well characterized by its pitch (fundamental frequency)
and its harmonic content, it will appear on the sonogram as an ensemble of parallel
bands with respect to the time axis. Figure 7.13 shows this, the human voice being a
musical instrument, which is slightly complicated by its variable geometry. This
representation shows the separation of two phonemes “sh” and “ah”, which is not
truly visible in a temporal representation of the corresponding sound.
We will now examine how these ideas can be used in order to reconstruct pieces of
synthesized music, which amounts to the reconstruction of a musical signal that has
been stored in a compressed form. The procedure is here very different from data
compression techniques described earlier, as we directly use the structure of the
musical sounds, by reproducing in a digitized form the interpretation of a musical
score with synthetic instruments (a “virtual” realization). The score and its
interpretation are realized in a MIDI file, the instruments being, as in reality, realized
independently of the score in distinct analog or digital modules (synthesizers).
The MIDI system is a serial control interface that was originally dedicated to
musical systems. However, it rapidly went beyond its original vocation and can
today be found in the control of a broad range of material that is not only audio, but
also dedicated to theatrical lighting. The MIDI protocol integrates numerous control
parameters, most of which can be freely manipulated by the user depending on his
needs. It is possible to control polyphonic musical instruments in pseudo-real time:
transmission times are imperceptible in most cases. It is also possible to address
numerous devices using the same MIDI data.
MIDI data are most often elaborated using an electromechanical interface for the
inputs, this being a keyboard which looks like that of a musical instrument (piano,
accordion, saxophone, etc.), and on which the user plays as if it was a real
instrument. The rapidity of the transmission of digitized data allows the control of
16 instruments quasi-simultaneously; we have in fact a single line crossing all of the
instruments played, on which the MIDI messages serve as indicators of which
device they are to be addressed to; each of these transmits all of the messages and
only takes account of the messages with which it is concerned (MIDI channel). The
temporal delay, which results from this in-series configuration, is small enough not
to be perceived by the listener.
A schematic of the MIDI system is shown in Figure 7.19; the data of a MIDI
partition can be written either by playing keyboards 1 or 2 or by writing the MIDI
files directly from a computer. In the same manner sound restitution can be obtained
directly from the keyboards, or off-line from a MIDI file (.mid file extension mid).
The MIDI instructions, which define the sound signals, are then transformed into
continuous electrical signals by sound generators (synthesizers).
The reader will very likely find a MIDI file reader in the accessories of his
computer (Windows Media Player, etc.), associated with a numerical sound
synthesizer. It is easy to verify that the volume of such files is quite small (e.g. 5
kbytes for one minute of music, whereas the same musical piece sampled at 44.2
kHz contains over 200 Mbytes).
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 399
sound signal
sound
generator 2
MIDI keyboard 2
MIDI score
or recording sound
generator 1
MIDI keyboard 1
Let us quickly describe the parameters of the usual synthesizer. We define the
amplitude envelope by a small number of values indicating the durations T1 and T2
of the attack sound, the duration Tm of the sound established if it exists, and two
parameters T3 and T4 for the duration of the extinction of the sound; we associate
these values with an amplitude curve, which is piece-wise linear in practice.
a(t): amplitude
a(t),'1(t) envelope
'N(t): frequency
variations envelope
T1 T2 T3 Tm T4
t
It then remains to realize the spectral sound content sought. For the established
regime, the harmonic content can be obtained by different means: additive synthesis
using harmonics: superposition of signals which are rich in harmonics (triangle,
etc.) which we may eventually filter in order to only conserve the first harmonics,
subtractive or multiplicative synthesis, frequency modulation, etc. We can introduce
temporal variations of the harmonic or amplitude content (modulation) associated
Measurement, Representation and Analysis of Temporal Signals 401
with the envelope parameters and diverse effects. We will note that these are distinct
from variations related to the preceding envelope curves. We can also add recorded
sounds that are difficult to synthesize.
The preceding technologies do not allow the exploration of the vast domain of
electronic music that is different from the preceding context, being based on sound
structures which are not related to the harmonics of a fundamental frequency or the
modal frequencies. From this perspective, the first stage of research is to define
agreeable sounds, which can allow us to make the distinction between music and
noise. The reader can easily imagine the difficulties which may be encountered by
the composers of electronic music whose objective is to generate new sound
structures which do not result from the resonant properties of vibrating strings or
resonant cavities. Regardless of whether their sound is agreeable or not, it should be
possible to characterize them using a small number of parameters, in order to define
a musical notation of a new kind which would allow their representation by means
of a musical score. We are here dealing with a relatively unexplored domain, which
is well beyond the scope of this book. It is worth noting, however, that a first
difficulty is to succeed in specifying the domain to be explored and to find a concept
that can replace the Pythagorean basis of tonal music ([LIC 02]).
7.4.4.1. Introduction
We have examined (section 7.2) the different ways in which signals can be
represented and analyzed, these two notions being related as we have seen. An
exhaustive treatment of this subject is beyond the scope of this book. Many other
analysis and extraction procedures also exist: in particular, filtering procedures
consist of the extraction or suppression of certain components of a signal. For
example, we can extract a coherent signal from a random background noise; these
procedures are largely used, but it is always necessary to characterize what it is we
are looking for. The preceding example of acoustic signals has shown the links that
exist between physical analysis and signal processing techniques. However, the
local measurement of quantities is the result of modifications of the fluid medium on
the ensemble of its characteristic curves or surfaces (Chapter 5) which move with
the matter, or propagate “acoustically”.
about 100 m/s-1), whereas the smallest problem of heat transfer generally involves
fluctuations of some about 10°C. For example, a local, instantaneous measurement
sensor of velocity or of temperature characterizes phenomena associated with the
flow and the heat transfer depending on the circumstances (section 7.2.4).
On the other hand, the respective contributions G p a of the acoustic modes and
G p c of the convective modes to pressure variations may be of the same order. In
effect, we have seen (section 5.3.2) that we have:
– on the acoustic characteristic curve:
G p a | U cG u a
G p c U VG V 0
G pa c G ua 1 G ua
|
G pc V GV M GV
separation between acoustic and turbulence signatures can only be made possible if
additional information is available: for example the periodic sound due to a
propeller can be extracted from a signal containing random turbulence fluctuations.
We will see that turbulence, being by its nature unsteady and broadly 3D, is
largely the result of interactions between inviscid fluid structures (turbulent energy
cascade [MAT 00]). The origin of turbulence is furthermore associated with the
development of flow instabilities issued from pre-existing perturbations. The
elementary mechanisms of these highly unsteady interactions are poorly understood.
For these reasons, we have focused on signal-processing and experimental methods
that can be used in a broad range of applications where unsteady phenomena are
encountered in possibly rotational flows These methods allowed for example the
acquisition of experimental data for the problem discussed in section 5.6.2.
Chapter 8
models in fluid dynamics and heat and mass transfer, by limiting ourselves to the
study of thermal systems, whose damped character simplifies the discussion.
Initial conditions
The control of a system is an action that is often necessary for diverse reasons:
control of temperature in a zone, of a flow structure, a sound level, etc. A system is
said to be controllable if, from any initial state of the system, it is possible to act on
certain inputs in order to bring the system to a desired state.
A system is said to be instantaneous if its state and its outputs at a given instant
depend only on the inputs at that instant. This definition can be applied to any
system whose sub-systems are in mutual thermodynamic equilibrium. A system is
said to be dynamic if it is not instantaneous.
Thermal Systems and Models 407
Systems exhibiting hysteresis present the particularity that the stationary solution
corresponding to fixed inputs depends on their history (state variables at the initial
state and the past evolution of the inputs). Let us take the example of an oscillator
comprising a mass P placed between two springs and subjected to a friction force on
a fixed wall. If the friction is caused by a fluid, the equilibrium position of the point
P is unique, the tension in the springs being therefore equal. In return the existence
of a solid source of friction in P means that the final position of the point P also
depends on the movement history (Figure 8.2a).
Flow systems with hysteresis are encountered not only with fluids whose
behavior laws involve a solid friction (Bingham fluid), but also for Newtonian
fluids. This phenomenon is thus associated with the existence of two possible steady
solutions for a flow with fixed conditions. This circumstance may be due to diverse
phenomena such as the feeding of a siphon (Figures 8.2b and 8.2c), reattachment of
a flow on a curved surface (Figure 8.2d and Figure 8.2e), the flow of water over a
weir depending on whether the sheet of water is aerated (or ventilated) or not
(Figure 8.2f and Figure 8.2g), etc. The observed solution can vary depending on the
manner we seek to achieve it by.
A B
P
(a) (b) (c)
water air water
Figure 8.2. Systems with hysteresis – (a) springs with dry friction; set of 2 tanks with feuded
(b) or not (c) siphon; flows in a divergent pipe (d) and (e); weir with aerated water sheet (f)
or non-aerated water sheet (g)
dX
A. X B.U Y D. X E.U [8.1]
dt
The state vector X is a set of n variables which characterize the state of the
system. The state representation is also called the internal representation. This
definition is no different in principle to the definition which was given in Chapter 1
where extensive and intensive variables were used as state variables. However, in
automatic control the components of the vector X can be any variables which
characterize the state of the system. The matrix A is a square matrix of rank n. It
characterizes the make-up of the system and of the sub-systems which correspond to
the choice of the state vector X.
1 I.e. the coefficients of operators in the equation; the inputs are not parameters of the system
here.
Thermal Systems and Models 409
The representation of the state of a system is not unique as the variables can be
chosen in different ways or can be modified by changes of variable. Furthermore,
the components of the state vector can be related when we are limited to particular
operation regimes as we will see on numerous occasions in the remainder of this
chapter (section 8.3, section 8.5 and section 8.6). However, the systems studied in
this work are constituted of a matter, which obeys the laws of thermodynamics. The
form of differential system [8.1] is analogous to that of the balance equations, but
the coherence with the laws of thermodynamics is only effective because of a
suitable choice of state vector components (section 1.2.1).
We also saw in section 5.1.1 that a system of first order differential equations
can be written in the form of a scalar differential equation of order n for one scalar
variable. This equation can also be written in the form of differential system [8.1],
the state vector X (t) being replaced by a state vector having the same number of
components, but constituted of a variable x1 (t) and of its n – 1 first derivatives. By
reconsidering the calculation of section 5.1.1 the reader will see that the inputs
obtained for this differential system imply the initial inputs and their n – 1 first
derivatives. This form of state-representation is known as the form of observability
([DOU 95], [GUP 83], [KUO 02]). We will use this for a particular case in section
8.4.2.2.
For a non-linear system the matrices A, B and D can be functions of the state
vector X of the system.
A. X B.U 0, Y D. X
We note that in the case of an impulse input, the response and the outputs of an
instantaneous-response system involve a discontinuity. As nature does not contain
discontinuities in such situations, we have in reality a continuous transitional regime
involving a singular perturbation (section 6.4.3).
410 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The formulae used by engineers for over two centuries are external
representations which correspond to operating conditions of the system, which are
more or less well (or badly) defined. Models which use continuous-medium
Thermal Systems and Models 411
equations are state representations in which the inputs and outputs take the form of
simple formulae corresponding to the system studied under particular conditions.
These simplified external representations are then often used in more general
conditions in which their degree of approximation is difficult to evaluate. For
example, in a flow system comprising a pipe of length L and of diameter D, in which
the mass flow q m is given (as an input), an interesting output is the pressure
difference 'p in the flow between the input and output sections. This will depend,
for example, on the mass flux, on the viscosity, on the density of the fluid and on the
dimension k of the roughness of the pipe. We will therefore have, in non-
dimensional form for the pressure 'p :
2
qm L § k·
'p Ue /¨¨ Re, ¸¸ [8.2]
2 D © D¹
2S
The pragmatic approach, from the point of view of control and command of a
system, often consists of considering only the observable outputs such as the
temperature, the pressure, certain concentrations of chemical species, fluxes, etc., at
points in an industrial system where measurement is possible. The objective of
control is to fix the values of certain output variables (temperature, pressure, etc.) or
certain state variables. The commands act on the input variables which may be of
the same nature as the output variables. In practice, we content ourselves with the
examination of the response of the system to perturbations such that we can estimate
the corrections which need to be made. The study of a response curve allows us to
define the global order of a system.
Modeling a sub-system leads us to define and choose the variables necessary for
its dynamic description, and in particular stocks and fluxes of extensive quantities at
each instant. The discrete equations result from the application of the balance
equations to each of the sub-systems. The extensive quantities are additive and they
are always defined for any given sub-system.
Thermal Systems and Models 413
T T
T2
T2
M1 M2 M1 M2
T1 T1
x x
A1 A2 A1 A2
(a) (b)
The behavior laws necessary to close the system of equations of the system
create a particular difficulty, as the thermodynamics fluxes which cross a surface are
related to the local gradients of the intensive quantities of the local continuous
medium. The problem is thus to express these by means of the intensive quantities
of the neighboring sub-systems. There is no general solution to this problem. Let us
take as an example the thermal resistance between two elements. Consider a fixed
1D continuous medium which is modeled as two blocks E1 and E2 which are
homogenous and of width A1 and A2 (Figure 8.3). For a fixed homogenous medium,
the mean temperatures T1 and T2 of each element are defined here by taking the
mean of the temperatures. Attributing the mean temperature to the central points of
the elements may appear natural. However, if the temperature gradient at the
interface is equal to the slope of the segment M1M2 in the temperature distribution
of Figure 8.3a, the same is not necessarily so in the case of Figure 8.3b.
x
Qi ³xnn 1 U CdT U CeTi
En
En-1
e e e x
We must now express the thermal fluxes between two neighboring elements.
Assuming that the middle of each element is at temperature Ti, we can write the
thermal flux qTi,i+1 received by Ei from Ei+1:
Ti Ti 1
qTi , i 1 O
e
We note that this expression satisfies the principal of action and reaction
( qTi1, i qTi1, i ) associated with the conservation of energy. If there is no lateral
thermal flux, the balance equation can be written for each element Ei:
dTi Ti Ti 1 Ti Ti 1 2Ti Ti 1 Ti 1
U Ce O O O [8.3]
dt e e e
We have seen (section 6.5.2.2) that the balance equation of a quantity g in a pipe
can be written by means of surface integrals on a cross-section and an integral over
the contour of this section ([6.82]). We thus consider a cutting out of the pipe into n
surfaces Si with an inter-surface spacing of e (Figure 8.4). Let u (t , M ) and T (t , M )
be the velocity and temperature distributions in the cross-section; we define below
the mean temperature Ti and the mean mixing-temperature Tmi for the section Si:
1
Ti t ³Si Tds; Tmi t ³Si u Tds
qv
w U CT
³S
wt
ds
w
wx S
³ U uCTds ³S V T ds ³C qTp dA
En
En-1
e e e S x
The calculation of the convective thermal flux between two successive surfaces
must be realized from upstream to downstream of the flow (section 5.6.1) and the
derivative w wx should be discretized between the sections Si-1 and Si. Let Tpi be the
temperature of the wall associated with the surface Si; the preceding equation [6.87]
can thus be written:
U CSe
dTi
U Cq v Tmi 1 Tmi 1
eF h T pi Tmi [8.4]
dt
w
³ U gdv
wt S
M SG ³S V G dv
S1 S2 S3
M 12
M 23
The balances can be obtained for sub-systems which are partially over-lapped.
Figure 3.6 shows the case of three contiguous sub-systems S1, S2 and S3: the sub-
system S2 S3 overlaps S2, but it is possible to write the balance equations for the 3
disjoint sub-systems or for the three ensembles of sub-systems different two by two.
This manner of proceeding is nonetheless limited by the fact that the system of
equations obtained must be suitably enough conditioned (section 7.2.7.3), each
equation providing specific and sufficient information. The sum of the internal
fluxes exchanged between the sub-systems is zero (principle of action and reaction).
In the construction of models and numerical schemes we must be careful that this
property is ensured (conservative scheme).
Thermal Systems and Models 417
dg j
dg i
! N ij y j y i ! ;
! N ji y i y j !
dt dt
dg i dg j
! N ij y j ! ; ! N ji y i !
dt dt
Denoting by U the group of sources of the quantity gi and defining the state
vectors G and Y of the extensive quantities gi and the corresponding intensive
quantities yi, the balance equations can be written in the general form:
dG
KY JU [8.5]
dt
So, the extensive variable gi and the intensive variable yi of a sub-system are
related by a state equation. Passage to the form [8.1] of the state representation of
the system can often be realized in thermal systems by expressing in each of the sub-
systems the extensive variable gi as a function of the only corresponding intensive
variable yi, g i g i y i . By defining the diagonal matrix ' of positive elements
d ij G ij dg i dy i , we have in this case:
418 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
dG dY
' [8.6]
dt dt
dX
A. X BU with : A '1 K B '1 J . [8.7]
dt
It is easy to verify that the matrix A '1 .K of equation [8.1] is not symmetric,
except if the value of each element dij is independent of the index i (identical sub-
systems). The reader can verify these considerations by means of the example in
section 8.3.1.3 by comparing equations [8.23] and [8.24] (or [8.28] and [8.29]). The
importance of this property for the linear case is discussed in section 8.2.2.2.
x(t ) a1 x t xt cG t x0 x 0 0 [8.8]
By integrating between 0 and a small time H and assuming that the functions
xt and x t remain bounded, we obtain:
x H c x(H ) oH
x(t ) a1 x t xt 0; xH oH , x H c [8.9]
x(t ) a1 x t xt 0; x0 0, x 0 c [8.10]
The reader can verify in the same way that non-linear problem [8.11] is
equivalent to problem [8.12]:
dX
A X . X (t ) B.U t X 0G t X 0 0 [8.11]
dt
dX
A X . X (t ) B.U t X 0 X0 [8.12]
dt
We can replace the initial conditions with these additional impulse inputs which
act on the state variables. In certain cases, these can be realized by acting on the
existing inputs U, except if the number of state variables n is greater than the
number of independent inputs. In summary, it is often not possible to make clear
conceptual distinctions between inputs and initial conditions (or boundary
conditions) such that they appear in the mathematical representation of a model.
quantity with the variables which are used to represent the system). A conservative
scheme avoids the amplification of numerical errors which are integrated into the
balance of physical quantities. It cannot of course correct the unstable character of a
physical system. The finite element method is not conservative, contrary to the finite
volume method. Finite difference schemes may or may not be conservative. Finally,
it is important to remember that, regardless of the method used for discretizing the
equations, numerical schemes and algorithms used should respect the rules of
transmission of information from one point or element to another which results from
the character elliptic, hyperbolic, parabolic or mixed of the equations (section 5.6.1).
dX
A. X B.U , X 0 X0 [8.13]
dt
The linearity of equation [8.13] makes it possible to use the usual methods of
solving linear differential equations. The solution is the sum:
– of a particular solution X e (t ) of the complete system [8.14]:
dX e
A. X e B.U [8.14]
dt
– and a solution Xˆ (t ) of the homogenous system [8.15] adjusted such that the
solution satisfies the initial conditions:
dXˆ
A. Xˆ , Xˆ 0 X e 0 X0 [8.15]
dt
The solutions of the homogenous system [8.15] are real decaying exponentials or
damped sinusoidal functions if the system is stable. They represent transitional
regimes.
A /I
4 0 I unit matrix
[8.16]
Equation [8.16] only has non-zero solutions for particular values /i, which are
known as eigenvalues, of which there are n, including their eventual multiplicity.
For each value /i the solutions of equation [8.16] are of the form ci 4 i , where 4i is
an eigenvector associated with the eigenvalue /i (ci is some constant). An
eigenvalue and its associated eigenvectors are known collectively as a mode. The
eigenvalues are real and negative for aperiodic modes (in thermal systems in
particular) or complex with a real part which may be negative for oscillatory damped
modes or zero for unamped modes (in acoustics for example). By limiting ourselves
here to thermal systems, the eigenvalues Xˆ i t can be written:
Xˆ i t 4 i exp/ i t
The scalar coefficients ci are calculated from the initial condition X 0 which is
assumed to be known:
422 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
n
X 0 X e 0 ¦ ci 4 i [8.18]
i 1
The transitional regimes are solutions comprising the return to rest of the
homogenous system (or to the established regime X e (t ) of the system with a right-
hand side) from non-zero initial conditions (or eventually zero for an established
regime X e (t ) ). Having determined the eigenvectors 4i, the coefficients ci are
solutions of linear system [8.18], the matrix of which is full; for a large number n of
equations this system is ill-conditioned (section 7.2.7.3). However, if a scalar
product exists U V ! for which the matrix A is self-adjoint
( AU V ! U A V ! ), the eigenvalues 4i are orthogonal (taking account of
[8.16], if / i z / j , we have 4 i 4 j ! /i 1 A4 i 4 j ! /j1 4 i A4 j ! 0 ).
For the scalar product U V U t 'V V t 'U of the vectors U and V , defined
with the diagonal matrix ' (relation [8.6]), K being symmetric, this leads to:
ci X 0 X e 0t '. X i X it '. X i
T1 T2 T1ex T1 T2ex T2
M1, 2 ; M1w ; M 2w . [8.20]
R R' R'
The initial temperatures T1 (0) and T2 (0) and the external temperatures T1ex(t)
and T2ex(t) are given.
m m
T1ex T1 T2 T2ex
M1w M1,2 M2w
R' E1 R E2 R'
Taking account of [8.20], the energy balance of each sub-system allows the
obtaining of a differential system for the temperatures T1 t and T2 t :
or in matrix form:
§ §1 1· 1 ·
¨ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¸
d §T · ¨ © R R' ¹ R ¸§¨ T1 ·¸ 1 §¨ T1ex ·¸
mC ¨¨ 1 ¸¸ ¨ [8.21]
dt © T2 ¹ ¨ 1 § 1 1 · ¸¨ T ¸ T ¸
¨¨ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¸¸© 2 ¹ R ' © 2ex ¹
© R © R R' ¹ ¹
Searching for solutions of the form 4 e rt for the homogenous system associated
with [8.21] gives the eigenvalue equation (characteristic equation):
§1 1· 1
¨¨ ¸¸ mCr 2
© R R' ¹ R §1 1 · 1
¨¨ mCr ¸¸ 0
1 §1 1· © R R' ¹ R2
¨¨ ¸¸ mCr
R © R R' ¹
1 1 §2 1·
r1 ; r2 ¨¨ ¸¸ [8.22]
mCR ' mC © R R ' ¹
From these we can find the components (4i1, 4i2) of the eigenvectors 4i (i = 1,
2), which are solutions to the system of equations:
§ §1 1· 1 ·
¨ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¸
§4 · ¨ © R R' ¹ R ¸§¨ 4 i1 ·¸
mCr ¨¨ i1 ¸¸
© 4i2 ¹
¨ 1 §1 1 · ¸¨ 4 ¸
¨¨ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¸¸© i 2 ¹
© R © R R' ¹ ¹
We obtain:
– mode 1 (symmetric, i = 1, with 411 = 412 = 1):
Thermal Systems and Models 425
1
r1 ; T11 T12 exp t / mCR '
mCR'
1 §2 1· § t §2 1 ··
r2 ¨¨ ¸¸; T21 T22 exp¨¨ ¨¨ ¸¸ ¸¸
mC © R R ' ¹ © mC © R R' ¹ ¹
The fast mode T2(t) corresponds here to the establishment of internal equilibrium
of the system, while the slow mode T1(t) represents the establishment of equilibrium
between the system and the exterior. For a system isolated from the exterior (infinite
R’), we obtain:
2t ·
T1 (t ) T2 (t ) T1 0 T2 0, T1 (t ) T2 (t ) T1 0 T2 0 exp§¨¨ ¸¸
© mCR ¹
E1and E2 via the thermal resistances of the same value R/2. As before, the sub-
systems E1 and E2 are each in contact via a thermal resistance of the same value R’,
with the external medium at temperature Ti ex(t) (i = 1,2). Sub-system E3 is isolated
from the exterior.
dT1 §2 1 · 2T T
mC T1 ¨¨ ¸¸ 3 1ex ;
dt © R R' ¹ R R'
dT2 §2 1 · 2T T
mC T2 ¨¨ ¸¸ 3 2ex ; [8.23]
dt © R R' ¹ R R'
dT3 2T1 2T2 4T3
m' C .
dt R R R
m m'=Hm m
T1ex R' T1 R/2 T3 R/2 T2 R' T2ex
M1p M1,3 M3,2 M2p
E1 E3 E2
m'
The system of equations can be written in matrix form (with H ):
m
§ R ·
¨ 2 0 2 ¸
§ T1 · ¨ R' ¸§ T1 · § T1ex ·
d ¨ ¸ 1 ¨ R ¸¨ ¸ 1 ¨ ¸
¨ T2 ¸ ¨ 0 2 2 ¸¨ T2 ¸ ¨ T2ex ¸ [8.24]
dt ¨ ¸ mCR ¨ R' ¨ ¸ mCR ' ¨ 0 ¸
© T3 ¹ ¨ 2H 2H 4 H ¸¸© T3 ¹ © ¹
¨ ¸
© ¹
a/ 0 2
0 a/ 2 >
a / H /2 /4 H a 4a 8 @ 0 [8.25]
2 2 4H /
4 H a r 16 8H 4 a H 2 a 2
/1 a; / i , i 2,3 [8.26]
2H
As the sum of the roots /2 and / 3 of the equation are negative and their product
is positive, the two roots are negative (a diffusive system is aperiodic).
/ a 4 i1 24 i3 ; H / 44 i3 44 i1
+ + + + 0 – + – +
/2 /1 /3
Figure 8.9. Structure of normal modes classed with increasing modulus of the eigenvalues
r2 r1 r3 (decreasing time constants)
428 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The structure of the modes is shown in Figure 8.9. The time constant of a mode
is equal to 1 r . The preceding discussion shows that we have r2 r1 r3 . The
slowest mode corresponds to the root r2 for which the three sub-systems at the same
temperature constitute a thermodynamic system in equilibrium, a structure for which
the thermal inertia is greatest towards the thermal resistances R’. On the other hand,
the most “agitated” mode corresponds to the smallest time constant 1 r3 .
Suppose now that the mass m’ of the sub-system E3 is small compared to the
mass m of the sub-systems E1 and E2 (i.e. H << 1). Performing a series development
of the roots [8.26], we obtain:
4
/1 a; /3 O1 /2 2 a OH
H
1 §2 1· 4 1
r1 ¨¨ ¸¸ r3 r2
mC © R R ' ¹ H mCR mCR '
The values r1 and r2 are those already found ([8.22]) for the system studied in
section 8.3.1. As the value of r3 is large compared to r1 and r2, mode 3 is very
quickly damped; after this damping, we have the relation [8.19] for i =3, which can
here be written Xˆ t t '.4 0 . Replacing X̂ t , ' (a matrix which allows us to
3
pass from [8.23] to [8.24]) and 43 by their values at small H:
§ T1 · § mC 0 0 · § 1 ·
¨ ¸ ¨ ¸ ¨ ¸
Xˆ t ¨ T2 ¸; ' ¨ 0 mC 0 ¸; 43 ¨ 1 ¸
¨T ¸ ¨ 0 0 H mC ¸¹ ¨ 2 / H ¸
© 3¹ © © ¹
we obtain:
§ R· m'
or, in matrix form, letting: a ¨¨ 2 ¸¸ and H :
© R' ¹ m
§ T1 · § a 1 1 ·§ T1 · § T1ex ·
d ¨ ¸ 1 ¨ ¸¨ ¸ 1 ¨ ¸
¨ T2 ¸ ¨ 1 a 1 ¸¨ T2 ¸ ¨ T2ex ¸ [8.29]
dt ¨ ¸ mCR ¨ mCR ' ¨
© T3 ¹ ©1 H 1 H a H ¸¹¨© T3 ¸¹ ¸
© T3ex H ¹
T1ex m m T2ex
R' T1 R T2 R'
M1w M1,2 M2w
E1 R R E2
M3,1 T3 m' M3,2 E3
Searching for solutions of the form 4i e rt for the homogenous system associated
with [8.29] gives the non-dimensional eigenvalue equation, where we have let
/ mCR r :
430 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
a/ 1 1
1 a/ 1 0
1 1 a H /
or:
H / 3 / 2 a1 2H / 2 H 1 a 2 a 2a 12 0 [8.30]
Taking account of the system symmetry, we see immediately that the anti-
symmetric mode verifies the relations 411 412 and 413 0 . Substituting
these relations into the equations of the homogenous system, we find that the
corresponding eigenvalue is equal to /1 (a 1) . The characteristic equation
[8.30] can be written:
/ 1 a
[% / 2 (%(a 1) a)/ (a 1)(a 2)] 0 [8.31]
/i
a H a 1 r a 2 2H a 2 a 4 H 2 1 a 2
2H
The structure of the modes can be obtained by simple reasoning. Taking account
of the system symmetry, the other eigenfunctions should present the symmetry
4 i1 4 i 2 . Substituting this relation into the homogenous system derived from
[8.29], we obtain:
/ i a 14 i1 4 i3 ; H / i a 4 i3 24 i1
We immediately find that the values /L which satisfy the preceding relations are
the roots of the second order trinomial of characteristic equation [8.31]. The values
of 4L1 and 4L3 have the same sign or opposite sign depending on whether H / i a
is positive or negative. Substituting H a as the value of /L in the preceding
trinomial, we find that this takes on a negative value, showing that this value is
between the roots of the trinomial. The result is that the quantity H / i a is
positive for the largest root /3, whereas it is negative for the other root /2. Figure
8.11 shows the structure of the three modes.
Thermal Systems and Models 431
E1 E2 E1 E2 E1 E2
+ + + – + +
E3 + E3 0 E3 –
/2 /1 = - a - 1 /3
For small values of the calorific capacity m'C of sub-system E3, a development
in H gives the values:
a 2
/3 O1 /2 a 1 OH
H a
1 § 3 1· 1 §2 1· 1 § R 3R ' ·
r1 ¨¨ ¸¸ r3 ¨¨ ¸¸ r2 ¨¨ ¸¸
mC © R R ' ¹ mCH © R R ' ¹ mCR ' © R 2 R ' ¹
As in the case of three components in series, r3 is much larger than r1 and r2, and
mode 3 is thus rapidly damped. The third equation of system [8.28] can thus be
written:
2T3 T1 T2 T3 T3ex
0
R R'
The reader can verify that the preceding relation is identical to condition [8.19].
Contrary to the case of three components in series, the limit of this system for m' = 0
is not the preceding system of two sub-systems (section 8.3.1.2).
8.3.2.1. Overview
The idea of a continuous medium amounts to replacing an integer valued index
(number of components of the state vector X) by a spatial variable of continuous
values. The temporal and spatial behaviors of the system are thus continuous
functions or piecewise continuous. However, we have seen in Chapter 5 that the
theory of characteristics allows us to identify different behaviors for these variables.
If the time is by nature irreversible, the spatial properties or spatio-temporal
432 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
wT w 2T
a A d x d A [8.32]
wt wx 2
As equation [8.32] is linear, the methodology is the same as before: the complete
solution can be obtained by superposition of the particular solution Te x, t of
equation [8.32] satisfying the non-zero boundary conditions and a general solution
of the heat equation with zero boundary conditions for the temperature. As in section
8.2.2.2, the coefficients of this solution are calculated such that the complete
solution satisfies the initial conditions.
In order to simplify the notation of the general solution, let us take the non-
dimensional variables:
~ ~
x x A; t a t A2 [8.33]
wT w 2T
~ 1 d ~x d 1 [8.34]
wt w~
x2
Thermal Systems and Models 433
~
f ' (t ) g" ( ~
x)
~ ~ cte / 2 [8.35]
f (t ) g(x )
~ ~
f (t ) exp(/ 2 t ) [8.36]
g" ( ~
x ) / 2 g (~
x) 0; g r 1 0 [8.37]
The integration of equation [8.37] shows that the eigenfunctions are of the form
x ) A cos/ ~
g (~ x B . The expression of boundary conditions [8.37] at ~x r1
gives the values of the constants / and B. We thus obtain:
S S
/ B pS ; / B p' S ( p, p' : integers)
2 2
or:
S S S
/ p p ' ; B p p '
2 2 2
In the preceding expressions p – p' and p + p' have the same parity:
– if p – p'=2k is even, we have / 2k kS and the corresponding eigenfunctions
are odd: g 2k sin>kS ~ x @;
S
– if p – p' = 2k + 1 is odd, we have / 2k 2k 1 and the eigenvalues are
2
ª S º
even: g 2k 1 cos «2k 1 ~
x» .
¬ 2 ¼
The first eigenfunctions of the wall problem at zero wall temperature are
represented in Figure 8.12.
2 The system being damped, the constant of equation [8.36] is necessarily negative.
434 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
gi gi
-1 1 -1 1
~
x ~
x
: g1 : g3 : g5 : g7 : g2 : g4 : g6 : g8
1 '' ~ 1 '
³1 g 'p g q' d~
1
³1 g p g q dx ³1 g p dg q x
1
g p gq'' gq g p'' ¯ dx 0.
hence: ¨ 1 ¢¡ ±°
f
Te~
x , t ¦ ci exp( /2i t ) g i ( ~
~ ~ ~
T (~
x, t ) x) [8.38]
0
~
The coefficients ci are calculated at the instant t 0:
f
T (~
x ,0) T0 ~
x Te ~
x ,0 ¦ c i g i ( ~
x)
0
The established solution Te ~x , t is thus constant and equal to T1. The coefficients
~
c2k corresponding to the odd eigenfunctions are zero. Formula [8.39] gives, for the
coefficients of the even eigenfunctions:
1k 4
c 2k 1 T0 T1
2k 1S
From this we can derive the solution of the thermal shock problem T1 – T0
applied on the two faces of a wall of thickness 2A:
~ S2 ~
T (~ 1k 4 2k 1
2
x , t ) T0 f t ª S º
1 ¦ e 4 . cos «2k 1 ~
x» [8.40]
T1 T0 k 0 2k 1S ¬ 2 ¼
1 1 ~ ~ ~
The mean3 temperature Tm ³ T ( x , t )dx can be expressed:
2 1
~ S2 ~
2 k 1
2
Tm ( t ) T0 f 8 t
1 ¦ e 4 [8.41]
T1 T0 k 0 2k 12 S 2
This expression allows us to know the contribution of each mode (Table 8.1) to
the thermal energy supplied by conduction, this being proportional to the relative
d
8 2k 1
2
amplitude of the mode (we have 2 1):
k0
Mode number 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Mode amplitude 0.8106 0.0901 0.0324 0.0165 0.0100 0.0067 0.0048
The wall behaves in a manner similar to a first order system, since only 20% of
the heat is exchanged more rapidly in modes higher than the first mode. The density
of the thermal flux qTp A, t O wT wx x A on the face of the wall at -A can be
derived from [8.40]. Infinite at time t = 0, it decays very rapidly in the first instants
and it can immediately be written in non-dimensional form:
S 2 at
AqTp A, t 2 k 1
2
f
2¦ e 4 A2 . [8.42]
O T1 T0 0
T
T1
f
5
4 3
2
1
–A T0 x
0 A
Figure 8.13 shows the evolution of the temperature profiles with time (curves
from 0 to 5). The curve 0 is the distribution at the initial instant where we impose the
temperature T1 on the walls ( x rA ). The diffusion of this condition occurs
progressively from the walls: the curves 1 and 2 represent the thermal shocks in a
quasi-infinite medium from the walls. The thermal diffusion zones are then rejoined
on the other curves (3 to 5). On curves 4 and 5, observed after a non-dimensional
time in the order of 1//1, only the first mode g1 remains, and it damps until its
amplitude falls to zero.
T T0 § x A· §~x 1· 2 ~x 1 / 2 ~
t u2
1 erf ¨¨ ¸
¸ 1 erf ¨ ¸ 1 ³0 e du
T1 T0 ¨ ~ ¸ S
© 2 at ¹ © 2 t ¹
The complete solution which represents the two boundary layers can be written:
T T0 §~x 1 ·¸ §~x 1 ·¸
2 erf ¨ erf ¨ [8.43]
T1 T0 ¨ ~¸ ¨ ~ ¸
©2 t ¹ © 2 t ¹
§ wT · O
qTp O ¨¨ ¸¸ T1 T0
© wx ¹ x A Sat
A qTp A, t
~
1
[8.44]
O T1 T0 S ~t
The mean temperature of the wall in the thermal boundary layer regime can be
obtained by performing the energy balance in the wall between instants 0 and t:
O du
U Tm T0 CA ³0 qTp u du
t
T1 T0 ³0t T1 T0 2 O t
S au Sa
or:
Tm t T0 2 ~
t [8.45]
T1 T0 S
thermal flux density is unusable and we thus have recourse to expression [8.44]
which is equivalent to the sum of the series [8.42] in these conditions.
We are thus led to search for a formula which contains the two different
asymptotic expressions f1(t) and f2(t) of the function f(t), which are valid for small
and large values of t respectively following the time value. This can be obtained by
means of a matching formula or a weight between the two temporal domains which
gives exact values for the function f and its temporal derivative at the origin, and
which respects the asymptotic behavior at infinity. A simple means consists of
weighting the two formulae by a suitable auxiliary function M(t) close to 1 for small t
and tending quite quickly to zero for t equal to infinity. The expression:
f t M t f1 t 1 M t f 2 t
satisfies these conditions if the function M(t) at least satisfies the relations
M 0 1, M ' 0 M f 0 and if M'(t) tends at infinity faster to zero than f 2 t ; we
have:
~2
The simplest weighting function is the Gaussian M t
~
e D t .
Let us apply this procedure to obtain a quite simple expression of the solution
valid all over the interval [-A,+A]. We take as our asymptotic expression at infinity
the modal solution limited to the first mode, and for small t, the boundary layer
solution. We will choose the mean temperature in order to determine the matching
condition. A simple numerical calculation shows that the difference between the
values of expression [8.41] limited to the first mode and formula [8.45] is minimal
~
in the vicinity of t 0.20 . Taking as a weighting function the Gaussian
~2
M t e D t and taking M(0.2) equal to 0.5, we find D = 7.5.
~
The mixed representation thus obtained for the first mode of the temperature Tm
can be written:
Thermal Systems and Models 439
Tm t
T0 2 t ¯
2
e 7.5. t 2 t 1 e7.5. t 2 ¡1 8 .e 4 °
[8.46]
T1 T0 ¡ 2 °
¡¢ °±
The corresponding expression for the wall’s thermal flux density is thus:
AqTp A, t
1 2
2.e
t
7.5. t 2 7.5. t 2
e 1 e 4
[8.47]
T1 T0
t
T T0 ¬ ¬¯
2
e7.5. t ¡ 2 erf x 1 erf x 1°
¡
T1 T0 ¢¡
2 t ® 2 t ®°±°
4 2 t x ¯°
1 e7.5. t ¡¡1 e 4 cos
2
2 °±°
¢¡
The interest in simple analytic expressions is clear; furthermore, the precision of
the approximations effected can be improved as much as we desire by conserving
additional terms of the modal solution in the preceding composite solution.
With equation [8.32] on the intervals [–A,0–] and [0+,A], we must associate:
– the matching condition involving the thermal resistance between the two sub-
systems:
§ wT · § wT · T (0 ) T ( 0 )
O ¨¨ ¸¸ O ¨¨ ¸¸ [8.48]
© wx ¹0 © wx ¹0 R
440 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
– the boundary conditions of the system: thermal flux densities given (or
eventually the temperature or thermal resistance) at the points x rA ;
– the initial temperature distribution T x,0 .
§ wT · § wT · § wT · A
¨¨ ~ ¸¸ 0; ¨¨ ~ ¸¸ ¨¨ ~ ¸¸ >T (0 ) T (0 )@ [8.49]
© wx ¹ r1 © wx ¹ 0 © wx ¹ 0 OR
g" ( ~
x ) / 2 g (~
x) 0;
A [8.50]
g ' r 1 0; g ' (0 ) g ' (0 ) >g (0 ) g (0 )@
OR
1 d ~
x 0: g (~
x) A cos/ ~
x B
~
0 x d1: ~
g(x ) A cos/ x B
~
A ./ sin / B A ./ sin / B 0
or:
Matching condition [8.49] for the thermal flux densities at x = 0 can be written:
B B 0; A A ; / 2k kS (k integer) [8.53]
4 We will number the functions with even numbers (respectively odd) for even eigenvalues
(respectively odd) with increasing order of the eigenvalues.
442 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
gi
+1
-1 +1
~
x /
/ / / /
-1
0 S S S S S S S
: g0 : g2 : g4 : g6 : 2P// : tan/
(a) (b)
Figure 8.15. (a) Even eigenfunctions of two walls separate by a thermal resistance;
(b) graphical solution of the eigenvalue equation in the case of odd eigenfunctions
2) Odd eigenfunctions. Substituting the values [8.51] of the pairs (B–, B+) into
first relation [8.52], we obtain a second group of solutions (B v 0, B v 0):
B B ; A A or B B S ; A A
Substituting this expression into [8.52], and taking account of [8.51], we obtain
the eigenvalue equation:
/ tan / 2P [8.54]
0 x d 1: g 2k 1 ( ~
x) A2k 1 cos / 2k 1 ~
x 1
g1 gi
+1 +1
-1 +1 -1 +1
~x ~x
–1 –1
P = 0.05 P = 0.5 : g1 : g3
P=3 P=f : g5 : g7
(a) Variations of the eigenfunction (b) Discontinuous eigenvalues for
g 1 for different values of P. P = 0.05.
Figure 8.16. Odd eigenvalues for two walls separated by a thermal resistance
If the thermal resistance R tends to zero, P becomes large and the eigenvalues
S
/ 2k 1 tend to the odd eigenvalues kS of the total isolated system. We thus
2
2k 1 S x
find the odd eigenfunctions sin of the conduction problem for an
2
insulated wall (and of course, the temperature continuity at the origin).
Wk A 2 a/2k
A2 A2 U CAR
W1
a /21 2aP 2
We find the time constant of the thermodynamic model of section 8.3.1.2 in the
particular case where we have R' = 0, with m U A .
1
> '' '' ~
³1 g p g q g q g p dx @
g p 0 g q' 0 g q 0 g 'p 0 g p 0 g q' 0 g q 0 g 'p 0
Taking account of conditions [8.48] for the thermal resistance at x = 0 and after
'' ''
replacing g p and g q by their expressions taken from equation [8.50], we see that
1
g p gq'' gq g p'' ¯ dx is zero if p is not equal to q:
the integral ¨
1
¡¢ °±
1 1
g p gq'' gq g p'' ¯ dx / 2p / q2
¨ ¡
1 ¢ ±° ¨1 g p gq dx 0
The eigenfunctions gp and gq are orthogonal for the scalar product
f , g ! ³1 fgd~
1
x.
Thermal Systems and Models 445
f 2 2~ ~
~ ~
T (~ x , t ) ¦ §¨ c 2 k e k S t cos(kS ~
Te ( ~ x ) ·¸ [8.55]
x ) c 2 k 1 e / 2 k 1 t g 2 k 1 ( ~
2
x, t )
k 0 © ¹
1
with c2 k 1
³ >T( x, 0 ) T ( x, 0 )@ g
1 e 2 k 1 ( x )dx
k 0 ,1, 2 ,...,n,...
1
³ g ( x )dx
2
1 2 k 1
1 1 1
c0
2 ³1
>T( x, 0 ) Te ( x, 0 )@ dx;
c2 k ³ >T( x, 0 ) T ( x, 0 )@ cos( kS x )dx k
1 e 1, 2,...,n,...
The same is true for the preceding models for continuous media, for which we
replace the temperature distribution T(x,t) in two continuous variables by a
denumerable sequence of series development coefficients ci [8.55] of eigenfunctions
associated with the physical model used. In a manner analogous to the development
of a periodic function in a Fourier series, the information necessary to characterize
the solution has been considerably reduced through the use of basis functions
adapted to the problem.
the solution decays with time, the effect of the second law of thermodynamics
(increasing entropy) being to homogenize the temperature.
8.4.1. Overview
Consider for example a linear invariant system for which the inputs are zero.
This is the modeling of an isolated homogenous system which evolves towards
equilibrium and which is characterized by a zero value for the state vector and the
outputs. Suppose that we impose as initial conditions given values (step functions
for example) for p components (p < n) of the state vector, the other components
being zero. This initial vector must be decomposed on eigenvectors of the
homogenous system, and apart from some particular cases, none of these
components is zero. The responses to these excitations comprise the n eigenmodes,
but they belong to a family of only p parameters which form a vector sub-space of
dimension p of the output space, which we can study directly.
hY1 t represents the evolution of the system outputs to this impulse on the first
input. Now, any given input u1 t can be considered as the superposition of Dirac
distributions:
u1 t ³0 u1 W G t W dW
f
Y1 t ³0 hY 1 t W u1 W .dW
f
[8.56]
The impulse response of the output vector therefore makes the characterization
of the response of a stationary linear system to any input excitation possible.
Y t ³0 H Y t W .U W .dW
f
[8.57]
As an input vector is usually of smaller dimension than the state vector, the
impulse response matrix H Y (t ) is a reduced model of the system adapted to its
operating conditions and which is not equivalent to the state representation of
section 8.1.2.
This matrix contains p*q time functions whose useful duration is equal to a
number of times the largest damping time constant. The quantity of information is
here much greater than in the case of the state representation: this is the result of the
absence of a model. For the linear time-invariant5 thermal system, each of the
5 Responses of stable systems usually studied in fluid mechanics and acoustics present an
oscillatory damped character.
448 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The result of formula [8.57] is that at a given instant, the state of a linear
invariant system depends only on the inputs belonging to a past which is at most
equal to the duration of the impulse response.
NOTE – The preceding procedure can also be applied to a state vector X(t). The
application of a Dirac impulse as an input of index i provides the state vector h Xi t .
Operating in a similar fashion on the ensemble of inputs, we obtain the matrix
H X (t ) of impulse responses of the state vector, of dimension n * p, which allows us
to obtain the response of the state vector to any given input U(t):
X t ³0 H X t W .U W .dW
f
However, the direct measurement of state variables is not easy in general, and
the impulse response matrix H X (t ) of the state vector is only of limited interest.
a 0 x a1 x' a 2 x' ' a 3 x' ' ' u; y d 0 x d1 x' d 2 x' ' [8.58]
Calculating the linear combination d 0u d1u 'd 2u '' and eliminating x(t) and its
derivatives with [8.58], we obtain a differential equation for the output y (t):
n p
¦ ai x i u; yj ¦ d jk x k [8.60]
i 0 k 0
We obtain:
Thermal Systems and Models 449
n n p p
i
¦ ai y j ¦ ¦ ai d jk x i k ¦ d jk u k [8.61]
i 0 i 0k 0 k 0
1 §1 1· 1 Tiex
a11 a 22 ¨¨ ¸¸; a12 a 21 ; ui i 1,2 .
mC © R R ' ¹ mCR mCR '
Differentiating the first equation [8.62] and eliminating T2' by means of second
relation [8.62], we obtain a second order differential equation satisfied by T1:
Taking the output variable in the form [8.58]: y d 0 T1 d1T1' , the external
representation can be obtained from [8.59]:
L f p ³0 f t e dt
f pt
[8.65]
L f ' p pL f p f 0
This property allows us to transform the system of differential equations and the
initial conditions into a system of algebraic equations between the transforms of the
variables. For example, the differential equation transform:
mx f x kx u t
can be written:
m p 2
f p k L x px0 x' 0 Lu
or:
Lu p px0 x 0
Lx p [8.66]
m p2 f p k
pL X X 0 AL X B.LU ; LY D.L X
Thermal Systems and Models 451
We can thus deduce the transforms of the solution X t and of the output vector
Y t :
LX p
pI A
¢ BLU p
X 0
¯± : LY D.LX .
-1
[3.67]
As the inverse of a matrix M is equal to the ratio between the transpose of its
comatrix6 and its determinant ([HAR 98]), the elements of the matrix pI A of
1
X t ¦ X j P j U t [8.69]
j
The output vector Y D. X can be written in an analogous form [8.69] with the
universal vectors D Xj and the parameters Pj:
Y t D X t ¦ D X j P j U t [8.70]
j
We can note that the solution of the system obtained by solving equations [8.14]
and [8.15] of the state representation using the variation of constants method is not
in general of the form [8.69] or [8.70].
dX
H A. X B.U [8.71]
dt
f
X t ¦ H i X i t [8.72]
0
A. X 0 t B.U t 0; ! ! !! !
A. X 1 t X 0' t ; A. X i t X i' 1 t ; [8.73]
A. X 2 t X 1' t ; ! ! !! !
X 0 t A 1 B.U t ; ! ! !! !
X 1 t A 2 B.U ' t ; X i t A i 1 B.U (i ) t ;
X 2 t A 3 B.U ' ' t ; ! ! !! !
f
X t A 1 B.U t ¦ A i 1 B.U (i ) t
i 1
[8.74]
Y t C. X D.U > @
ª f º
CA B. D .U t C.« ¦ A i 1 B.U (i ) t »
1
¬ 1 ¼
The idea of form parameters can be introduced by means of the simple example
of a system with a scalar input u t . Solution [8.74] can thus be written:
ª f u (i ) t º
X t u t « A 1 B. ¦ A i 1 B. » [8.75]
«¬ i 1 u t »¼
i
The parameters u t u t are form parameters of the problem and determine
the structure of the solution.
pI A1
A 1 I pA 1
1
>
A 1 I pA 1 p 2 A 2 .. p n A n .@
or:
LX A pI 1 B.LU >
A 1 I pA 1 p 2 A 2 ... p n A n .... B.LU @
This expression is indeed the Laplace transform of the first equation [8.74].
NOTES –
1) Temporal series of the form [8.74] (or [8.76]) which describes in parametric
form how the established regimes can be derived from responses obtained by the
convolution integral [8.57] in which we perform a Taylor series development. For
example, for the state vector, taking account of the commutativity of the convolution
product, we have:
Thermal Systems and Models 455
d 2 d ¯
X t
¨ U t
.H
d ¨¡U t
U ' t
U ' t
...°H
d
0 0 ¡ 2 °
¢ ±
d d d 2
U t
¨ H
d U ' t
.¨ H
d U '' t
¨ H
d ...
0 0 0 2
n n 1
¦ a i x i u t ; yj ¦ d jk x k
i 1 k 0
§ n · ª n 1 kº
¨ ¦ ai p i ¸L x p Lu p ; Ly j « ¦ d jk p » L x p
¨ ¸
©i 1 ¹ ¬k 0 ¼
or:
n 1
¦ d jk p k
Lu p
Lx p ; Ly j k 0
Lu p
n n
i
¦ ai p ¦ ai p i
i 1 i 1
The established regime for small values of p can be obtained by calculating the
above fraction series development following the increasing powers of p, for
example, by means of a division following increasing powers.
Lu p
Lx p
§ a ·
a 0 ¨1 i p i ¸
¨ a0 ¸
© ¹
1 §¨ a1 § a12 a 2 · 2 § a 3 2a 2 a1 a13 · 3 ·
1 p ¨ ¸p ¨ ¸ p ...¸ L p
a 0 ¨¨ ¨a ¸¸ u
a0 ¨ a 2 a0 ¸
© 0 ¹ © 0 a 02 a 03 ¸¹
© ¹
456 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
a 0 y a1 y ' a 2 y ' ' a3 y ' ' ' d 0 u d1u ' d 2 u ' '
a 0
a1 p a 2 p 2 a 3 p 3 L y p d 0
d 1 p d 2 p 2 Lu p
or:
d 0 d1 p d 2 p 2
L y p Lu p
a 0 a1 p a 2 p 2 a 3 p 3
d0 §d d a · § d a2 d a d a d ·
y t u t ¨ 1 0 1 ¸u 't ¨ 0 1 0 2 1 1 2 ¸u"t ...
a0 ¨ a0
© a 02 ¸¹ ¨ a3
© 0 a 02 a 02 a 0 ¸¹
jZ Xˆ A. Xˆ BUˆ [8.77]
Xˆ ($ ) j$ I A
B.Uˆ ($ );
1
Yˆ ($ ) Hˆ ($ ).Uˆ ($ ) with: H $
D. j$ I A
B
1
The matrix H (Z ) is the transfer matrix of the system between the inputs and the
outputs. It is the Fourier transform of the impulse response matrix.
d 0 jd1Z d 2Z 2
yˆ
u
ˆ
a0 a 2Z 2 jZ a1 a3Z 2
f § f ·
Xˆ ¦ jZ n A n 1 B.Uˆ .; Yˆ Z ¨ D C ¦ jZ n A n 1 B ¸.Uˆ
¨ ¸
n 0 © n 0 ¹
The preceding series developments in Z are a valid approximation for the low
frequencies. We will obtain in section 8.5.3 an estimation of the radius of
convergence of the preceding series in Z in an example.
7 These extensive quantities can be reduced, for instance in the case of mechanical
impedances.
458 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
particular kind of transfer function. We will assume that these ideas are known to
the reader at least in the domain of electricity.
wT
a 'T ; with : y, z C : T y, z , t Tw t [8.78]
wt
~ ~z ~
y y A; z A; t a t A2
wT
with : ~y , ~z C : T ~
y , ~z , t Tw t
~ ~ ~
~ 'T [8.79]
wt
f
¦ g i ( ~y , ~z )Tw(i ) t
~ ~
T (~
y , ~z , t ) [8.80]
i 0
The functions g i ~
y , ~z can thus be calculated from place to place. The reader
can immediately verify that these are identical to the corresponding functions of the
unsteady flow problem of a viscous fluid in a cylindrical tube of contour C (section
6.4.2.6), a difference of unity excepted for the value of index i.
sT s 2 T
; with:-1 b x 0, 0 x b 1 [8.81]
st sx 2
§ wT · § wT ·
Tw t ; P >T (0 ) T (0 )@ [8.82]
~
T 1 0; T 1 ¨¨ ~ ¸¸ ¨¨ ~ ¸¸
© wx ¹ 0 © wx ¹ 0
We can easily verify that the equation and the preceding boundary conditions
possess a solution analogous to [8.80]:
f
¦ g i ~x Tw(i ) t
~ ~
T (~
x, t ) [8.83]
i 0
The functions g i ~
x satisfy the following successive relations and conditions:
g 0' ' ~
x 0; g1' ' ~
x g 0 ~
x ; g 2' ' ~
x g 1 ~
x ; !! g n' ' ~
x g n 1 ~ x!
A
i 1, ! , f : g i 1 g i 1 0; g i' 0 g i' 0 >g i 0 g i 0 @
OR
g 0 1 0; g 0 1 1;
P ~
x 1 P ~
x 1 ª ~ 8P 6 º
1 d ~ «x 1
2
x 0 g0 ; g1 »
1 2P 61 2 P ¬ 1 2P ¼
P ~
x 1
0 x d1 g0 1; [8.84]
1 2P
Px 1 ª ~ 8P 6 º ~x2 1
«x 1
2
g1 »
61 2 P ¬ 1 2P ¼ 2
§ wT · O §¨ P T p t P4 P 3 A 2 ·
qTp A O ¨¨ ¸¸ T p' t !¸
© wx ¹A A ¨© 1 2 P 31 2 P 2 a ¸
¹ [8.85]
§ wT · O P T p t ª
§ P4 P 3 º A 2 ·
qTp A O ¨¨ ¸¸ ¨ «1 » T p' t ! ¸
© wx ¹A A ¨©1 2 P «¬ 31 2 P 2 »¼ a ¸
¹
More generally, M being an operator which only contains spatial derivatives, let
us consider equation [8.86]:
wf
M f [8.86]
wt
f
T ( x, y , z , t ) ¦ g i x, y, z Tw(i ) t
i 0
Mg0 x, y, z 0; Mg1 x, y, z g0 x, y, z ; ! Mg n x, y, z g n 1 x, y, z ; !
wT 1 ªw § wT · w § wT ·º
« ¨¨ O y, z ¸ wy ¨ O y, z wy
¸ ¨ ¸»
¸
wt U y, z c y, z «¬ wy © wy ¹ © ¹»¼
s sT ¬
It corresponds to the operator M a y, z
y, z
:
sy sy ®
1 ªw § w · w § w ·º
M « ¨¨ O y, z ¸¸ ¨ O y , z ¸»
U y, z c y, z ¬« wy © wy ¹ wy ¨© wy ¸¹¼»
The case where the cylinder is the seat of a volume heat source VT(t) can be
treated in an analogous manner to that of the problem of viscous flow in a
cylindrical tube, as studied in section 6.4.2.6:
sT
T t
a 'T ; with: y, z
C : T y, z , t
0
st
K x 2 at W t; T x, t T K ,W
1 w 2T K wT wT
W [8.87]
4 wK 2 2 wK wW
f
T K , H W ¦ g i W f i K [8.88]
i 0
1 d2 K d
Letting M , equation [8.87] can be written:
4 dK 2 2 dK
wT
MT W
wW
M f 0 K 0 g0 Tw W
M f1 K f 0 K g1 W W g 0' W
M f 2 K f1 K , g 2 W W g1' W [8.89]
!!!!
M f i K f i 1 K g i W W g i' 1 W
!!!!
Taking account of the conditions at infinity, the function f0(K) is (see section
5.4.5.4):
f 0 K 1 erfK
which is preferable, makes the easy calculation of the first functions fi possible. The
series of functions fi is alternated and tends asymptotically to two functions equal to
r f f K which can be easily determined from system [8.89]:
M fd fd with: fd 0
fd d
0
expression for the functions gi. Furthermore, we note that the perturbation term
W wT wW of equation [8.87], of order W Tw' t Tw t in relative value, must remain
quite small: the temporal derivative of the imposed temperature must decay quickly
enough as time increases. From a physical point of view, it seems natural that in
order to remain as a small perturbation, the imposed temperature variation decreases
with time as the temperature distribution of the base solution T0 spreads (Figure
8.6). In order to render the perturbation uniform in time, we compress the time scale
by performing the temporal variable change:
t ln W
Gi tˆ g i W ,
which simplifies recurrence relation [8.89] of the functions gi, which can be written:
G0 tˆ Tw tˆ G1 tˆ Tw' tˆ G 2' tˆ
G1' tˆ
Tw' ' tˆ
[8.90]
!!!!
Gi tˆ
Gi' 1 tˆ !
Tw(i ) tˆ !!!!
The parametric expression of the solutions for the thermal shock is thus:
f
T x, t ¦ Tw(i ) tˆ f i K [8.91]
i 0
The derivatives of the function Tw(t) being taken with respect to the variable
tˆ ln t .
wT O f
¦ Tw(i ) tˆ f i' 0
1
qTw O
wx x 0 at i 02
464 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
i 0 1 2 3 4
i 5 6 7 8 9
The preceding method can also be applied to the expression of solutions in the
vicinity of the base solutions of the form t n f K . In particular, it is easy to verify
that the value n = 1/2 corresponds to the constant thermal flux which is given at the
wall. The solutions where the thermal flux varies gradually can be obtained as
before.
wT w 2T
a ; T 0, t T0 4 cos Z t ; T f, t T0 [8.92]
wt wx 2
T T0 4e jZ t f x
jZ f af ' ' x
The real solutions sought for the temperature distribution can be written:
T T0 4 exp x G cosZ t x G
The complex amplitudes method can be applied equally well to problems defined
in finite domains (walls, cylinders, etc.).
8.6.1. Overview
Model reductions can be performed using various methods. However, the value
of the results of a model or of an experiment always depends on the pertinence of the
original hypotheses, on the reasoned use of numerical solutions or physical
measurement techniques and on a suitable physical analysis of the phenomena.
Certain methods consist of the performance of a numerical solution of a system by
means of a knowledge model, and the coupling of inputs and outputs with
466 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
dXˆ r
Ar . Xˆ r B r .U [8.97]
dt
de dX r
Ar e q Ar e Ar . X r B r .U
dt dt
We must therefore determine the matrices R, Ar and Br, such that the error of
equation q is minimized. This minimization procedure can be performed on an
ensemble of known solutions. We will leave aside the details of this kind of
procedure.
It is easy to impose that the reduction be exact for the steady regime. In this case,
equations [8.93] and [8.94] can be solved and we obtain:
Xr Ar1 Br .U RX RA 1 BU
In the unsteady regime, the preceding elimination is no longer possible and the
vector RX obtained with the solution of [8.93] is no longer equal to the solution X̂ r
468 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The sub-systems whose extensive quantity contents are small can often be
eliminated or assimilated into neighboring components, leading to the suppression
of the corresponding variables. The components whose extensive quantities are
constant or vary little can become sources of established fluxes: they thus play a role
of a simple resistance for the transfer of extensive quantities and their modeling
loses its differential character. We have seen two examples in sections 8.3.1.3 and
8.3.1.4.
In general, the number and the size of the sub-systems (or the grid of the system
domain) must be adapted to the categories of the solutions studied. Let us take the
example of the discretization on a continuous medium of a wall whose surfaces are
subjected to a thermal shock (section 8.3.2.2.2). Let us begin by segmenting the wall
into 50 equal elements in series (a system analogous to that of section 8.3.1.3).
Figure 8.13 shows that the temperature variations in the first instances are rapid in
the vicinity of the wall surface, whereas later, they become quite regular. The
discretization in equal elements is thus not the best solution: a finer discretization is
Thermal Systems and Models 469
needed in the vicinity of the wall surfaces if we want to have a suitable precision in
the first instants, whereas such a fine discretization is not necessary later in the
central part of the wall. A better result with 50 elements is obtained when these are
distributed broadly at the center of the wall, and extremely close to the edges of the
wall.
8 For example, cavitation (vaporization and chiefly sudden condensation) when local pressure
in a liquid flow is less than the saturation vapor pressure, high temperature on a wall in high
supersonic or hypersonic air flow, production of pollutants inside engines or chemical
reactors due to local bad conditions of temperature or concentrations, etc.
470 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
fast energy transfers in the higher order modes occur instantaneously (section
8.2.2.2). Various authors avoid this discontinuity by adding a fictitious mode or by
attributing to the last mode retained the total remaining amplitude. Let us illustrate
this problem by reconsidering the example of thermal shock on the wall edges
(section 8.3.2.2.2).
Tm(t)
T1
3 2
1 4 ~
T0 t
0 1 2
Figure 8.17. Mean temperature on a wall during a thermal shock on its two faces
(section 8.3.2.2.2). The draughts are indicative
Let us consider the mean temperature Tm (formula [8.41]), which translates the
thermal energy evolution over the course of the heating processes caused by the
thermal shock (curve 1, Figure 8.17). We have seen (Table 8.1) that the first mode
contains 81% of the process energy; in only conserving this first mode, we obtain a
representation for the temperature Tm (curve 2, Figure 8.17), which contains a
discontinuity at the origin equal to 0.19 T1 T0 ; considering the first two modes of
the series representing Tm (curve 3, Figure 8.17) this discontinuity is reduced to
0.10 T1 T0 ).
S2 9S 2
Tm ( t ) T1 T0 T1 [ 0 .81e
t t
4
0 .19e 4 ]
However, the second mode is now too large; we can therefore look to determine
a time constant of the second mode in order to achieve a better representation of the
function Tm (t), for example by a mean square error minimization method. It is also
possible to add a fictitious mode. It is clear that a good solution is not achieved and
the values obtained by empirical adjustments are not physically pertinent.
Thermal Systems and Models 471
In effect, in the first instants of the evolution, only zones in the vicinity of edges
are concerned with the heat transfer. Further from these, the sum of the series terms
[8.41] is zero: the modal representation is not adapted to the representation of a
thermal boundary layer problem (section 8.3.2.2.2). We can obviously note that the
thermal boundary layer is independent of the wall thickness A that can take any
value: defining modes by means of an arbitrary length is indeed an irrational method
which cannot lead to a judicious mathematical representation.
A good reduced model of thermal conduction in a wall must also take into
account the modal aspect as the evolution of the unsteady boundary layer. There is
no other (or nearly no other) way to obtain such a reduced model than a composite
representation matching the modal representation and the thermal shock solution:
we have presented this method in section 8.3.2.2.3, where a good precision was
obtained for the mean temperature [8.46], using only the first mode. This method
also has the advantage of giving precise values for the thermal flux density at the
edges [8.47] at any instant.
of the solution (Figure 8.13). This more rational method of discretization has the
advantage of reducing the number of variables.
dX r
Ar . X r Br .U [8.98]
dt
A / i I 4 i 0 RA / i RI 4 i Ar / i I R4 i 0
The s eigenvalues /i of the reduced model are thus eigenvalues of the complete
model, the corresponding eigenvectors being equal to R4i9, the choice of which
modes to retain in the reduced model results from the definition of matrix R. The
reduction matrix R is thus such that the reduced state vector is constituted of the s
retained modes. Taking eigenvalues as a basis (modal basis), the matrix A is the
diagonal eigenvalue matrix /i. We assume that the s eigenvalues to be retained have
been placed in the first s elements of the diagonal. In the modal basis, the reduction
matrix R, of dimension s*n contains 1 on the diagonal, in correspondence with the
first diagonal element. The reader can verify that the reduced square matrix Ar
contains the s eigenvalues which were retained.
The same result can in principle be obtained in another manner. We have seen in
section 8.2.2.2 that the suppression of a mode amounts to requiring that its
coefficient be zero in the modal development at each instant: this results in an
instantaneous linear relationship between the state vector components (formula
[8.19]). The suppression of n-s modes of the model comes down to writing n-s
relations between the variables, which allows us to eliminate n-s state variables. We
thus obtain a representation by s state variables of the system which is reduced. This
method does not require us to calculate the modal basis. While it is in principal
arbitrary in the preceding methods, the choice of physical variables which are not
eliminated should nonetheless be performed so as to be conducive to physical
interpretation. The reader will also note that the principle of modal reduction itself
leads to a situation where discontinuous data leads to a discontinuity of the
variables of the reduced representation.
Second order differential equations represent accumulation (of mass or heat for
example), damping and stiffness mechanisms, which are themselves represented,
respectively, by second order terms, first order terms and zero order terms (the
function). It is thus possible to represent aperiodic or stable oscillatory systems. The
coefficients of such differential equations can be determined by imposing an
impulse excitation as an input, and then by “best” identifying the response of the
system to an expression of the form ae D t cosZ t M . This is equivalent to
performing a spectral study of the system (section 8.5.2.4).
474 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
The methods evoked in this chapter are encountered when dealing with the
solution of flow and transfer problems in boundary layers ([SCH 99], [YIH 77]).
However, these are generally non-linear and computations cannot be effected in as
complete a manner as in this chapter. Writing balance equations, ultimately with
approximations which may be more or less global, leads to state representations
Thermal Systems and Models 475
where time is replaced by a boundary layer coordinate. The inputs are therefore
often evolution laws for the velocity of a perfect fluid as a function of the spatial
coordinate, the initial conditions having been provided in the initial section of a
boundary layer or a pipe. It is thus possible to obtain approximate external
representations in forms which are more or less explicit.
Laplace Transform
A1.1. Definition
f
L f p ³ f t e
pt
dt
0
A1.2. Properties
L f ' p ³0 f ' t e dt p ³0 f t e pt dt f 0 pL f p f 0
f pt f
The derivative is here taken in the sense of distributions: any discontinuity of the
function leads to a Dirac distribution at that point for the derivative.
478 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
if: g (t ) f t W t t W, g (t ) 0 tW
px W
Lg p ³0 g t e dt ³W f t e dt ³0 f x e
f f f
pt pt
dx L f ( p)e pW
Conversely, if: g (t ) f (t )e a t
p a t
Lg p ³0 f t e e dt ³0 f t e
f a t pt f
dt L f ( p a)
L f * g ( p) L f ( p) L g ( p)
LG p ³0 G t e dt ³ f G t e
f pt f pt
dt 1
– The unit ramp t is the primitive ³0 H u du of the unit step H(f); its transform
t
is: Lt ( p ) 1 p2 .
In general, we obtain: Lt n p 1 p n 1 .
– f 0 lim f t lim pL f p
t o0 p of
Appendices 479
– f f lim f t lim pL f p
t of po 0
– Consider the limited development Pm(t) to order m for small values of time t.
We obtain:
m m a
Pm t ¦ a i t i L Pm p ¦ i
i 1
i 0 i 0p
The lowest order terms in p-1 represent the Laplace transform which corresponds
to small values of time t.
The highest order terms in p-1 represent the Laplace transform which corresponds
to large values of t.
– The Laplace transforms of exponential and harmonic functions are:
1 1
Lexpat p Lexp jZt p
f ( a p )t
³0 e dt ;
pa p jZ
p Z
LcosZt p ; Lsin Zt p
2 2
p Z p Z2
2
dX
Consider the system: A. X BU X 0 X0 .
dt
pI AL X p L BU p X 0
L X ( p) pI A-1 >L BU ( p) X 0 @
480 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
f f
L X ( p) ¦ p i Di L BU ( p) pI A-1 X 0 ¦ Di L BU i ( p) pI A-1 X 0
i 0 i 0
The second term represents the transient response to the initial conditions. The
steady response is thus:
f
X ¦ BDiU (i ) t
i 0
Appendix 2
Hilbert Transform
The modulus at and the argument Mt of this complex number can be defined
as the amplitude and the instantaneous phase of the signal x(t); we thus define the
instantaneous frequency as the derivative M ' t 2S .
These definitions are only meaningful if the point whose affix is the complex
function turns nearly regularly in the positive direction around the origin, in a way
quite similar to a complex exponential function. This is the case for amplitude- or
phase-modulated harmonic signals, or for the sounds of musical instruments. A
narrow-band signal x(t) appears on an oscilloscope as a carrier of the neighbouring
frequency Qo, whose amplitude [a(t)] varies slowly and whose phase [ M (t)] is
fluctuating.
generalize the properties of harmonic signals. However, we note that the definition
of an analytic signal e j 2SQ t for a sinusoidal function cos 2S Q t consists of
eliminating the negative frequencies of the Fourier transform of this analytical
signal, by folding over the negative frequencies onto the positive frequency axis.
This operation can be applied to any signal x(t) and it allows the analytical signal
Dx(t) to be defined. Let Fx Q be the Fourier transform of the signal x(t). The
Fourier transform of the analytical signal D x t associated with x(t) is defined by:
FDx Q { 0 for Q 0
®
¯ FDx Q { 2 Fx Q for Q ! 0
¦£x 0 Sign(x) 1
i.e. Fax (v ) Fx (v ) Sign(v ).Fx (v ) with: ¦¤ [A2.1]
¦¦¥x 0 Sign(x) 1
D x t F 1 >FDx Q @ xt jH x t
1 1 du
H t jF 1 SignQ .F x Q * xt VP ³ f xu .
f
St S t u
Cepstral Analysis
A3.1. Introduction
The cepstrum is an integral transform that can be calculated from a spectrum and
contributes to its analysis. For example, in a vibration problem, it makes it possible
to separate the impulse response from the excitation forces. The analysis of vibration
signals from rotating machinery is important. The different operating conditions of a
machine, as well as defects, can be observed in the spectral domain ([STR 96]).
It is also used in speech processing, the vocal signal coming from the
convolution of the excitation (source) and the impulse response of the vocal passage.
A3.2. Definitions
Let x(t) be a time signal and Fx(Q) its Fourier transform; by definition the
complex cepstrum Cx(t) is the inverse Fourier transform, denoted F-1, of the
logarithm of function Fx (Q ) ([BOU 98], [NOR 03 ], [STR 96])
C x (W ) F 1 (ln^Fx (Q )`)
The power cepstrum may be defined in several ways, for example, as the square
of the modulus of the complex cepstrum of the signal:
2
C px F 1 (ln^Fx (Q )`) .
C px
©
^
F 1 §¨ ln Fx (Q )
2
`·¸¹
A3.3. Example of echo suppression
Let x(t) be a sound signal comprising the superposition of an original sound s(t)
and an unwanted echo sr(t):
x(t ) s (t ) s r (t )
The reflected sound is attenuated and dephased compared with the original signal
s r (t ) a s (t t 0 )
Fx (Q )
Fs (Q ) 1 a e 2S j Q t0
and the square of the modulus of this transform is:
F x (Q )
2 2
Fs (Q ) 1 a 2 2a cos 2S Q t 0
If we take the logarithm of this quantity, the echo phenomenon is seen in
frequency space by the addition of a periodic term, of period 1/t0:
^
ln Fx (Q )
2
` ln^F (Q ) ` ln1 a
s
2 2
2a cos 2S Q t 0
We now take the inverse Fourier transform of this expression ([ALL 04], ([MAD
98], [NOR 03]): the first two terms will be, respectively, the power cepstrums x(t)
and x(t); the third term will be the inverse Fourier transform of the periodic function
shown above, which will be comprised of Dirac functions of different amplitude,
separated by t0
Appendices 485
C px (W ) ^
C ps (W ) F 1 ln 1 a 2 2a cos 2S Q t 0 `
We thus find ourselves in a pseudo-temporal space, whose variable is known as
“quefrency”, in which we perform a “liftering” of the Dirac signals (the terms
“cepstrum”, “quefrency” and “liftering” are respectively anagrams of the words
spectrum, frequency and filtering). The echo signal is thus eliminated by the
suppression of the Dirac signals in this space. The initial signal is thus reconstructed
without its echo by an inverse process ([NOR 03]); however, we note that phase
information has been lost with this procedure of cepstrum power.
We consider a source signal x(t) going through a passive linear system whose
impulse response is h(t). The output signal y(t) is the convolution product of x by h:
y (t ) h(t ) * x(t )
F y Q H Q Fx Q
C y (W ) C h (W ) C x (W )
Eigenfunctions of an Operator
L fi O fi
A4.2.1. Eigenfunctions
Let us define the scalar product f g ! , for the foregoing functions f, by the
relation:
³a f x .g x dx
b
f g !
³a Lf x .g x dx ³a f x .Lg x dx
b b
f Lg ! L f g !
the eigenvalues of the self-adjoint operator L are positive and form an infinite
denumerable set Oi i 1, 2,..., n,... . With each eigenvalue Oi we can associate an
eigenfunction fi;
f
f x ¦ c j f j x
j 1
f
f x f i x ! ¦ ci f j x f i x ! [A4.1]
j 1
Now, the eigenfunctions are orthogonal for the scalar product. In effect, with the
assumption of a self-adjoint operator, we obtain for O i z O j :
f i Lf j ! L f i f j ! O j O i fi f j ! 0
We also obtain:
2
f i Lf i ! O i f i f i ! O i f i
Substituting previous results into [A4.1], we obtain the value of the coefficient
ci:
f
f x f i x ! ¦ c i f j x f i x ! c i f i x
2
j 1
f x
fi x
or:
ci 2
fi x
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A C
Actions Calorific coefficients, 27
by contact, 18 Cauchy problem, 200, 202, 206,
volume, 18 207, 216, 235
Anemometry Causal signal, 368
Eulerian, 345 Causality, 3, 6, 406
Lagrangian, 342 Center of buoyancy, 65, 71
laser Doppler, 343 Cepstrum, 369
Archimedes’ theorem, 65 Characteristic curves, 205, 207, 209,
212, 214, 226, 240, 254
B Characteristic determinant, 208, 213
Characteristic equation, 208, 222,
Balance equations, 54; 227
extensive quantity, 151 Circulation
for sub-systems, 416 creation of, 335
global, 151, 182 of the velocity, 258
global for chemical species, 188 Command model, 411, 473
local, 151 Complex potential, 274
local for chemical species, 177 Compressibility coefficients, 27
Barotropic.fluid, 65 Compression of data, 385
Bernoulli theorem analytical methods, 387
first, 166, 167 arithmetic methods, 386
second, 269 Concentration measurements, 347
Biot and Savart’s formula, 259 Condition number, 353
Boundary conditions, 178, 255, 322 Conditioning of a linear system, 353
Boundary layer, 319, 323 Conjugated flows, 274
equations, 321 Conservation of volume, 160
thermal, 437 Contact actions, 57, 58
Couette flow, 137
498 Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics and Transport Phenomena
Lewis number, 88 N, O
Lift, 280
Navier-Stokes equations, 161, 190
Newtonian fluid, 163, 176, 407
M
Non-dimensional parameters, 189
Mach lines, 215 Non-isothermal mixtures, 97
Mach number, 160, 169, 192, 215 Numerical solutions, 250
Mass Nusselt number, 194
average velocity, 79 Ohm’s law, 61
concentration, 76 Onsager relations, 42, 59
conservation, 154, 160, 170, 184,
190 P, Q
enthalpy, 65
fraction, 76 Parametric models, 451
Matched asymptotic expansions, 437 Parseval’s theorem, 362
Material derivative, 122 Particle Image Velocimetry, 349
of a flux integral, 128 Péclet diffusion number, 192, 197
of a volume integral, 125 Perfect gas, 23, 28, 39
Modal reduction, 465 Perturbation, 296
continuous media, 469 parameter, 300
discrete models, 471 regular, 296
discrete systems, 466 singular, 305
Model reduction Poiseuille flow, 142
input-output, 473 Potential
Modulation equation, 271
amplitude, 378 flows, 269, 282
frequency, 378 lines, 276
Molar Power
average velocity, 79 mechanical, 173
concentration, 76 thermal, 173
fraction, 76 Prandtl number, 192
molarity, 76 Pressure
momentum, 102, 103 center of, 70
angular, 107 driving, 162, 170, 180, 181, 194
balance, 113, 160 forces, 63, 68
coefficient, 317 mean driving, 318
conservation of, 103 measurement of, 341
flux, 114 partial, 76
flux theorem, 184 total, 166
linear, 107 total driving, 166
MP3 encoding, 388 Process, 13
natural, 15, 16
possible, 15
quasi-static, 15
reversible, 15
Index 501