Reynolds Number
Angular momentum
L conserved angular velocity declines as r increases - the nearer a fluid parcel gets to the axis of rotation, the faster it will circulate
Viscous forces
Promotes laminar flow
Inertial forces
Promotes turbulent flow The greater the inertia of a fluid, the more likely it is to separate from a surface and generate turbulence
Re guidelines in pipes
Re < 2000 = laminar flow Re > 4000 = turbulent flow Re > 100 000 = flow around cylinder or sphere transitions to turbulent Low Re = viscosity dominated flow regime High Re = inertia dominated flow regime
Biological range of Re
Re > 100 = flow becomes increasingly turbulent - inertial forces dominant Re < 100 = flow is slow, ordered and laminar - viscous forces dominate
Factor that drives flowing fluids towards becoming laminar
Viscous forces Viscosity - tendency of a fluid to stick to itself and move together
Outside of a vortex
all flow-lines are sheared by slower moving fluid on their outside edge, and the faster moving fluid on their inside edge shear increases as angular momentum increases exponentially towards center
Turbulent flow
disordered flow irreproducible and irreversible efficient mixing vorticity
Angular velocity
how fast object is rotating about it's axis radians/second ex. 2pi radians/second = one full rotation per second
Factors that drive flowing fluids towards becoming turbulent
inertial forces - increasing fluid density - increasing velocity - increasing characteristic length (more SA there is to flow across, more time there is for turbulence to develop)
Vortex - spinning fluids
object on outside of vortex translates in circle around central axis object on inside of vortex rotates in circle around central axis
Moment of inertia
objects with mass that rotates - objects resistance to starting or stopping spinning mass x radius^2 x angular velocity
Laminar flow
ordered flow reversible and reproducible no mixing
Tangential velocity
radius x angular velocity declines as r increases
Reynolds number
ratio of inertial force to viscous force dimensionless number used to predict whether flow is laminar or turbulent
Vortex
region within fluid where the flow moves around a central axis
Generating vortices
shearing of concentric rings of fluid at low Re = viscous forces dominate, so vortices can have large rotational cores to shear streams of viscous fluid past one another requires energy in absence of energy being added, viscous shearing will cause vortex to grind to a stop and dissipate
Solid Body Rotation
solid rotates around central axis entire solid object moves as one entity - no shearing, no slipping
Kinematic viscosity
viscosity/density ratio of fundamental properties of a fluid unit= L^2/T = Stokes
Center of a vortex
viscous forces at centre eliminate the shearing and pull core into rigid body rotation