Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Problem 1
Problem Statement:
A gas may gas may be considered rareed if it contains less than 1012 molecules/mm3 . At what pressure can air be considered rareed at 18 C?
Approach:
Treat air as an ideal gas, use ideal gas law with consistant units, check for dimensional homogeneity.
Assumptions:
Air can be treated as an ideal gas under these conditons.
Governing Equations:
P = RT Where P is pressure, is density, R is the ideal gas constant, and T is absolute temperature.
Solution:
Let A=number of molecules/volume at which air is considered rareed. Let the density of rareed air =R
M R = A N , where M is the molecular mass of air and NA is Avogadros number. A AM NA RT
, T = 10 C = 291 k From the problem statement: A = 102 molecules mm3 molecules (1000mm)3 1mol g 1kg m2 28 . 97 287 291k mm3 1m3 6.023 1023 molecules mol 1000g s2 k
PR = 1012
PR = 1012
2 )3 (((( (1000 molecules mm 1 mol g ( 1kg 287 m 291 k 28 . 97 ( 3 1000g ((( mm 1m3 6.023 1023( molecules s2 k mol
PR 4.0
kg = 4.0 P a ms2
Problem 2
Problem Statement:
Given atmospheric conditions on Mars of T = 50 C , P = 900 P a, nd : 1. The density of the Martian atmosphere, assuming Rg Rco2 2. The density of air on Earth given the same conditions 3. The density of CO2 at T = 18 C , P = 101.6 kP a
Approach:
Use the ideal gas law to solve for density.
Assumptions:
Air and the Martian atmoshere can be treated as ideal gases at these conditions, Rg Rco2
Governing Equations:
The ideal gas law: P = RT 2
Solution:
m m From Table A.4: Rco2 = 189 s 2 k , Rair = 287 s2 k
2 2
P Rco2 T P
900
kg 2.16 102 m 3
Rair T
= =
900
kg 1.41 102 m 3
P Rair T
k=
101600
2 s k
kg ms2
291 k 287 m 2
1.85
kg m3
kg The density of the Martian atmospere at P = 900 P a, T = 50 C 2.16 102 m 3 kg The density of air at P = 900 P a, T = 50 C 1.41 102 m 3 kg The density of CO2 at P = 101.6 kP a, T = 18 C 1.85 102 m 3
Problem 3
Problem Statement:
A rigid tank contains helium gas at 600 kPa and 20 C. What is the change in pressure if the temperature increases to 40 C?
Approach:
Use the ideal gas law to nd the original helium gas density in the tank. A rigid tank does not allow mass or volume change, so density must stay constant in the tank, and we can use this fact to solve for pressure.
Assumptions:
Helium can be treated as an ideal gas at these conditions, mass of gas in the tank is constant.
Governing Equations:
Ideal gas law: P = RT
Solution:
Constant density implies P = RT = P2 P1 = P2 P1 = P1 RT1 RT2 313 k 1 293 k T2 1 T1
P2 P1 = 600 kP a
41 kP a
The pressure in the tank rises by 41 kPa when the temperature rises from 20 C to 40 C
Problem 4
Problem Statement:
A 25 mm shaft is being pulled through a bearing lled with lubricant. The gap between the bearing and the shaft is 0.3 mm and the bearing is 0.5 m long. The lubricant has a kinematic viscosity of = 8 104 m2 /s and a density of = 910 kg/m3 . Find the force necessary to pull the shaft through the bearing at 3 m/s.
Approach:
Use the relationship between shear stress and the shear deformation of a Newtonian uid. = du dy , to solve for the required force
Assumptions:
The lubricant is a Newtonian uid, the velocity prole in the gap is linear, the no-slip condition holds at the boundaries.
Governing Equations:
= du dy , where is the shear stress at the surface, is dynamic viscosity, and velocity gradient at the boundary.
du dy
is the
Sketch:
Solution:
From the no-slip condition u|bearing = 0 We assume the velocity prole is linear, so u|bearing u|shaf t du |shaf t = dy h Using = and =
F A,
u|shaf t = 3m/s
F = 2RL
u|bearing u|shaf t h
F =2
F 286 N The uid exerts a 286 N force on the uid to the left, so the required force to move the shaft is 286 N to the right.