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The mechanical energy can be defined as the form of energy that can be converted to mechanical work
completely and directly by an ideal mechanical device such as an ideal turbine.
• Kinetic and potential energies are the familiar forms of mechanical energy.
• Thermal energy is not mechanical energy, however, since it cannot be converted to work directly and
completely (the second law of thermodynamics).
• A pump transfers mechanical energy to a fluid by raising its pressure.
• A turbine extracts mechanical energy from a fluid by dropping its pressure. Therefore, the pressure of a
flowing fluid is also associated with its mechanical energy.
V2
where P/ is the flow energy, gz
is the kinetic energy,
2
is the potential energy of the fluid, all per unit mass.
Fan:
Pump:
Turbine:
The mechanical energy can be defined as the form of energy that can be converted to
mechanical work completely and directly by an ideal mechanical device such as an ideal
turbine.
Kinetic and potential energies are the familiar forms of mechanical energy.
Thermal energy is not mechanical energy, however, since it cannot be converted to work directly and
completely (the second law of thermodynamics).
A pump transfers mechanical energy to a fluid by raising its pressure,
A turbine extracts mechanical energy from a fluid by dropping its pressure. Therefore, the pressure
of a flowing fluid is also associated with its mechanical energy.
2
where P/ is the flow energy, V is the kinetic energy, gz
2
potential energy of the fluid, all per unit mass.
Acceleration of a Fluid Particle
Steady simply means no change with time at a specified location, but the
value of a quantity may change from one location to another.
THE BERNOULLI EQUATION
The Bernoulli equation is an approximate relation between pressure, velocity, and elevation, and
is valid in regions of steady, incompressible flow where net frictional forces are negligible
Conservation of linear momentum principle
where
and
and
Finally,
The Bernoulli equation can also be written between any two points on the same streamline
for steady incompressible flow as
Unsteady, compressible Flow: Constant
Static, Dynamic, and Stagnation Pressures
P is the static pressure; it represents the actual
thermodynamic pressure of the fluid.
V 2
2 is the dynamic pressure; it represents the
pressure rise when the fluid in motion is brought to
rest isentropically.
gz
is the hydrostatic pressure, which is not
pressure in a real sense since its value depends on
the reference level selected.
Sum of these three pressure is called total pressure.
V 2 2( Pstag P)
Stagnation pressure: Pstag P V
2
LIMITATIONS
(i) Viscous effects are negligibly small compared to inertial, gravitational, and
pressure effects. Inviscid flow approximation cannot be valid for an entire flow
field of practical interest.
(ii) Steady Flow.
(iii) No Shaft Work
(iv) Incompressible Flow
(v) No Heat Transfer
(vi) Flow along a streamline.