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Thermodynamics 2

By : Asad Ali Arshad





 A Nozzle is a duct of smoothly varying cross-sectional area in

 which a steadily flowing fluid can be made to accelerate by a 

pressure drop along the duct.

E.g., nozzles are used in steam and gas turbines, in jet 

engines, in rocket motors, in flow measurement, in 

injectors, in ejectors etc.







  Diffuser: When a fluid is decelerated in a duct, causing a rise in 

pressure along the stream.

Major applications: Centrifugal Compressor and

the Ramjet.Analysis here will be restricted to One-dimensional Flow it is assumed that the Fluid Velocity, and the Fluid Properties, change only in the direction of the flow.
Fluid velocity is assumed to remain constant at a mean value across the cross-section of the duct.
Friction will not be analyzed Fundamentally, suitable efficiencies or coefficients being adopted to allow
for the departure from the ideal friction less case.

Further Explanation of variation of Nozzle-Area 

with decreasing Pressure.


At low velocities the density is constant and therefore as the area gets smaller (Convergent Nozzle) the velocity must increase to keep ρVA constant. This is the case we are used to in our day to day lives. In reality, as velocity increases, the decreasing static pressure allows the air to expand. So as air accelerates through a convergent duct its volume gets bigger. At speeds closer to the speed of sound, the density is not a constant any more. At these speeds the fluid is sort of stretched out and less dense: the higher the velocity the lesser dense the fluid becomes. At this point we notice that the density and the velocity work in opposite directions in the quantity ρVA, that is, meanwhile more V brings ρVA higher, less ρ brings ρVA lower.
If in the nozzle we continue to make A smaller (convergent), eventually we will reach the point where ρ out-powers V in the expression ρVA and the velocity cannot go higher anymore. In other words, ρV reaches its maximum. Any increase in V will cause a decrease in ρ such as the quantity ρVA would be smaller and this is not possible, ρVA must be a constant. The value of V when this maximum happens is the speed of sound for this particular fluid and conditions. since the quantity ρV is at its maximum, the mass flow rate ρVA is at its maximum as well. In other words, it is impossible to increase the mass flow rate no matter what and the nozzle is said to be choked.
After the speed of sound is reached, if we increase A (divergent nozzle), V will continue to go up and ρ will continue to go down in such a way that ρVA will remain still constant. Effectively the fluid now behaves the opposite way, it will increase its velocity as the area increases and all because of the inverse relationship between the density and the velocity of the fluid.








Thermodynamics

By : Asad Ali Arshad
Thermodynamics Lecture no 5
Thermodynamics

Chapter no 5:   Mass Energy Analysis of Control Volume

chapter 5.pdf

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In this chapter we will discussed the following topics in detail:

  • Energy Analysis of Steady flow
  • First law of thermodynamics for a Control Volume under steady flow
  • Mass and Energy balance for a steady-flow Process
  • Some Steady flow Engineering Devices
  • Turbines and Compressor
  • Throttling value
  • Heat Exchanger




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