Mecánica de fluidos | Ecuación de continuidad
Continuity Equation for Ideal Fluids
Characteristics of an Ideal Fluid
- An ideal fluid is characterized by being non-viscous, laminar flow, incompressible, and irrotational.
- Non-viscous means internal friction forces within the fluid are negligible.
- Laminar flow indicates that particles in the fluid follow smooth paths without crossing each other, resembling parallel sheets.
- Incompressible fluids maintain constant volume under external forces; their density does not change.
- Irrotational implies there is no rotational movement in the flow or among its constituent particles.
Analysis of Flow Volumes
- When a certain volume of water enters through a hose at one end, it must displace an equal volume out at the other end due to incompressibility.
- The volumes entering and exiting are analyzed over a distance: delta x1 for entry and delta x2 for exit.
- Each volume moves with specific velocities (v1 for entry and v2 for exit), allowing us to express distances traveled as functions of time.
Deriving Volume Expressions
- The volume of a cylinder can be calculated using the formula: Volume = Area × Height. Here, height corresponds to either delta x1 or delta x2.
- For Volume 1: V1 = Area 1 × Velocity 1 × Time; similarly for Volume 2: V2 = Area 2 × Velocity 2 × Time.
- Since both volumes are equal (V1 = V2), we can equate these expressions and cancel out time to derive a key equation.
Continuity Equation
- The resulting equation from equating volumes leads to A1 × v1 = A2 × v2, known as the continuity equation.
- This equation states that the product of area and velocity remains constant along any section of flow.