Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Historical notes
- 3 Boundary conditions for viscous fluids
- 4 Helmholtz decomposition coupling rotational to irrotational flow
- 5 Harmonic functions that give rise to vorticity
- 6 Radial motions of a spherical gas bubble in a viscous liquid
- 7 Rise velocity of a spherical cap bubble
- 8 Ellipsoidal model of the rise of a Taylor bubble in a round tube
- 9 Rayleigh–Taylor instability of viscous fluids
- 10 The force on a cylinder near a wall in viscous potential flows
- 11 Kelvin–Helmholtz instability
- 12 Energy equation for irrotational theories of gas–liquid flow: viscous potential flow, viscous potential flow with pressure correction, and dissipation method
- 13 Rising bubbles
- 14 Purely irrotational theories of the effect of viscosity on the decay of waves
- 15 Irrotational Faraday waves on a viscous fluid
- 16 Stability of a liquid jet into incompressible gases and liquids
- 17 Stress-induced cavitation
- 18 Viscous effects of the irrotational flow outside boundary layers on rigid solids
- 19 Irrotational flows that satisfy the compressible Navier–Stokes equations
- 20 Irrotational flows of viscoelastic fluids
- 21 Purely irrotational theories of stability of viscoelastic fluids
- 22 Numerical methods for irrotational flows of viscous fluid
- Appendix A Equations of motion and strain rates for rotational and irrotational flow in Cartesian, cylindrical, and spherical coordinates
- Appendix B List of frequently used symbols and concepts
- References
- Index
18 - Viscous effects of the irrotational flow outside boundary layers on rigid solids
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Historical notes
- 3 Boundary conditions for viscous fluids
- 4 Helmholtz decomposition coupling rotational to irrotational flow
- 5 Harmonic functions that give rise to vorticity
- 6 Radial motions of a spherical gas bubble in a viscous liquid
- 7 Rise velocity of a spherical cap bubble
- 8 Ellipsoidal model of the rise of a Taylor bubble in a round tube
- 9 Rayleigh–Taylor instability of viscous fluids
- 10 The force on a cylinder near a wall in viscous potential flows
- 11 Kelvin–Helmholtz instability
- 12 Energy equation for irrotational theories of gas–liquid flow: viscous potential flow, viscous potential flow with pressure correction, and dissipation method
- 13 Rising bubbles
- 14 Purely irrotational theories of the effect of viscosity on the decay of waves
- 15 Irrotational Faraday waves on a viscous fluid
- 16 Stability of a liquid jet into incompressible gases and liquids
- 17 Stress-induced cavitation
- 18 Viscous effects of the irrotational flow outside boundary layers on rigid solids
- 19 Irrotational flows that satisfy the compressible Navier–Stokes equations
- 20 Irrotational flows of viscoelastic fluids
- 21 Purely irrotational theories of stability of viscoelastic fluids
- 22 Numerical methods for irrotational flows of viscous fluid
- Appendix A Equations of motion and strain rates for rotational and irrotational flow in Cartesian, cylindrical, and spherical coordinates
- Appendix B List of frequently used symbols and concepts
- References
- Index
Summary
High-Reynolds-number flows may be approximated by an outer irrotational flow and small layers on the boundary and narrow wakes where vorticity is important. The irrotational flow gives rise to an extra viscous dissipation over and above the dissipation in the boundary layer. At high Reynolds numbers the viscous dissipation in the irrotational flow outside is a very small fraction of the total that vanishes asymptotically as the Reynolds number tends to infinity.
Prandtl's boundary-layer theory is asymptotic and does not account for the viscous effects of the outer irrotational flow. Viscous effects on the normal stresses at the boundary of a solid cannot be obtained from Prandtl's theory. It is very well known and easily demonstrated that, as a consequence of the continuity equation, the viscous normal stress must vanish on a rigid solid. The only way that viscous effects can act on a boundary is through the pressure, but the pressure in Prandtl's theory is not viscous. It is determined by Bernoulli's equation in the irrotational flow and is imposed unchanged on the wall through the thin boundary layer. Therefore the important pressure drag cannot be calculated from Prandtl's theory. In addition, the mismatch between the irrotational shear stress and the shear stress at the outer edge of the boundary layer given by Prandtl's theory is not resolved.
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- Potential Flows of Viscous and Viscoelastic Liquids , pp. 310 - 373Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007