Does Conservation of Mass Apply to Compressible Gases in Vents?

AI Thread Summary
Conservation of mass applies to compressible gases in vents, even at steady state. In a system with constant cross-section, the inlet and exit mass flow rates must be equal, which implies that if the gas density increases at the outlet, the exit velocity must be greater than the inlet velocity. This relationship can be expressed using the equation that relates inlet and exit densities to their respective velocities. The ideal gas law can be utilized to connect the densities under constant pressure and temperature conditions. Overall, conservation of mass remains valid regardless of gas compressibility.
Red_CCF
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Hi

Just a quick question about Conservation of Mass that I somehow managed to confuse myself:

If I have a vent of constant cross section at steady state, given that conservation of mass means that inlet and exit mass flow rate must be the same, does this mean that, taking the compressibility of gas into account (for this example I'm assuming Ma > 0.3 although unrealistic in real life), this means that the exit velocity must be greater than the inlet velocity (temperature and pressure are the same in inlet and exit)?

Basically my question is (and I know this sounds stupid), conservation of mass holds always even if the gas is compressible?

Thanks
 
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Conservation of mass always holds.

In your example, "steady state" would usually mean that mass (and hence gas pressure) aren't building up between the inlet and the exit.
 
Use grams per second as flow rate.
 
olivermsun said:
Conservation of mass always holds.

In your example, "steady state" would usually mean that mass (and hence gas pressure) aren't building up between the inlet and the exit.

Hi

So at steady and the gas is flowing very fast such that it becomes compressed by the time it gets to the outlet (so its density is higher at the outlet than inlet). Keeping P and T known and constant and area as constant, then the gas velocity at the outlet and inlet are related by the inlet density/exit density = exit velocity/inlet velocity? And the ideal gas law can be used to relate the densities (assuming the P and T conditions are ideal enough)?

Thanks
 
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