How Do You Calculate Shear Stress in a Flowing Fluid?

AI Thread Summary
To calculate shear stress in a flowing fluid, the viscosity and the velocity gradient (du/dr) are essential. The no-slip condition indicates that the velocity at the pipe wall (r=0) should be 0 m/s, which is crucial for accurate calculations. The initial attempt incorrectly assumed that r=0 at the wall, leading to an erroneous shear stress of 0 N/m². Correct calculations show that the shear stress at the wall should be 2.5 N/m², and at r=0.2 cm, it should be 1.25 N/m². Understanding the velocity profile and the no-slip condition is vital for accurate shear stress calculations.
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Homework Statement



Water at 20 degrees C flows in a 0.8cm diameter pipe with a velocity distribution of u(r) = 5[1-r2/(16x10-6)]m/s. Calculate the shear stress on

(a) pipe wall
(b) at a radius where r = 0.2 cm
(c) at centerline of pipe

Homework Equations



Shear stress = viscosity x du/dr

The Attempt at a Solution



So what I did first was get du/dr, which is -10/(16x10-6)r = du/dr

I used the value of viscosity for water at room temperature and pressure which is 1.1x10-3

And then I just plugged everything in so shear stress at wall = 1.1x10-3x -10/16x10-6x0 = 0N/m2 at pipe wall. It is x0 because it is the pipe wall so r = 0m

for part (b) I got 1.1x10-3x (-10/16x10-6) x 0.2x10-2 = -1.38N/m2

Looking at the answers, it seems I got it wrong. part (a) answer is 2.5N/m2 and part(b) is 1.25N/m2

Can anyone please tell me where I got it wrong? Somehow I feel like I made a careless mistake somewhere...

Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution


Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 
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math_04 said:
Water at 20 degrees C flows in a 0.8cm diameter pipe with a velocity distribution of u(r) = 5[1-r2/(16x10-6)]m/s.

And then I just plugged everything in so shear stress at wall = 1.1x10-3x -10/16x10-6x0 = 0N/m2 at pipe wall. It is x0 because it is the pipe wall so r = 0m
What makes you think r is 0 at the pipe wall? What would you expect the velocity to be at the pipe wall? For what r is u(r) equal to that?
 
The velocity should be 0 m/s at pipe wall right? Because of the no slip condition?
 
math_04 said:
The velocity should be 0 m/s at pipe wall right? Because of the no slip condition?

Yes. So where is r measured from?
 
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