Chestermiller said:
Yes, right on. The dilatational term is in the explicit expression that Bird et al give for ##\vec{τ}## (Eqn. 1.2-7).
Chet
As that is not in my library, I had no way of checking what was actually in Bird
et al., and I am sure you are aware of how obnoxious it is that different authors use many different notations for these things.
At any rate, then, the stress tensor ought to be
\tau_{ij} = -p\delta_{ij} + \mu\left( \dfrac{\partial u_i}{\partial x_j} + \dfrac{\partial u_j}{\partial x_i} \right) + \delta_{ij}\lambda \dfrac{\partial u_k}{\partial x_k}.
For an incompressible flow, where ##\nabla\cdot\vec{v} = \partial u_k/\partial x_k = 0##, this reduces to the more familiar stress tensor
\tau_{ij} = -p\delta_{ij} + \mu\left( \dfrac{\partial u_i}{\partial x_j} + \dfrac{\partial u_j}{\partial x_i} \right)
and ##\lambda## is not important.
I suppose I should also point out that since the interest here is compressible flow, you cannot ignore the energy equation. In an incompressible flow, the density is treated as constant and the energy equation can be solve after solving for the flowfield. This is not the case for a compressible flow. Since density is now a variable, you need an additional equation. The energy equation can cover the density variable, but also introduces temperature as a variable (which is, in general, not constant), so you need a sixth equation to solve the system. This is an equation of state. Typically, for a gas, this ends up being the ideal gas law (or perhaps a real gas law if you care about real gas effects).
The moral of the story is you need 6 equations now: mass, 3 momentum equations, energy, and an equation of state.