wessholders
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Will water flowing through a funnel be accelerated more by a "curve-walled" funnel rather than a "straight-walled" funnel?
The discussion revolves around the acceleration of water flowing through different types of funnels, specifically comparing "curve-walled" funnels to "straight-walled" funnels. Participants explore the optimal design for maximizing volume and acceleration in a project context, touching on concepts from fluid dynamics and geometry.
Participants express various viewpoints on the effectiveness of different funnel designs, with no clear consensus on the optimal shape or configuration. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the best approach to funnel design for maximizing water flow and acceleration.
Some limitations include the lack of specific parameters such as funnel size and expected flow rates, which may influence the effectiveness of different designs. The discussion also highlights the dependence on definitions related to fluid dynamics concepts.
This discussion may be of interest to individuals involved in fluid dynamics, engineering design, or those working on practical projects related to fluid flow and acceleration.
Baluncore said:The aim is to avoid sudden changes in flow direction, which can lead to a "vena contracta" that will reduce the effective diameter of the funnel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vena_contracta
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borda–Carnot_equation
Potential energy must be smoothly converted to kinetic energy as the fluid falls through the funnel. Cross-section must change by the same ratio per unit travel along the funnel.
I believe the optimum flow will be with an exponential horn, like a reversed loud hailer, so the fluid is accelerating smoothly along the channel, without sudden changes in fluid wall pressure.
Here is a short video demonstrating what I am talking about.hutchphd said:Thanks for the description. That looks like an interesting toy. Does the water come out in a relatively collimated jet? I'm sure that turbulent flow is the enemy here. But it may be very subtle. I may cut up some "larger" plastic bottles and hit the pool !
I just took a video and am trying to figure out how to post it, but it does look to be relatively collimated. I am a biologist so not super versed with the vocabulary, but it appears smooth/laminar.wessholders said:Here is a short video demonstrating what I am talking about.