It depends on the shape of the duct or tube you are using.hotjohn said:Homework Statement
as we all know , D=4R , D=hydraulic diameter , in the equation of P= (8μLV_avg) / (R^2) , i would get (128μLV_avg)/ (D^2) , am i right ? why the author gave (32μLV_avg)/ (D^2) ?
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
yes , i know that . the object given is a long circular tube , so it is D=4R , right ? the notes is wrong ?SteamKing said:It depends on the shape of the duct or tube you are using.
The hydraulic diameter is defined as DH = 4A/P, where A is the cross sectional area of the duct or pipe and P is the wetted perimeter..
For a circular pipe, DH = D (internal) of the pipe, or ##D_H = \frac{4 ⋅ π ⋅ \frac{D^2}{4}}{π ⋅ D} = D##
This article shows the hydraulic diameters for ducts of different shapes:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_diameter
No, it's 2R as usual.hotjohn said:so it is D=4R , right ? the notes is wrong ?
They used the wrong formula for calculating hydraulic diameter to start withhotjohn said:why the note gave 4R ?
Some authors define the hydraulic diameter as A/P. However, I have never liked this, and I always used 4A/P. But, if you are reading a text, you need to make sure which definition they are using.SteamKing said:They used the wrong formula for calculating hydraulic diameter to start with
##D_H = \frac{4A}{P}##
The rest is shoddy proof-reading and failing to catch the error.
I believe you are confusing radius with hydraulic radius.hotjohn said:why the note gave 4R ?
Oops. In my last post, I meant to say hydraulic radius, not hydraulic diameter. Thanks for catching this.haruspex said:I believe you are confusing radius with hydraulic radius.
The link from your original post mentioned R and D, with the implied relationship D=2R.
Your link in post #5 does not mention R, but Rh. This is the hydraulic radius, which is meaningful in any cross section, and does not equate to the actual radius in the case of a cylindrical pipe. Indeed, the way it is defined at https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manning_formula would make it R/2.
so , D=4Rh or D=2Rh ?Chestermiller said:Oops. In my last post, I meant to say hydraulic radius, not hydraulic diameter. Thanks for catching this.
D is the pipe diameter and is therefore twice the radius, D=2R.hotjohn said:so , D=4Rh or D=2Rh ?
i have an example from my books ,haruspex said:D is the pipe diameter and is therefore twice the radius, D=2R.
Rh is defined as the cross-sectional area of flow, A, divided by the wetted perimeter, P. For a filled cylindrical pipe radius R, A=πR2, P=2πR, so Rh=R/2=D/4.
A half-filled horizontal cylindrical pipe has half the wetted perimeter and half the flow cross-section, so the same Rh.
In between the two, Rh reaches a maximum somewhere.
I don't know why hydraulic diameter and hydraulic radius are defined in such ways that the ratio is 4:1 instead of 2:1. My guess is that it is an accident of history and the two definitions (in terms of A and P) were made independently.hotjohn said:i have an example from my books ,
it stated that Dh= 4A / P , why not Dh= 2A / P ? since 2 radius = diameter ?
so , just follow D_h = 4A/ P ? R_h = A/ P ?haruspex said:I don't know why hydraulic diameter and hydraulic radius are defined in such ways that the ratio is 4:1 instead of 2:1. My guess is that it is an accident of history and the two definitions (in terms of A and P) were made independently.
Yes. I suspect that you will not usually find both Rh and Dh used in the same text/problem. Authors will tend to adhere to one or the other. I could be wrong, though.hotjohn said:so , just follow D_h = 4A/ P ? R_h = A/ P ?