Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes Equation

4
Deriving Vorticity Equation from Navier-Stokes Equation. Consider the two-dimensional flow of a homogenous and incompressible fluid. The density and the viscosity of the fluid are both assumed to be uniform. We assume that any body forces on the fluid are derived as a gradient of a scalar function. The governing equations for the motion of the fluid are the conservation of mass and linear momentum . The mass conservation equation is (2.1) where is the velocity and is the gradient operator. We also denote to be any point in the plane and and to be the unit vectors along the axes. The linear momentum conservation for a Newtonian fluid is given by the Navier-Stokes equations, where is time; is mechanical pressure; is body force per unit mass of the fluid;

description

Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes

Transcript of Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes Equation

Page 1: Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes Equation

Deriving Vorticity Equation from Navier-Stokes Equation. Consider the two-dimensional flow of a homogenous and incompressible fluid. The density and the viscosity of the fluid are both assumed to be uniform. We assume that any body forces on the fluid are derived as a gradient of a scalar function. The governing equations for the motion of the fluid are the conservation of mass and linear momentum . The mass conservation equation is

 

(2.1)

where  

is the velocity and is the gradient operator. We also denote to be any point in

the plane and and to be the unit vectors along the axes. The linear momentum conservation for a Newtonian fluid is given by the Navier-Stokes equations,

 

where is time;

is mechanical pressure; is body force per unit mass of the fluid;

is kinematic viscosity, defined as the ratio of the dynamic viscosity and the density of the fluid and,

is the Laplacian operator. The equation for the the evolution of vorticity can be derived from the Navier-Stokes equations . To do that, we first define the vorticity to be the curl of the flow velocity,

 

For two-dimensional flows, the vorticity vector is normal to the plane of the flow; that is,

Page 2: Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes Equation

where,

is an unit vector normal to the plane. The vorticity equation is obtained by taking the curl of and it is given by:

 

 

The physical interpretation of each of the terms in the vorticity equation is the basis for the formulation of vortex methods. On the right hand side of the first term represents the transport of vorticity due to the velocity (convection process), and the second term represents the change in vorticity due to viscosity (diffusion process) . Truesdell has described the convection and diffusion processes in detail from a kinematic point of view. To solve for a particular problem, initial and boundary conditions must be specified. The initial vorticity field may be prescribed or it may also be derived as the curl of a specified initial velocity field. Boundary conditions must be specified when there are boundaries in a flow. On a solid impermeable boundary, the velocity of the fluid on the boundary must be the same as the velocity of the boundary itself,

 

where is any point on the boundary and,

is the velocity of the boundary. Notice that the boundary condition is in terms of velocity and not vorticity; we will discuss the handling of this boundary condition in section. Further, in many applications the flow domain is unbounded and at large distances the velocity is either uniform or vanishes; hence the vorticity vanishes at large distances also.

 Vortex methods are based on the Lagrangian approach in which the ``fluid particles" are used as the basic computational elements. Here the fluid particles are understood to be small volumes of fluid. To be precise, particles are volumes of fluid that are much smaller than all relevant length

Page 3: Deriving Vorticity Equation From Navier-Stokes Equation

scales of the flow but still much larger than the molecular size and mean free-path length. The time derivative following a fluid particle is defined as

 

In terms of this ``Lagrangian time-derivative", we can rewrite the vorticity equation as,

 

According to, the vorticity of a fluid particle changes only due to diffusion. In inviscid flows

the vorticity of a fluid particle does not change; this result is very useful in formulating vortex methods However, the vorticity equation is only one equation for three unknowns,

, ,