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Practice Problems Set 3

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Problem Set 3

ME 231A

1. A laboratory test tank contains seawater of salinity S and density . Water enters the tank at
conditions (S1, 1 , A1, V1) and is assumed to mix immediately in the tank. Tank
water leaves through an outlet A2 at velocity V2. If salt is a conservative property (neither
created nor destroyed), use the Reynolds transport theorem to find an expression for the rate of
change of salt mass Msalt within the tank.

2. A room contains dust of uniform concentration C = dust . It is to be cleaned up by


introducing fresh air at velocity Vi through a duct of area Ai on one wall and exhausting
the room air at velocity V0 through a duct A0 on the opposite wall. Find an expression for the
instantaneous rate of change of dust mass within the room.

3. The balloon in Fig. 3 is being filled through section 1, where the area is A1, velocity is V1,
and fluid density is 1 . The average density within the balloon is b (t). Find an expression for
the rate of change of system mass within the balloon at this instant.

4. Water at 20C flows steadily at 40 kg/s through the nozzle in Fig. 4. If D1 18 cm and D2 5 cm,
compute the average velocity, in m/s, at (a) section 1 and (b) section 2.

5. Liquid fills a bucket as shown in Fig. 5. The average velocity of the liquid at the exit of the
filling pipe is Up and cross section of the pipe is Ap. The liquid fills a bucket with cross section
area of A and instantaneous height is h. Find the height as a function of the other parameters.
Assume that the density is constant and at the boundary interface Aj=0.7Ap. And where Aj is the
area of jet when touching the liquid boundary in bucket. The last assumption is result of the
energy equation (with some influence of momentum equation). The relationship is function of
the distance of the pipe from the boundary of the liquid. However, this effect can be neglected
for this range which this problem. In reality, the ratio is determined by height of the pipe from
the liquid surface in the bucket. Calculate the bucket liquid interface velocity.

6. A solid propellant rocket in Fig. 6 is self-contained and has no entrance ducts. Using a control-
volume analysis for the conditions shown in Fig. 6, compute the rate of mass loss of the
propellant, assuming that the exit gas has a molecular weight of 28.

7. The water jet in Fig. 7 strikes normal to a fixed plate. Neglect gravity and friction, and
compute the force F in Newtons required to hold the plate fixed.

8. A water jet of velocity Vj impinges normal to a flat plate which moves to the right at velocity
Vc, as shown in Fig. 8. Find the force required to keep the plate moving at constant velocity if
the jet density is 1000 kg/m3, the jet area is 3 cm2, and Vj and Vc are 20 and 15 m/s, respectively.
Neglect the weight of the jet and plate, and assume steady flow with respect to the moving plate
with the jet splitting into an equal upward and downward half-jet.
9. As shown in Fig. 9, a liquid column of height h is confined in a vertical tube of cross-sectional
area A by a stopper. At t = 0 the stopper is suddenly removed, exposing the bottom of the liquid
to atmospheric pressure. Using a control-volume analysis of mass and vertical momentum,
derive the differential equation for the downward motion V(t) of the liquid. Assume one-
dimensional, incompressible, frictionless flow.

10. Air at 20C and 1 atm enters the bottom of an 85 conical flowmeter duct at a mass flow of
0.3 kg/s, as shown in Fig. 10. It is able to support a centered conical body by steady annular flow
around the cone, as shown. The air velocity at the upper edge of the body equals the entering
velocity. Estimate the weight of the body, in newtons.

11. Torricellis idealization of efflux from a hole in the side of a tank is v 2 gh , as shown in
Fig. 11. The cylindrical tank weighs 150 N when empty and contains water at 20C. The tank
bottom is on very smooth ice (static friction coefficient 0.01). The hole diameter is 9 cm. For
what water depth h will the tank just begin to move to the right?
12. When the pump in Fig. 12 draws 220 m3/h of water at 20C from the reservoir, the total
friction head loss is 5 m. The flow discharges through a nozzle to the atmosphere. Estimate the
pump power in kW delivered to the water.

13. The air-cushion vehicle in Fig. 13 brings in sea-level standard air through a fan and
discharges it at high velocity through an annular skirt of 3-cm clearance. If the vehicle weighs 50
kN, estimate (a) the required airflow rate and (b) the fan power in kW.
14. A liquid jet of velocity Vj and area Aj strikes a single 180 bucket on a turbine wheel rotating
at angular velocity , as in Fig. 14. Derive an expression for the power P delivered to this wheel
at this instant as a function of the system parameters. At what angular velocity is the maximum
power delivered? How would your analysis differ if there were many, many buckets on the
wheel, so that the jet was continually striking at least one bucket?

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