17–2 ■ SPEED OF SOUND AND MACH NUMBER
An important parameter in the study of compressible flow is the speed of
sound(or the sonic speed), which is the speed at which an infinitesimally
small pressure wave travels through a medium. The pressure wave may be
caused by a small disturbance, which creates a slight rise in local pressure.
To obtain a relation for the speed of sound in a medium, consider a pipe
that is filled with a fluid at rest, as shown in Fig. 17–7. A piston fitted in the
pipe is now moved to the right with a constant incremental velocity dV, cre-
ating a sonic wave. The wave front moves to the right through the fluid at
the speed of sound cand separates the moving fluid adjacent to the piston
from the fluid still at rest. The fluid to the left of the wave front experiences
an incremental change in its thermodynamic properties, while the fluid on
the right of the wave front maintains its original thermodynamic properties,
as shown in Fig. 17–7.
To simplify the analysis, consider a control volume that encloses the wave
front and moves with it, as shown in Fig. 17–8. To an observer traveling
with the wave front, the fluid to the right will appear to be moving toward
the wave front with a speed of cand the fluid to the left to be moving away
from the wave front with a speed of cdV. Of course, the observer will
think the control volume that encloses the wave front (and herself or him-
self) is stationary, and the observer will be witnessing a steady-flow process.
The mass balance for this single-stream, steady-flow process can be
expressed as
or
By canceling the cross-sectional (or flow) area Aand neglecting the higher-
order terms, this equation reduces to
(a)
No heat or work crosses the boundaries of the control volume during this
steady-flow process, and the potential energy change, if any, can be
neglected. Then the steady-flow energy balance eineoutbecomes
h
c^2
2
hdh
1 cdV 22
2
c drr dV 0
rAc 1 rdr 2 A 1 cdV 2
m#rightm#left
Chapter 17 | 827
Disregarding potential energy changes and heat transfer, the compressor
work per unit mass of air is determined from Eq. 17–8:
Thus the work supplied to the compressor is 233.9 kJ/kg.
Discussion Notice that using stagnation properties automatically accounts
for any changes in the kinetic energy of a fluid stream.
233.9 kJ/kg
1 1.005 kJ>kg#K 21 519.5 K286.8 K 2
wincp 1 T 02 T 012
x
dV
rrr + d
Moving
Piston wave front
Stationary
P + dP fluid
h + dh
P
h
dV
V
(^0) x
P + dP
P
P
c
FIGURE 17–7
Propagation of a small pressure wave
along a duct.
dV
rrr + d
Control volume
traveling with
the wave front
P + dP
h + dh
P
c – c h
FIGURE 17–8
Control volume moving with the small
pressure wave along a duct.
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