Instructor:
Professor Milivoje M. Kostic, Ph.D., P.E., Department of Mechanical Engineering
Tel: 753-9975, email: kostic@niu.edu ; Web www.kostic.niu.edu
Office and Class/Lab hours: See Web posted schedule at: Office Hours and Info. Office: EB 208.
Course/Catalog Description:
MEE 540/640: ADVANCED FLUID MECHANICS (3). Kinematics of fluid flow; plane irrotational and incompressible fluid flow; Navier-Stokes equations; hydrodynamic stability; turbulence; two-dimensional boundary layers in incompressible flow; flow separation. PRQ: Consent of department (equivalent to undergraduate MEE 340 Fluid Mechanics course).
Topics - Course Outline (tentative):
Week(s) or | Topic(s)/Assignment(s) | Textbook Chapters |
| 1,2 | Review of Preliminary concepts (undergraduate prerequisite) and kinematics of fluid flow | 1 Introduction; 2 Cartesian Tensors; 3 Kinematics |
| 3,4 | Fundamental and Navier-Stokes equations | 4 Conservation Laws |
| 5 | Vorticity Dynamics | 5 Vorticity Dynamics |
| 6 | Review and Midterm | |
| 7 | Plain irrotational and incompressible fluid flow | 6 Irrotational Flow |
| 8 | Some solutions of the viscous-flow equations | 9 Laminar Flow |
| 9,10 | Two-dimensional boundary layers in incompressible flow | 10 Boundary Layers and Related Topics |
| 11 | Flow separation | 10 Boundary Layers and Related Topics |
| 12 | Hydrodynamic stability | 12 Instability |
| 13,14 | Turbulence | 13 Turbulence |
| 15 | Review | |
| 16 | FINAL EXAM. |
Textbook(s):
Kundu, P. K., and Ira M. Cohen, Fluid Mechanics, 4th ed., Elsevier/Academic Press 2007/Elsevier, 2008. ISBN-10: 0123737354, ISBN-13: 978-0123737359. Web Link
Supplementary Text: Çengel, Y.A. and J.M. Cimbala, Fluid Mechanics, McGraw-Hill, 2006. ISBN: 0072472367. Web Link
References:
Çengel, Y.A. and J.M. Cimbala, Fluid Mechanics, McGraw-Hill,
Munson, B.R., D.F. Young, and T.H. Okiishi, Fundamentals of FLUID MECHANICS, 4th Ed., Wiley, New York, NY, 2002._( TOC )
White, F. M., Fluid Mechanics, Fifth Edition, McGraw Hill 2003.
(NOTE: Even though the above are undergraduate texts, they cover all topics in full depth, as many other excellent undergraduate textbooks do; thus they could and should be used for review of fundamental concepts, often better than advanced books that emphasize analytical techniques.
Kundu, P. K., and Ira M. Cohen, Fluid Mechanics, 4th ed., Academic Press 2007/Elsevier, 2008. ISBN-10: 0123737354, ISBN-13: 978-0123737359
Yuan, S.W., Foundations of Fluid Mechanics, Prentice Hall, 1967.
White, F. M., , Viscous Fluid Flow, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill 1991.
Currie, I.G., Fundamental Mechanics of Fluids, 2nd Edition, McGraw Hill 1993.
Panton, R.L., Incompressible Flow, 2nd Ed., John Wiley & Sons, 1996.
Fay, J. A., Introduction to Fluid Mechanics Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1994. ISBN: 0262061651
Chevray, R. and J. Mathieu, Topics in Fluid Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 1993.
Leal, L.G., Laminar Flow and Convective Transport Processes Butterworth-Heinemann (1992).
Schlichting, H., Boundary Layer Theory, McGraw-Hill, 1968.
Batchelor, G.K., An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics, Cambridge University Press, 1967.
Aris, R., Vectors, Tensors, and the Basic Equations of Fluid Mechanics, Prentice-Hall, 1962.
Happel J. and H. Brenner, Low Reynolds Number Hydrodynamics, Noordhoff International, 1973.
Panton, R. L., Incompressible Flow, John Wiley & Sons, 1984.
Multi-Media Fluid Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 2000.
Computer Usage:
Students are required to use FORTRAN, BASIC, or C programs, and/or MathCAD or MATLAB software to solve some homework problems and projects.
Grading:
Homework about 25%; Midterm(s) about 25%; Final about 50%. If any item is not required/graded for the whole class, the other items are prorated proportionally. Final Exam is comprehensive and its passing grade is required to pass the course (see Class/HW/Lab/Exam Policies).
Useful Links:
efluids.com
Fluid Flow Animations
Notes On Vectors and Tensors from a course at Penn State