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The Prandtl number (Pr) or Prandtl group is a dimensionless number, named after the German physicist Ludwig Prandtl, defined as the ratio of momentum diffusivity to thermal diffusivity.[1] The Prandtl number is given as:
where:
- : momentum diffusivity (kinematic viscosity), , (SI units: m2/s)
- : thermal diffusivity, , (SI units: m2/s)
- : dynamic viscosity, (SI units: Pa s = N s/m2)
- : thermal conductivity, (SI units: W/(m·K))
- : specific heat, (SI units: J/(kg·K))
- : density, (SI units: kg/m3).
Note that whereas the Reynolds number and Grashof number are subscripted with a scale variable, the Prandtl number contains no such length scale and is dependent only on the fluid and the fluid state. The Prandtl number is often found in property tables alongside other properties such as viscosity and thermal conductivity.
The mass transfer analog of the Prandtl number is the Schmidt number and the ratio of the Prandtl number and the Schmidt number is the Lewis number.
Experimental values
editTypical values
editFor most gases over a wide range of temperature and pressure, Pr is approximately constant. Therefore, it can be used to determine the thermal conductivity of gases at high temperatures, where it is difficult to measure experimentally due to the formation of convection currents.[1]
Typical values for Pr are:
- 0.003 for molten potassium at 975 K[1]
- around 0.015 for mercury
- 0.065 for molten lithium at 975 K[1]
- around 0.16–0.7 for mixtures of noble gases or noble gases with hydrogen
- 0.63 for oxygen[1]
- around 0.71 for air and many other gases
- 1.38 for gaseous ammonia[1]
- between 4 and 5 for R-12 refrigerant
- around 7.56 for water (At 18 °C)
- 13.4 and 7.2 for seawater (At 0 °C and 20 °C respectively)
- 50 for n-butanol[1]
- between 100 and 40,000 for engine oil
- 1000 for glycerol[1]
- 10,000 for polymer melts[1]
- around 1×1025 for Earth's mantle.
Formula for the calculation of the Prandtl number of air and water
editFor air with a pressure of 1 bar, the Prandtl numbers in the temperature range between −100 °C and +500 °C can be calculated using the formula given below.[2] The temperature is to be used in the unit degree Celsius. The deviations are a maximum of 0.1% from the literature values.
, where is the temperature in Celsius.
The Prandtl numbers for water (1 bar) can be determined in the temperature range between 0 °C and 90 °C using the formula given below.[2] The temperature is to be used in the unit degree Celsius. The deviations are a maximum of 1% from the literature values.
Physical interpretation
editSmall values of the Prandtl number, Pr ≪ 1, means the thermal diffusivity dominates. Whereas with large values, Pr ≫ 1, the momentum diffusivity dominates the behavior. For example, the listed value for liquid mercury indicates that the heat conduction is more significant compared to convection, so thermal diffusivity is dominant. However, engine oil with its high viscosity and low heat conductivity, has a higher momentum diffusivity as compared to thermal diffusivity.[3]
The Prandtl numbers of gases are about 1, which indicates that both momentum and heat dissipate through the fluid at about the same rate. Heat diffuses very quickly in liquid metals (Pr ≪ 1) and very slowly in oils (Pr ≫ 1) relative to momentum. Consequently thermal boundary layer is much thicker for liquid metals and much thinner for oils relative to the velocity boundary layer.
In heat transfer problems, the Prandtl number controls the relative thickness of the momentum and thermal boundary layers. When Pr is small, it means that the heat diffuses quickly compared to the velocity (momentum). This means that for liquid metals the thermal boundary layer is much thicker than the velocity boundary layer.
In laminar boundary layers, the ratio of the thermal to momentum boundary layer thickness over a flat plate is well approximated by[4]
where is the thermal boundary layer thickness and is the momentum boundary layer thickness.
For incompressible flow over a flat plate, the two Nusselt number correlations are asymptotically correct:[4]
where is the Reynolds number. These two asymptotic solutions can be blended together using the concept of the Norm (mathematics):[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i Coulson, J. M.; Richardson, J. F. (1999). Chemical Engineering Volume 1 (6th ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-7506-4444-0.
- ^ a b tec-science (2020-05-10). "Prandtl number". tec-science. Retrieved 2020-06-25.
- ^ Çengel, Yunus A. (2003). Heat transfer : a practical approach (2nd ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0072458933. OCLC 50192222.
- ^ a b c Lienhard IV, John Henry; Lienhard V, John Henry (2017). A Heat Transfer Textbook (4th ed.). Cambridge, MA: Phlogiston Press.
Further reading
edit- White, F. M. (2006). Viscous Fluid Flow (3rd. ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-240231-8.