DRAG REDUCTION BY ADDITIVES
An examination is made of the experimental evidence for the reduction of skin friction in dilute solutions of high molecular weight linear polymers below that of the solvent alone. Inferences are drawn about the necessary properties of the polymers and their solvents, and the mechanical properties of the solutions are described. In the detailed flow measurements, those observations requiring explanation are identified. Simple dimensional considerations are applied to isolate the phenomenon in a relatively narrow region outside the viscous sublayer; these same considerations are shown to explain several of the observed anomalies. In an attempt at a deeper explanation, the influence of phenomena such as agglomeration and extension is discussed. It is shown that mechanisms of interaction which suggest themselves, while qualitatively satisfactory, are quantitatively and conceptually in disagreement with experiment, while the experimental results are in disagreement with accepted principles of fluid mechanics. ( Author )
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Corporate Authors:
Cambridge University Press
32 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY United States 10013-2473Pennsylvania State University, University Park
Department of Mechanical Engineering
University Park, PA United States 16802 -
Authors:
- Lumley, John L
- Publication Date: 1969
Media Info
- Pagination: p. 367-384
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Serial:
- Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics
- Volume: 1
- Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Environment; Oceans
- Uncontrolled Terms: Marine environment
- Subject Areas: Design; Environment; Marine Transportation;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00007099
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: National Technical Information Service
- Contract Numbers: 656( 33 )
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Dec 22 1974 12:00AM