AIR1168/1 Thermodynamics of Incompressible and Compressible Fluid Flow

Reaffirmed

06/20/2011

Features
Issuing Committee
Scope
Content
The fluid flow treated in this section is isothermal, subsonic, and incompressible. The effects of heat addition, work on the fluid, variation in sonic velocity, and changes in elevation are neglected. An incompressible fluid is one in which a change in pressure causes no resulting change in fluid density. The assumption that liquids are incompressible introduces no appreciable error in calculations, but the assumption that a gas is incompressible introduces an error of a magnitude that is dependent on the fluid velocity and on the loss coefficient of the particular duct section or piece of equipment. Fig. 1A-1 shows the error in pressure drop resulting from assuming that air is incompressible.
With reasonably small loss coefficients and the accuracy that is usually required in most calculations, compressible fluids may be treated as incompressible for velocities less than Mach 0.2. At higher velocities and for large loss coefficients (Kt and 4fL/D), compressible flow analysis should be used.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR1168/1
Pages
156
Citation
SAE International Information Report, Thermodynamics of Incompressible and Compressible Fluid Flow, SAE Standard AIR1168/1, Reaffirmed June 2011, Issued March 1990, https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR1168/1.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 20, 2011
Product Code
AIR1168/1
Content Type
Information Report
Status
Reaffirmed
Language
English

Revisions