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01/04/2012 CHE 341 Syllabus

ChE 341: Fluid Mechanics


Winter 2012 Instructor: Lecture: Prof. Sunitha Nagrath MWF 3:104:00PM Chrysler Auditorium

All Personnel: Name Sunitha Nagrath Vasudha Murlidhar Alissa Kerner Jordan Stoeker Nathan Pastuzyn Sheng Mark Zheng Role Faculty Instructor GSI GSI IA IA Tutor Office 3320 G. G. Brown 3212 Dow Email snagrath vasmdhar akerner stoeckej pastuznj shzheng

Discussions: Discussions are scheduled for Tuesdays. Section 002 003 004 005 006 007 Time 10.30-11.30 9.30-10.30 1.30-2.30 2.30-3.30 11.30-12.30 1.30-2.30 Room 1005 DOW 3150 DOW 2150 DOW 2166 DOW 3150 DOW 2166 DOW Graduate Student Instructor (GSI) Vasudha Vasudha Alissa Vasudha Alissa Vasudha

Practice Sessions: Optional Sunday sessions will be led by Instructional Aides (IAs), as well as additional evening office hours. Course Objectives/Outcomes: At the end of this course, you should be able to: Knowledge of fundamental concepts in fluids, such as density, viscosity, pressure, stress/strain rate, etc. Ability to apply mass, energy, and momentum balances to hydrostatic and fluid flow problems. Ability to analyze frictional flow in pipes and piping networks. Ability to analyze fluid flow in chemical engineering equipment. Ability to set up the differential equations of fluid mechanics leading to the Navier-Stokes equations, and use them to solve fluid flow problems both analytically and numerically. Ability to analyze boundary layer flows. Ability to analyze turbulent flows. Ability to solve problems involving Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. Ability to analyze flows at small Reynolds number, such as creeping, lubrication, or microfluidic flows. 1

01/04/2012 CHE 341 Syllabus Required Texts: Fluid Mechanics for Chemical Engineers, 2nd ed. (Prentice-Hall: 2006) J. O. Wilkes. Fundamentals of Momentum, Heat, and Mass Transfer, 5th ed. (Wiley: 2008) Welty, Wicks, Wilson, and Rorrer. Office Hours (tentative, locations TBA): Wednesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 11.30am-1.30pm at EECS 3433 7.00pm-9.00pm in Central Campus (location TBD) 11.30am-1.30pm at GGBL 1363 11.30am-1.30pm at GGBL 2233

Prof. Nagrath will have an office hour in 3320 G. G. Brown, Tuesdays 11:30-12:30. Prof. Nagrath, GSIs, IAs and the IAA are also available by appointment. Exam dates: Midterm 1: Midterm 2: Final Exam: Course Web Site: CTools This site will contain the following items, among others: Any announcement related to the course Homework assignments: The problems in each homework set will be posted on the web after they are handed out in lecture. Homework solutions: (several days after the due date). Exam solutions: (several days after the exams have been returned). Graded assignments: In addition to homeworks, there will be two midterm examinations during the semester and a comprehensive final examination. Homeworks 15% Midterm exam 1 24% Midterm exam 2 24% Final exam 34% Class participation, attendance and professionalism 3% -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Total 100% Monday, 6 February 6.00pm-8.00pm Wednesday, 28 March 6.00pm-8.00pm Thursday, April 26 10:30 am - 12:30 pm

Homework: There will be 10 homework assignments during the term, each of which will be handed out at least a week before its due date. Unless otherwise instructed, homework assignments are to be completed individually.

01/04/2012 CHE 341 Syllabus

Homework grading policy: Each homework will be marked out of 25 points. Returned homework will be treated as early and awarded 2 bonus points if delivered to the collection box outside 3212 H. H. DOW by 5:00 PM the day before the due date. (If the grade on all homework exceeds 100%, the excess points will be added directly into the students lowest exam score.) Homework will be treated as on time if submitted no later than the beginning of lecture (by 3:20 PM) on the due date. Homework will be considered late if returned after 3:20 PM, in which case the score will be docked 50%. Homework will not be accepted after 5:30 PM on its due date. Homework presentation guidelines: 1. On the first page, in the upper right hand corner, write: Your Name Your Discussion Section Number and GSI Name Problem Set and Due Date Students you have studied with while working on this assignment 1. Use 8.5 x 11 inch paper with straight edges (not paper torn from a spiral bound notebook). Typing your solutions on a computer is an option, but not mandatory. 2. Number all pages (e.g., 1/5, 2/5, etc.), put your name on each page, and staple the pages together do not paper clip or fold the corners. 3. Use a ruler (or computer application) when making sketches and drawings. 4. Please be neat and write legibly. If the grader cant read it, s/he will assume it is wrong. Requests for re-grading: You may request that the grading of a homework assignment, group project, quiz, or exam be re-evaluated. All such requests must be made in writing. Submit the assignment, project, quiz, or exam in question and a brief note that explains your concerns about the grading. The statute of limitations for requesting a re-grade is one (1) week from the date that an assignment or exam is returned. No requests for re-grades will be accepted after the statute of limitations has expired. There is also a one-week statute of limitations for notifying your instructor in the event that an assignment has not been returned to you. The grader will email students whose grades are missing from a particular assignment. Engineering Honor Code: All exams, quizzes, homework and project assignments will be administered under the College of Engineering Honor Code. Exams: You must write and sign the Honor Pledge "I have neither given nor received aid on this examination, nor have I concealed any violation of the Honor Code." after taking each exam or quiz. Failure to do so gives your instructor the right to refuse to grade that exam or quiz. Individual assignment (Limited collaboration): Each assignment is to be completed individually, but not necessarily in isolation. You are allowed to form small study groups (e.g. of less than five students) and to discuss general solution strategies with peers. However, you are expected to attempt every problem on your 3

01/04/2012 CHE 341 Syllabus own before discussing with classmates and you must complete all calculations and write-up, from scrap to final form, on your own. It is acceptable to discuss problem-solving strategies with the usage of books and notes, but you may not allow any classmate to copy your solution. Note that creating an unfair advantage for another student is an Honor Code violation. Verbatim copying of another student's work is forbidden. You are not allowed to possess, look at, use, or in any way derive advantage from the existence of solutions prepared in previous years, whether these solutions were former students work or copies of solutions made available by instructors or the textbook author. Students with disabilities: Prof. Nagrath is available to discuss appropriate academic accommodations that may be required for student with disabilities. Requests for academic accommodations are to be made during the first three weeks of the semester, except for unusual circumstances, so arrangements can be made. Students are encouraged to register with Office of Students with Disabilities, G-664 Haven Hall, 763-3000, to verify their eligibility for appropriate accommodations. Further information is also available at the following link. http://www.umich.edu/~sswd/

ChE 341. Tentative course outline (by week) for winter 2012 I. Macroscopic fluid mechanics W1. Equilibrium properties of fluids W2. Fluid statics Buoyancy and Archimedes's principle W3. Introduction to transport phenomena Macroscopic mass balances W4. Macroscopic energy balances The (frictionless) Bernoulli equation W5. Macroscopic momentum balances *** MIDTERM 1 (Feb 8th) Wilkes 2.1, 2.2 Welty chap.4 Wilkes 2.3 Welty chap.6 Wilkes 2.4-2.5, Welty 6.3 Wilkes 2.6, Welty chap.5 Wilkes 1.2-1.5, Welty chap.1 Wilkes 1.6, Welty chap. 2

W6. Nonequlibrium properties of fluids The Reynolds number W7. The engineering Bernoulli equation Flow in pump/pipe networks W8. Viscous drag Flow in packed beds 4 Wilkes chap.4, Welty chap.12 Wilkes chap.3, Welty chap.13

01/04/2012 CHE 341 Syllabus

*** SPRING BREAK II. Microscopic fluid mechanics

W9. Microscopic mass and momentum balances Strain; constitutive laws for stress W10. Solving the Navier-Stokes equation 1. W11. Solving the Navier-Stokes equation 2. *** MIDTERM 2 (March 28th) W12. Vorticity and circulation Streaming and potential flows W13. Dimensional analysis Boundary layer flows W14. Turbulent flows, Microfluidics

Wilkes chap.5 (5.5-5.7), Welty chap.9

Wilkes chap.7, Welty chap.10

Wilkes 4.10, Welty chap.11 Wilkes chap.8, Welty 12.3-12.7 Wilkes chap.9, Welty 12.8-12.15

*** FINAL EXAM (Thursday, April 26 10:30 am - 12:30 pm)

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