A Newtonian fluid is a fluid in which the viscous stresses arising from its Fluid dynamics are at every point linearly correlated to the local strain rate — the rate of change of its deformation over time.
A fluid is Newtonian only if the that describe the viscous stress and the strain rate are related by a constant viscosity that does not depend on the stress state and velocity of the flow. If the fluid is also isotropic (i.e., its mechanical properties are the same along any direction), the viscosity tensor reduces to two real coefficients, describing the fluid's resistance to continuous shear deformation and continuous compression or expansion, respectively.
Newtonian fluids are the easiest mathematical models of fluids that account for viscosity. While no real fluid fits the definition perfectly, many common liquids and gases, such as water and air, can be assumed to be Newtonian for practical calculations under ordinary conditions. However, non-Newtonian fluids are relatively common and include oobleck (which becomes stiffer when vigorously sheared) and non-drip paint (which becomes shear thinning). Other examples include many polymer solutions (which exhibit the Weissenberg effect), molten polymers, many solid suspensions, blood, and most highly viscous fluids.
Newtonian fluids are named after Isaac Newton, who first used the differential equation to postulate the relation between the shear strain rate and shear stress for such fluids.
The deformation of a fluid element, relative to some previous state, can be first order approximated by a strain tensor that changes with time. The time derivative of that tensor is the strain rate tensor, that expresses how the element's deformation is changing with time; and is also the gradient of the velocity vector field at that point, often denoted .
The tensors and can be expressed by 3×3 matrices, relative to any chosen coordinate system. The fluid is said to be Newtonian if these matrices are related by the matrix equation where is a fixed 3×3×3×3 fourth order tensor that does not depend on the velocity or stress state of the fluid.
In case of a general 2D incompressibile flow in the plane x, y, the Newton constitutive equation become:
where:
We can now generalize to the case of an incompressible flow with a general direction in the 3D space, the above constitutive equation becomes where
or written in more compact tensor notation where is the flow velocity gradient.
An alternative way of stating this constitutive equation is:
where is the rate-of-strain tensor. So this decomposition can be made explicit as:Batchelor (1967) pp. 137 & 142.
This constitutive equation is also called the Newton law of viscosity.
The total stress tensor can always be decomposed as the sum of the isotropic stress tensor and the deviatoric stress tensor ():
In the incompressible case, the isotropic stress is simply proportional to the thermodynamic pressure :
and the deviatoric stress is coincident with the shear stress tensor :
The stress constitutive equation then becomes or written in more compact tensor notation where is the identity tensor.
where is the Identity matrix, and is the trace of the rate-of-strain tensor. So this decomposition can be explicitly defined as:
Since the trace of the rate-of-strain tensor in three dimensions is the divergence (i.e. rate of expansion) of the flow:
Given this relation, and since the trace of the identity tensor in three dimensions is three:
the trace of the stress tensor in three dimensions becomes:
So by alternatively decomposing the stress tensor into isotropic and deviatoric parts, as usual in fluid dynamics:
Introducing the volume viscosity ,
we arrive to the linear constitutive equation in the form usually employed in thermal hydraulics:
which can also be arranged in the other usual form:Bird, Stewart, Lightfoot, Transport Phenomena, 1st ed., 1960, eq. (3.2-11a)
Note that in the compressible case the pressure is no more proportional to the isotropic stress term, since there is the additional bulk viscosity term:
and the deviatoric stress tensor is still coincident with the shear stress tensor (i.e. the deviatoric stress in a Newtonian fluid has no normal stress components), and it has a compressibility term in addition to the incompressible case, which is proportional to the shear viscosity:
Note that the incompressible case correspond to the assumption that the pressure constrains the flow so that the volume of is constant: isochoric flow resulting in a solenoidal velocity field with .Batchelor (1967) p. 75.
So one returns to the expressions for pressure and deviatoric stress seen in the preceding paragraph.
Both bulk viscosity and dynamic viscosity need not be constant – in general, they depend on two thermodynamics variables if the fluid contains a single chemical species, say for example, pressure and temperature. Any equation that makes explicit one of these transport coefficient in the conservation variables is called an equation of state.Batchelor (1967) p. 165.
Apart from its dependence of pressure and temperature, the second viscosity coefficient also depends on the process, that is to say, the second viscosity coefficient is not just a material property. Example: in the case of a sound wave with a definitive frequency that alternatively compresses and expands a fluid element, the second viscosity coefficient depends on the frequency of the wave. This dependence is called the dispersion. In some cases, the volume viscosity can be assumed to be constant in which case, the effect of the volume viscosity is that the mechanical pressure is not equivalent to the thermodynamic pressure:Landau & Lifshitz (1987) pp. 44–45, 196 as demonstrated below.
However, this difference is usually neglected most of the time (that is whenever we are not dealing with processes such as sound absorption and attenuation of shock waves,White (2006) p. 67. where second viscosity coefficient becomes important) by explicitly assuming . The assumption of setting is called as the Stokes hypothesis.Stokes, G. G. (2007). On the theories of the internal friction of fluids in motion, and of the equilibrium and motion of elastic solids. The validity of Stokes hypothesis can be demonstrated for monoatomic gas both experimentally and from the kinetic theory;Vincenti, W. G., Kruger Jr., C. H. (1975). Introduction to physical gas dynamic. Introduction to physical gas dynamics/Huntington. for other gases and liquids, Stokes hypothesis is generally incorrect.
Finally, note that Stokes hypothesis is less restrictive that the one of incompressible flow. In fact, in the incompressible flow both the bulk viscosity term, and the shear viscosity term in the divergence of the flow velocity term disappears, while in the Stokes hypothesis the first term also disappears but the second one still remains.
There is general formula for friction force in a liquid: The vector differential of friction force is equal the viscosity tensor increased on vector product differential of the area vector of adjoining a liquid layers and rotor of velocity:
where is the viscosity tensor. The diagonal components of viscosity tensor is molecular viscosity of a liquid, and not diagonal components – turbulence eddy viscosity.
The relationship between shear stress, strain rate and the velocity gradient for the power law model are:
where
If
For anisotropic fluids
Newton's law of viscosity
If viscosity does not vary with rate of deformation the fluid is Newtonian.
Power law model
Fluid model
Examples
See also
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