Relative Equilibrium of Fluids in Fluid Mechanics

What is Relative Equilibrium of Fluids?

Relative equilibrium occurs when a fluid mass moves as a rigid body – meaning there’s no relative motion between fluid particles, even though the entire fluid mass may be accelerating or rotating. Think of it as the fluid “going along for the ride” with its container without sloshing around internally.


Types of Relative Equilibrium of Fluids

  1. Linear Acceleration
    – Horizontal Motion
    – Vertical Motion
  2. Rotational Motion

Horizontal Motion

Relative Equilibrium of Fluids

Solve for ACCELERATION:


where:
\theta = angle of free surface
a = horizontal acceleration (m/s^2)
g = gravitational acceleration (9.81 m/s^2)

Solve for FORCE:


where:
a = acceleration
m = mass of the tank + mass of the fluid

Inclined Motion

Solve for ACCELERATION:

Vertical Motion

In a closed tank:

equation

Rotational Motion

Rotational Motion

Slope of the Fluid Surface:

tan \theta = \frac{\omega^2x}{g}

\frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{\omega^2 x}{g}

Paraboloid Equation:


where:
y = Height above the lowest point of the parabola
\omega = Angular velocity (rad/s)
r = Radial distance from rotation axis
g = Gravitational Acceleration (9.81 m/s^2)

Squared Property of Paraboloid:

Volume Spilled


where:
Volume of the Cylinder:

V = \pi r^2h

Volume of the Paraboloid:

V = \pi r^2h

Volume Left:

References:

Cengel, Y. A., & Cimbala, J. M. (2018). Fluid mechanics: Fundamentals and applications (4th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education.

Fox, R. W., McDonald, A. T., & Mitchell, J. W. (2020). Fox and McDonald’s introduction to fluid mechanics (10th ed.). John Wiley & Sons.

Mathalino. Fluid Mechanics and Hydraulics

Munson, B. R., Rothmayer, A. P., Okiishi, T. H., & Huebsch, W. W. (2016). Fundamentals of fluid mechanics (8th ed.). John Wiley & Sons.