Turbomachinery is a challenging and diverse field, with applications for professionals and students in many subsets of the mechanical engineering discipline, including fluid mechanics, combustion and heat transfer, dynamics and vibrations, as well as structural mechanics and materials engineering. O
Worked Examples in Turbomachinery. (Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics)
โ Scribed by S. L. Dixon (Auth.)
- Publisher
- Elsevier Ltd
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 111
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Content:
Inside Front Cover, Page ii
Front Matter, Page iii
Copyright, Page iv
Editorial Foreword, Page vii
Preface, Pages ix-x
SYMBOLS, Pages xi-xii
Chapter I - Dimensional Analysis, Similitude, Pages 1-8
Chapter 2 - Thermodynamics, Pages 9-19
Chapter 3 - Two-dimensional Cascades, Pages 20-32
Chapter 4 - Axial Flow Turbines, Pages 33-47
Chapter 5 - Axial Flow Compressors, Pages 48-63
Chapter 6 - Three-dimensional Flows in Axial Turbomachines, Pages 64-80
Chapter 7 - Centrifugal Compressors and Pumps, Pages 81-93
Chapter 8 - Radial Flow Turbines, Pages 94-103
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Turbomachines are those in which energy is transferred to or from a continuously moving fluid by the motion of a rotating element. Some of the most common and important machines used in engineering and industry fall into this category, including those which absorb power (and thereby increase fluid p
Turbomachinery is a challenging and diverse field, with applications for professionals and students in many subsets of the mechanical engineering discipline, including fluid mechanics, combustion and heat transfer, dynamics and vibrations, as well as structural mechanics and materials engineering. O
Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics of Turbomachinery is the leading turbomachinery book due to its balanced coverage of theory and application. Starting with background principles in fluid mechanics and thermodynamics, the authors go on to discuss axial flow turbines and compressors, centrifugal pum
Turbomachinery embraces a number of devices that are classified as 'open', such as propellers, windmills and unshrouded fans. The machines examined here are those defined as 'closed', where a finite quantity of fluid can be considered to pass through the machine in unit time, for it is these which a