News Release

Scaling the pressure fluctuation in an accelerated liquid

Interconnecting the incompressible and compressible (i.e., the water hammer) theories by considering a transitional change in velocity made a unified scaling on the pressure development in one-dimensional flow

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

Impact-Induced Pressure Fluctuations and Validation of a New Pressure Model

image: 

(a) Typical acceleration fluctuations of the liquid caused by the impact and the pressure fluctuations in the liquid, which largely change by the floor materials. (b) Comparison between the experimental data, conventional models (marked as blue and red lines), and the teamʼs proposed model (marked as a black curve).  This implies the universality of the proposed model for various situations. *Modified from Kurihara et al., J. Fluid Mech., (2024).

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Credit: Chihiro Kurihara, Akihito Kiyama and Yoshiyuki Tagawa

The liquid is usually considered rarely compressible, except for when subjected to a high-speed flow or rapid acceleration.  The latter case is known as the water hammer theory, which often occurs with a loud sound when a water faucet is suddenly closed.  In recent years, the onset of mild traumatic brain injury has been discussed in a similar context, meaning that better understanding of this issue is important in not only traditional engineering but also emerging biomechanics applications.

An open question in this classic problem is how to model the transitional development of the pressure field during acceleration.  Existing works often rely on either the incompressible or compressible assumptions (i.e., the water hammer theory), in which the acceleration duration is considered so short that the pressure wavefront develops as a step-wise function (i.e., the pressure in the liquid jumps from zero to a fully developed state spontaneously).  However, in the biomechanical impact, the impactors are typically soft, and the impact duration should be significantly longer.

At the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT), a research team from the Department of Mechanical Systems Engineering has developed a scaling model of transitional pressure development while employing a newly modified dimensionless number.  The research team led by Prof. Yoshiyuki Tagawa, which includes Chihiro Kurihara (a graduate of masterʼs course) and Akihito Kiyama (former assistant professor at TUAT, now at Saitama University) has got their findings published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics on January 16, 2025.

The team came up with a simple experimental setup, in which a test tube partially filled with a liquid was dropped freely and eventually collided with a floor with various stiffness.  The acceleration conditions, which are primary parameters for this specific case, can be tuned with the liquid column length, the speed of sound of liquid (i.e., liquid type), and the acceleration duration (i.e., the floor stiffness).  These parameters determine a dimensionless number, Strouhal number St, which is re-defined as the ratio of the fluid length to the thickness of the pressure wavefront.  While this dimensionless number is often understood as the ratio of fluid/acoustic timescales, their interpretation is more intuitive in this system.  With the help of indirect pressure measurements inside the liquid using an accelerometer, the team proposed an analytical model that interconnects the dimensionless pressure and the Strouhal number.  Their systematic experiment showed that the proposed model can be applied universally to various floors and liquid types.  The model was robust even for a weak hydrogel.  Even though the model is designed for a one-dimensional system such as a pipe, the concept could be developed into a three-dimensional system in the future.

“Our finding is significantly important for understanding pressure dynamics in confined fluid systems under various acceleration conditions,” said Yoshiyuki Tagawa, a professor at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology. “Our research has revealed a unified scaling model that bridges incompressible and compressible flow theories, which can be used to improve engineering designs and to study impact-related biomechanics, such as mitigating brain injuries caused by physical impacts.”

 

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For more information about the Y. Tagawa Laboratory, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, please visit https://sites.google.com/view/tagawalab?authuser=0.

 

About Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT):

TUAT is a distinguished university in Japan dedicated to science and technology.  TUAT focuses on agriculture and engineering that form the foundation of industry, and promotes education and research fields that incorporate them.  Boasting a history of 150 years since our founding in 1874, TUAT continues to boldly take on new challenges and steadily promote fields.  With high ethics, TUAT fulfills social responsibility in the capacity of transmitting science and technology information towards the construction of a sustainable society where both human beings and nature can thrive in a symbiotic relationship.  For more information, please visit http://www.tuat.ac.jp/en/.


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