anubis512
Mechanical
- Jul 29, 2013
- 21
Hi All,
I'm a pretty new engineer a couple years out of college. The topic of choked flow keeps coming up at my job so I've bought a couple compressible flow books and am attempting to educate myself. Currently browsing through Compressible Fluid Flow by Saad (if you have any other recommendations, please let me know). In the section discussing mass flow, Saad shows that the maximum mass flow occurs when Mach Number = 1 and minimum flow area. The minimum flow area is A* the cross sectional area at M = 1. He goes on to define a ratio A(actual)/A* and states that this value can never be less than 1.
What does this mean? If A* at M = 1 is defined as 5 in2, what would happen if A = 3 in2? It seems to imply this can't physically happen so I'm confused.
Thanks for your time
I'm a pretty new engineer a couple years out of college. The topic of choked flow keeps coming up at my job so I've bought a couple compressible flow books and am attempting to educate myself. Currently browsing through Compressible Fluid Flow by Saad (if you have any other recommendations, please let me know). In the section discussing mass flow, Saad shows that the maximum mass flow occurs when Mach Number = 1 and minimum flow area. The minimum flow area is A* the cross sectional area at M = 1. He goes on to define a ratio A(actual)/A* and states that this value can never be less than 1.
What does this mean? If A* at M = 1 is defined as 5 in2, what would happen if A = 3 in2? It seems to imply this can't physically happen so I'm confused.
Thanks for your time