Sign In

The continuity equation asserts that the mass flow rate must remain constant for a steady flow of an incompressible fluid within a confined system. This principle applies to systems where fluid passes through varying cross-sectional areas, such as nozzles, syringes, and pipes.

The mass flow rate is expressed as:

Equation 1

For incompressible flow, where the density remains constant, the continuity equation simplifies to:

Equation 2

This equation illustrates that the velocity increases when the cross-sectional area decreases and vice versa, ensuring mass conservation. An example is the flow through a syringe. When the plunger compresses the fluid through a nozzle, the continuity equation shows that if the outlet area is half the inlet area, the outlet velocity must be twice the inlet velocity.

Another example is flow in a gravity-driven tank. Applying both Bernoulli's equation and the continuity equation to points along the flow helps to determine outlet velocity and volumetric flow rate:

Equation 3

Equation 3

where h is the fluid's height, D is the diameter of the tank, and d is the outlet diameter. This relationship shows that the flow rate converges to a stable value as the outlet diameter becomes small relative to the tank diameter. These derivations exemplify the utility of the continuity equation in predicting fluid behavior under various constraints, ensuring mass conservation in dynamic systems.

From Chapter 16:

article

Now Playing

16.6 : Continuity Equation

Fluid Dynamics

8 Views

article

16.1 : Bernoulli's Equation for Flow Along a Streamline

Fluid Dynamics

17 Views

article

16.2 : Bernoulli's Equation for Flow Normal to a Streamline

Fluid Dynamics

10 Views

article

16.3 : Bernoulli's Equation: Problem Solving

Fluid Dynamics

22 Views

article

16.4 : Static, Stagnation, Dynamic and Total Pressure

Fluid Dynamics

11 Views

article

16.5 : Free Jet

Fluid Dynamics

12 Views

article

16.7 : Energy Line and Hydraulic Gradient Line

Fluid Dynamics

7 Views

article

16.8 : Design Example: Designing Water Slide

Fluid Dynamics

10 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved