Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution

The solution of the steady-state isothermal gas flow with zero-pressure gradient over a flat plate is classical and was presented by Blasius in 1908. Despite being reduced to a third-order Ordinary Differential Equation, nobody has solved it using just three boundary conditions. In consequence, the “so...

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Main Author: Emerson Freitas Jaguaribe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2020-01-01
Series:Mathematical Problems in Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2964231
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spelling doaj-b8408d35f7ee43b69ea64cb1cd98fcd22020-11-25T02:45:44ZengHindawi LimitedMathematical Problems in Engineering1024-123X1563-51472020-01-01202010.1155/2020/29642312964231Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional SolutionEmerson Freitas Jaguaribe0Departamento de Engenharia Mecânica, Centro de Tecnologia, Campus I da UFPB, João Pessoa, PB 50051-900, BrazilThe solution of the steady-state isothermal gas flow with zero-pressure gradient over a flat plate is classical and was presented by Blasius in 1908. Despite being reduced to a third-order Ordinary Differential Equation, nobody has solved it using just three boundary conditions. In consequence, the “solutions” (exact or numerical) are not unique, do not satisfy Prandtl’s boundary layer concept, and give rise to imprecise criteria of the boundary layer thickness definition (0.99.U∞, where U∞ is the free stream velocity) and to idealizations such as the displacement thickness, δ∗, and the momentum thickness, δI. Even though η, the similarity parameter, is defined as a function of x, it is surprising that it is seen as a constant, η∞, at the limit of the boundary layer, being valid for the entire plate. It is shown that uncountable “solutions” satisfying the classical equation and its three natural boundary layer conditions can be built. The reduction technique of the Boundary Value Problem, BVP, to an Initial Value Problem, IVP, and the Perturbation Analysis Technique, used as an attempt to incorporate a fourth boundary condition to the differential equation, are discussed. A more general and direct method to deduce the classical Blasius’s flat plate equation is considered, as one of the steps to rectify its solution, and shed light on the origin of the conflicting issues involved.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2964231
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emerson Freitas Jaguaribe
spellingShingle Emerson Freitas Jaguaribe
Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
Mathematical Problems in Engineering
author_facet Emerson Freitas Jaguaribe
author_sort Emerson Freitas Jaguaribe
title Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
title_short Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
title_full Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
title_fullStr Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
title_full_unstemmed Conflicting Aspects in the Flat Plate Boundary Layer Conventional Solution
title_sort conflicting aspects in the flat plate boundary layer conventional solution
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Mathematical Problems in Engineering
issn 1024-123X
1563-5147
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The solution of the steady-state isothermal gas flow with zero-pressure gradient over a flat plate is classical and was presented by Blasius in 1908. Despite being reduced to a third-order Ordinary Differential Equation, nobody has solved it using just three boundary conditions. In consequence, the “solutions” (exact or numerical) are not unique, do not satisfy Prandtl’s boundary layer concept, and give rise to imprecise criteria of the boundary layer thickness definition (0.99.U∞, where U∞ is the free stream velocity) and to idealizations such as the displacement thickness, δ∗, and the momentum thickness, δI. Even though η, the similarity parameter, is defined as a function of x, it is surprising that it is seen as a constant, η∞, at the limit of the boundary layer, being valid for the entire plate. It is shown that uncountable “solutions” satisfying the classical equation and its three natural boundary layer conditions can be built. The reduction technique of the Boundary Value Problem, BVP, to an Initial Value Problem, IVP, and the Perturbation Analysis Technique, used as an attempt to incorporate a fourth boundary condition to the differential equation, are discussed. A more general and direct method to deduce the classical Blasius’s flat plate equation is considered, as one of the steps to rectify its solution, and shed light on the origin of the conflicting issues involved.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2964231
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