Fanning friction factor
The Fanning friction factor, named after John Thomas Fanning, is a dimensionless number used as a local parameter in continuum mechanics calculations. It is defined as the ratio between the local shear stress and the local flow kinetic energy density:
where:
- is the local Fanning friction factor
- is the local shear stress
- is the local flow velocity
- is the density of the fluid
In particular the shear stress at the wall can, in turn, be related to the pressure loss by multiplying the wall shear stress by the wall area ( for a pipe with circular cross section) and dividing by the cross-sectional flow area ( for a pipe with circular cross section). Thus
The friction head can be related to the pressure loss due to friction by dividing the pressure loss by the product of the acceleration due to gravity and the density of the fluid. Accordingly, the relationship between the friction head and the Fanning friction factor is:
where:
- is the friction loss (in head) of the pipe.
- is the Fanning friction factor of the pipe.
- is the flow velocity in the pipe.
- is the length of pipe.
- is the local acceleration of gravity.
- is the pipe diameter.
Fanning friction factor formula
This friction factor is one-fourth of the Darcy friction factor, so attention must be paid to note which one of these is meant in the "friction factor" chart or equation consulted. Of the two, the Fanning friction factor is the more commonly used by chemical engineers and those following the British convention.
The formulae below may be used to obtain the Fanning friction factor for common applications.
The friction factor for laminar flow in round tubes is often taken to be:
where Re is the Reynolds number of the flow.
For a square channel the value used is:
The Darcy friction factor can also be expressed as[1]
where:
- is the shear stress at the wall
- is the density of the fluid
- is the flow velocity averaged on the flow cross section
For the turbulent flow regime, the relationship between the Fanning friction factor and the Reynolds number is more complex and is governed by the Colebrook equation [2] which is implicit in :
Various explicit approximations of the related Darcy friction factor have been developed for turbulent flow.
Stuart W. Churchill[3] developed a formula that covers the friction factor for both laminar and turbulent flow. This was originally produced to describe the Moody chart, which plots the Darcy-Weisbach Friction factor against Reynolds number. The Darcy Weisbach Formula is 4 times the Fanning friction factor and so a factor of has been applied to produce the formula given below.
- Re, Reynolds number (unitless);
- ε, roughness of the inner surface of the pipe (dimension of length);
- D, inner pipe diameter;
References
- ↑ Cengel, Yunus; Ghajar, Afshin (2014). Heat and Mass Transfer: Fundamentals and Applications. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-339818-1.
- ↑ Colebrook, C. F.; White, C. M. (3 August 1937). "Experiments with Fluid Friction in Roughened Pipes". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 161 (906): 367–381. doi:10.1098/rspa.1937.0150. JSTOR 96790. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ Churchill, S.W. (1977). "Friction factor equation spans all fluid-flow regimes". Chemical engineering. 84 (24): 91–92.
Further reading
- Fanning, J.T. (1896). A practical treatise on hydraulic and water-supply engineering. D. Van Nostrand. ISBN 978-5-87581-042-8.