The formula for the viscosity of a fluid (or even a gas) is equal to \begin{align*} \frac{F}{A} =\mu\frac{du}{dz} \end{align*} where $F$ is the force applied to the top layer of the fluid, $A$ is the surface area between the top and bottom layers of the fluid, $\mu$ is the viscosity of the fluid, and $du/dz$ is the velocity gradient of the fluid. In general, is the velocity gradient of a homogeneous viscous fluid a constant, or are there cases where higher order terms are needed?
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$\begingroup$ No, the gradient is not constant in general. Look at boundary layer theory. $\endgroup$– alephzeroCommented Jan 1, 2019 at 12:07
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$\begingroup$ Okay, is it at least a good assumption over small gaps in height? $\endgroup$– Alex SCommented Jan 1, 2019 at 12:11
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1$\begingroup$ It is OK for a viscous fluid between parallel plates, with the tangential velocities of the plates different. For more complicated situations, you need to consider the 3D version of the relationship between the stress tensor and the rate of deformation tensor. Google Newtonian Fluid. $\endgroup$– Chet MillerCommented Jan 1, 2019 at 14:36
1 Answer
This formula is applicable only in the case of a stationary fluid sheared between two plates (Poiseuille flow), in the limit that the shear strain is small. In that case the shear strain is automatically spatially constant. If the shear strain is large (or of the fluid is non-Newtonian) then $\mu$ will depend on the shear strain.
The general formula is that the stress tensor is given by $$ \Pi_{ij} = P\delta_{ij} +\rho u_iu_j - \mu\left( \nabla_iu_j+\nabla_j u_i -\frac{2}{3}\delta_{ij} (\nabla\cdot u) \right) - \zeta \delta_{ij} (\nabla\cdot u) + O(\nabla^2) $$ where $O(\nabla^2)$ denotes terms that become important at higher strain rate. The force per area on a surface element is $$ dF_i = \Pi_{ij}dA_j $$ We can quickly check that this reproduces Newton's formula. Take a flow $u_x(z)$ bounded by plates in the $xy$ plane. The tangential force on the plates is $$ F_x/A=-(\hat{e}_z)_i \Pi_{xj} = -\Pi_{xz}=\eta\nabla_z u_x $$
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$\begingroup$ Would you be able to provide any references for your equation? $\endgroup$– Alex SCommented Jan 3, 2019 at 5:57
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$\begingroup$ Any book on fluid dynamics will do, for example chapter 7 and 15 of Landau, or chapter 6 of Acheson. $\endgroup$– ThomasCommented Jan 3, 2019 at 16:11
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$\begingroup$ See also Transport Phenomena by Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 4, 2019 at 19:18