Application Areas of Fluid Mechanics

Fluid mechanics is widely used in everyday activities and in the design of modern engineering systems, from vacuum cleaners to supersonic aircraft.

To begin with, fluid mechanics plays a vital role in the human body. The heart constantly pumps blood to all parts of the human body through the arteries and veins, and the lungs are the sites of airflow in alternating directions. All artificial hearts, breathing machines, and dialysis systems are designed using fluid dynamics.

An ordinary house is, in some respects, an exhibition hall filled with applications of fluid mechanics. The piping systems for cold water, natural gas, and sewage for individual houses and the entire city are designed primarily using fluid mechanics. The same applies to heating and air-conditioning systems' piping and ducting networks. A refrigerator involves tubes through which the refrigerant flows, a compressor pressuring the refrigerant, and two heat exchangers where the refrigerant absorbs and rejects heat. Fluid mechanics plays a significant role in the design of all these components. Even the operation of ordinary faucets is based on fluid mechanics.

Applications of Fluid mechanics
Application of Fluid Mechanics

We can also see numerous applications of fluid mechanics in an automobile. All components associated with the transportation of the fuel from the fuel tank to the cylinders, the fuel line, fuel pump, fuel injectors, or carburetors, as well as the mixing of the fuel and the air in the cylinders and the purging of combustion gases in exhaust pipes, are analyzed using fluid mechanics. Fluid mechanics is also used in the design of the heating and air-conditioning system, the hydraulic brakes, the power steering, automatic transmission and lubrication systems, the cooling system of the engine block, including the radiator and the water pump, and even the tires. Recent model cars' sleek, streamlined shape results from efforts to minimize drag using extensive flow analysis over surfaces.

On a broader scale, fluid mechanics plays a significant part in designing and analyzing aircraft, boats, submarines, rockets, jet engines, wind turbines, biomedical devices, the cooling of electronic components, and the transportation of water, crude oil, and natural gas. It is also considered in designing buildings, bridges, and even billboards to ensure that the structures can withstand wind loading. Natural phenomena such as the rain cycle, weather patterns, rising groundwater to the top of trees, winds, ocean waves, and currents in large water bodies are also governed by fluid mechanics principles.

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