Knudsen equation

Not to be confused with Hertz–Knudsen equation.

In fluid dynamics, the Knudsen equation is used to describe how gas flows through a tube in free molecular flow. When the mean free path of the molecules in the gas is larger than or equal to the diameter of the tube, the molecules will interact more often with the walls of the tube than with each other. For typical tube dimensions, this occurs only in high or ultrahigh vacuum.

The equation was developed by Martin Hans Christian Knudsen (1871–1949), a Danish physicist who taught and conducted research at the Technical University of Denmark.

Cylindrical tube

For a cylindrical tube, the Knudsen equation is:[1]

q = \frac16 \sqrt{2 \pi} \Delta P \frac{d^3}{ l \sqrt{\rho_1}},

where:

Quantity Description
q volume flow rate at unit pressure (volume×pressure/time)
ΔP pressure drop from the beginning of the tube to the end
d diameter of the tube
l length of the tube
ρ1 ratio of density and pressure

For nitrogen (or air) at room temperature, the conductivity C (in liters per second) of a tube can be calculated from this equation:[2]

\frac{C}{\mathrm{L}/\mathrm{s}} \approx 12 \, \frac{d^3/\mathrm{cm}^3}{{l/\mathrm{cm}}}

References

  1. Loeb, Leonard B. (2004) [1927], The Kinetic Theory of Gases, Dover, p. 293, ISBN 978-0-486-49572-9
  2. Umrath, Walter (2001) [1998], Fundamentals of vacuum technology; Leybold Vacuum Products and Reference Book 2001/2002, Leybold, p. 14
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 10, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.