AN INVESTIGATION OF THE EFFECTS OF BOUNDARY LAYER THICKNESS ON A THIN FILM OF LIQUID FLOW DOWN AN INCLINED PLANE
Abstract/ Overview
The motion of fluid substances may be described by the Navier-Stokes (N-S)
equations. The equations arise from the application of Newton’s second Law of
motion to a fluid. In this paper, N-S equations in two dimensions are considered and
applied to an incompressible laminar viscous fluid moving down an inclined plane
with net flow. The boundary layer thickness is obtained and its effects on the velocity
of the motion at various angles of inclination are examined. In applications such as
photographic and magnetic media coating, flow occurs in an inclined position. This
makes it necessary to investigate the flow on an inclined plane. Most solutions that
have been obtained are over horizontal flat plate. An experimental solution over an
inclined plane involving a flat photographic film being pulled up by a processing bath
by rollers obtained, boundary layer thickness of the flow where there is no net flow
and used a single angle of inclination. In this paper, we examine motion with net flow
and varied angle of inclination. Velocity of flow in the boundary layer is obtained in a
number of ways and utilized in the momentum integral equation to obtain the
boundary layer thickness, a parameter that is used to obtain the flow velocity down
the inclined plane.