Ecuación de Bernoulli

Visualización interactiva de la dinámica de fluidos y la relación presión-velocidad

Tubo de Venturi

Presión de Entrada P₁: 0 Pa
Presión de la Garganta P₂: 0 Pa
Presión de Salida P₃: 0 Pa

Líneas de Corriente

Velocidad de Entrada v₁: 0 m/s
Velocidad de la Garganta v₂: 0 m/s
Velocidad de Salida v₃: 0 m/s

Distribución de Presión

Presión P(x)

Distribución de Velocidad

Velocidad v(x)

Verificación de la Ecuación de Bernoulli

P₁ + ½ρv₁² = 0 J/m³
P₂ + ½ρv₂² = 0 J/m³
P₃ + ½ρv₃² = 0 J/m³
Difference: 0%

Parámetros del Fluido

Propiedades del Fluido

Geometría del Tubo de Venturi

Opciones de Visualización

Ajustes Rápidos

Ecuación de Bernoulli

Ecuación de Bernoulli: P + ½ρv² + ρgh = constant
Ecuación de Continuidad: A₁v₁ = A₂v₂ = A₃v₃
Relación de Velocidad: v₂ = (A₁/A₂)v₁ = (D₁/D₂)²v₁
Relación de Presión: P₂ = P₁ + ½ρ(v₁² - v₂²)
Caudal Volumétrico: Q = A₁v₁ = A₂v₂
Caudal Másico: ṁ = ρA₁v₁ = ρA₂v₂

¿Qué es la Ecuación de Bernoulli?

La ecuación de Bernoulli es un principio fundamental de la dinámica de fluidos que describe la relación entre presión, velocidad y elevación en un fluido en movimiento. Establece que para un flujo no viscoso e incompresible, la suma de energía de presión, energía cinética y energía potencial por unidad de volumen permanece constante a lo largo de una línea de corriente. Esta ecuación explica fenómenos como el sustentación en las alas de avión, el funcionamiento de los medidores Venturi y el comportamiento de los fluidos en tuberías de sección variable.

Key Concepts

Pressure Energy (P): The work done by pressure forces. Higher pressure regions have more potential energy per unit volume.
Kinetic Energy (½ρv²): Energy due to fluid motion. Faster moving fluids have more kinetic energy.
Potential Energy (ρgh): Energy due to elevation in a gravitational field.
Energy Conservation: In the absence of friction and turbulence, total mechanical energy per unit volume is conserved.
Speed-Pressure Trade-off: As fluid speed increases, pressure decreases, and vice versa.

Venturi Effect

Constriction Accelerates Flow: When a pipe narrows, fluid velocity must increase to maintain constant mass flow rate (continuity equation).
Pressure Drop: According to Bernoulli's equation, the increase in kinetic energy comes at the expense of pressure energy, causing pressure to drop in the constriction.
Pressure Recovery: As the pipe expands back to its original diameter, velocity decreases and pressure recovers (though some energy may be lost due to turbulence).
Applications: Venturi meters for flow measurement, carburetors, perfume atomizers, and water aspirators.

Real-World Applications

Airplane Wings: Air moves faster over the curved upper surface, creating lower pressure and generating lift.
Venturi Meters: Measure fluid flow rate by detecting pressure difference across a constriction.
Carburetors: Use Venturi effect to draw fuel into the airstream in engines.
Perfume Spray Bottles: Squeezing the bulb creates high-speed airflow that lowers pressure, drawing liquid up the tube.
Chimneys: Wind blowing over a chimney creates lower pressure at the top, enhancing draft.
Sailing: Wind blowing over a sail creates pressure differences that propel the boat.

Limitations and Assumptions

Inviscid Flow: Assumes no viscosity (no friction losses). Real fluids have some viscosity.
Incompressible Flow: Assumes constant density. Valid for liquids and low-speed gas flow.
Steady Flow: Assumes flow conditions don't change with time.
Along a Streamline: Energy is constant along individual streamlines, not necessarily across them.
No Turbulence: Assumes smooth, laminar flow. Real flows may become turbulent at high velocities or sharp transitions.

Historical Context

Daniel Bernoulli published his equation in 1738 in his work "Hydrodynamica." He was a Swiss mathematician and physicist from the famous Bernoulli family. His work laid the foundation for modern fluid dynamics. The equation was later refined by Leonhard Euler, who gave it its modern mathematical form. Bernoulli's principle is one of the most important and widely used equations in fluid mechanics, with applications ranging from hydraulics to aerodynamics. The Venturi effect, named after Italian physicist Giovanni Battista Venturi (1746-1822), is a direct application of Bernoulli's principle and is used in countless engineering applications today.