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PIPES CONVEYING FLUID: LINEAR DYNAMICS I               83

              plane) to make the argument simplest:

                                aP          aw         aT          aw
                             -A  - -qS+  F  - = 0,     - +qS  - F  - = 0,          (3.65)
                                ax          ax          ax         ax
               which, when added give
                                             a
                                            -(T   - PA) = 0.                       (3.66)
                                            ax
              Thus, the frictional force qS  is replaced by  its twin effects: (i) as a tension on  the pipe
               and (ii) as a pressure drop in the fluid. Equation (3.66), when integrated from x to L gives
               (T - PA), = (T - ~A)L, the equivalent of  equation (3.36). Ignoring externally imposed
              tensioning and pressurization, which do not enter the argument (and which are discussed
              in Section 3.4.2), and thus considering for simplicity the fluid to discharge to atmosphere,
              both p  and T  vanish at x = L, and hence

                                     T - PA = 0    for   x E  [O.  L].             (3.67)

              It follows that the term related to T  and  p  in  equation (3.34), the precursor to the final
              equation of  motion, vanishes, i.e.
                                          a
                                          - [(T - PA):]   = 0,
                                          ax                                       (3.68)

              because  of  (3.66)  and  (3.67). Therefore,  the  two  effects  of  friction - tensioning  and
              pressure drop - cancel each other entirely and vanish  from the  equation of  motion, to
              the order of the linear approximation (Benjamin 1961a; Gregory & Pdidoussis 1966a).
                This has been verified experimentally (see Sections 3.4.4 and 3.5.6), and also numeri-
              cally in calculations with shell theory for beam-mode vibrations (n = 1)  in Chapter 7.


              3.3.5  Nondimensional equation of motion

              Consider the most general form of the equation of motion derived so far, equation (3.38).
              It  will  help further discussion if  this equation is generalized a little by  considering the
              possibility that the pipe may be  supported all along its length by  a Winkler-type elastic
              foundation, which involves distributed springs of  stiffness K  per unit length: thus, a term
              Kw is added to the equation of  motion.
                The resultant equation may be rendered dimensionless through the use of


                                                                                   (3.69)


              The dimensionless equation is
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