Philipp Forchheimer
Philipp Forchheimer (7 August 1852 in Vienna – 2 October 1933 in Dürnstein, Lower Austria) was an Austrian engineer, a pioneer in the field of civil engineering and practical hydraulics. He was professor in Istanbul, Aachen and Graz.
| Philipp Forchheimer | |
|---|---|
| Born | 7 August 1852 | 
| Died | 2 October 1933 (aged 81) | 
| Nationality | Austrian | 
| Occupation | Engineer | 
| Engineering career | |
| Significant advance | Hydraulics | 
He introduced mathematical methodology to the study of hydraulics, thus establishing a scientific basis for the field. He was director of the Graz University of Technology until 1897. In addition to his teaching, he worked as a consultant for construction projects. He made proposals for the construction of a tunnel under the English Channel.
Modification to Darcy's Law
    
Forchheimer proposed a modification to Darcy's Law, describing fluid flow through packed beds in 1901. This also had a significant influence on the development of the Ergun equation.[1]
where:
 is the pressure drop across the bed,
 is the viscosity of the fluid,
 permeability (const.),
 is the (area-averaged) velocity of the fluid,
 is an empirical constant,
 is the density of the fluid.
A more general expression of the friction factor follows from Forchheimers modification:[1]
where is the Reynold's number and C is a constant.
See also
    
    
References
    
- Bejan, Adrian (2013). Convection Heat Transfer (Fourth ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 540–541. ISBN 978-0-470-90037-6.
- Forchheimer, Philipp: Teaching and the hydraulic manual, 5 volumes, 1914-16.
- JR: Philipp Forchheimer (1852–1933). Water Management 73 (1983), No. 10, p. 350 - 351st