1 / 36

Week 1 Unit Conversions Mass and Volume Flow Ideal Gas Newtonian Fluids, Reynolds No . Week 2

Week 1 Unit Conversions Mass and Volume Flow Ideal Gas Newtonian Fluids, Reynolds No . Week 2 Pressure Loss in Pipe Flow Pressure Loss Examples Flow Measurement and Valves Pump Calcs and Sizing.

kadeem
Download Presentation

Week 1 Unit Conversions Mass and Volume Flow Ideal Gas Newtonian Fluids, Reynolds No . Week 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week 1 Unit Conversions Mass and Volume Flow Ideal Gas Newtonian Fluids, Reynolds No. Week 2 Pressure Loss in Pipe Flow Pressure Loss Examples Flow Measurement and Valves Pump Calcsand Sizing

  2. 4 m3 of wortis transferred from a kettle through a 100 m long, 4 cm diameter pipe with a roughness of 0.01 mm. The wort flows at an average velocity of 1.2 m/s and assume that its physical properties are the same as those of water (μ = 0.001 Pa.s). • Determine the time required to transfer all of the wort to the boil kettle, in min. • Determine the Reynolds Number. • Determine the pressure drop in the pipe.

  3. Friction Losses in Pipes found on Moody Chart handout Determine the pressure drop of water, moving through a 5 cm diameter, 100 m long pipe at an average velocity of 5 m/s. The density of the water is 1000 kg/m3 and the viscosity is 0.001 Pa.s. The pipe roughness is 0.05 mm.

  4. Valves – Globe Valve Single Seat - Good general purpose - Good seal at shutoff Double Seat - Higher flow rates - Poor shutoff (2 ports) Three-way - Mixing or diverting - As disc adjusted, flow to one channel increased, flow to other decreased

  5. Valves – Butterfly Valve Low Cost “Food Grade” Poor flow control Can be automated

  6. Valves – Mix-proof Double Seat Two separate sealing elements keeping the two fluids separated. Keeps fluids from mixing Immediate indication of failure Automated, Sanitary apps Easier and Cheaper than using manyseparate valves

  7. Valves – Gate Valve Little flow control, simple, reliable

  8. Valves – Ball Valve Very little pressure loss, little flow control

  9. Valves – Brewery Applications Product Routing – Tight shutoff, material compatibility, CIP critical Butterfly and mixproof Service Routing – Tight shutoff and high temperature and pressure Ball, Gate, Globe Flow Control – Precise control of passage area Globe (and needle), Butterfly Pressure Relief – Control a downstream pressure

  10. Flow Measurement Principle: • Bernoulli Equation • Notice how this works for static fluids.

  11. Flow Measurement – Orifice Meter • Cd accounts for frictional loss,  0.65 • Simple design, fabrication • High turbulence, significant uncertainty P1 P2

  12. Flow Meas. – Venturi Meter • Less frictional losses, Cd 0.95 • Low pressure drop, but expensive • Higher accuracy than orifice plate P1 P2

  13. Flow Meas. – Variable Area/Rotameter Inexpensive, good flow rate indicator Good for liquids or gases No remote sensing, limited accuracy

  14. Flow Measurement - Pitot Tube • Direct velocity measurement (not flow rate) • Measure P with gauge, transducer, or manometer P1 P2 1 2 v

  15. Flow Measurement – Weir Open channel flow, height determines flow Inexpensive, good flow rate indicator Good for estimating flow to sewer Can measure height using ultrasonic meter

  16. Flow Measurement – Thermal Mass Measure gas or liquid temperature upstream and downstream of heater Must know specific heat of fluid Know power going to heater Calculate flow rate

  17. Flow Measurement – Magnetic Faradays Law Magnetic field applied to the tube Voltage created proportional to velocity Requires a conducting fluid (non-DI water)

  18. Flow Measurement – Magnetic

  19. Pumps z = static head hf = head loss due to friction Suction Pump Delivery

  20. Pumps

  21. Pumps Calculate the theoretical pump power required to raise 1000 m3 per day of water from 1 bar to 16 bar pressure. If the pump efficiency is 55%, calculate the shaft power required. Denisityof Water = 1000 kg/m3 1 bar = 100 kPa

  22. Pumps A pump, located at the outlet of tank A, must transfer 10 m3 of fluid into tank B in 20 minutes. The water level in tank A is 3 m above the pump, the pipe roughness is 0.05 mm, and the pump efficiency is 55%. The fluid density is 975 kg/m3 and the viscosity is 0.00045 Pa.s. Both tanks are at atmospheric pressure. Determine the total head and pump input and output power. 4 m Tank B 15 m Pipe Diameter, 50 mm Fittings = 5 m Tank A 8 m

  23. Pumps Need Available NPSH > Pump Required NPSH Avoid Cavitation z = static head hf = head loss due to friction

  24. Pumps A pump, located at the outlet of tank A, must transfer 10 m3 of fluid into tank B in 20 minutes. The water level in tank A is 3 m above the pump, the pipe roughness is 0.05 mm, and the pump efficiency is 55%. The fluid density is 975 kg/m3 and the viscosity is 0.00045 Pa.s. The vapor pressure is 50 kPa and the tank is at atmospheric pressure. Determine the available NPSH. 4 m Tank B 15 m Pipe Diameter, 50 mm Fittings = 5 m Tank A 8 m

  25. Pump Sizing • Volume Flow Rate (m3/hr or gpm) • Total Head, h (m or ft) • 2a. P (bar, kPa, psi) • Power Output (kW or hp) • NPSH Required

  26. Pumps Centrifugal Impeller spinning inside fluid Kinetic energy to pressure Flow controlled by Pdelivery Positive Displacement Flow independent of Pdelivery Many configurations

  27. Centrifugal Pumps Delivery Impeller Volute Casting Suction

  28. Centrifugal Pumps Flow accelerated (forced by impeller) Then, flow decelerated (pressure increases) Low pressure at center “draws” in fluid Pump should be full of liquid at all times Flow controlled by delivery side valve May operate against closed valve Seal between rotating shaft and casing

  29. Centrifugal Pumps Advantages Simple construction, many materials No valves, can be cleaned in place Relatively inexpensive, low maintenance Steady delivery, versatile Operates at high speed (electric motor) Wide operating range (flow and head) Disadvantages Multiple stages needed for high pressures Poor efficiency for high viscosity fluids Must prime pump

  30. Centrifugal Pumps H-V Chart Increasing Impeller Diameter Head (or P) A B C Volume Flow Rate

  31. Centrifugal Pumps H-Q Chart Increasing Efficiency Head (or P) Required NPSH A B C Volume Flow Rate

  32. Centrifugal Pumps H-Q Chart Head (or P) A B C Volume Flow Rate

  33. Centrifugal Pumps H-Q Chart Required Flow Capacity Head (or P) Actual Flow Capacity Required Power Volume Flow Rate

  34. Pump Sizing Example Requirements 100 gpm 45 feet of head Choose the proper impeller Determine the power input to the pump

  35. Pressure Drop Example Water flows through a 10 cm diameter, 300 m long pipe at a velocity of 2 m/s. The density is 1000 kg/m3, the viscosity is 0.001 Pa.s and the pipe roughness is 0.01 mm. Determine: a. Volume flow rate, in m3/s b. Mass flow rate in kg/s c. Pressure loss through the pipe, in Pa d. Head loss through the pipe meters

More Related