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Pressure Drop Along Pipe Length - Fluid Flow Hydraulic and Pneumatic

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views1 page

Pressure Drop Along Pipe Length - Fluid Flow Hydraulic and Pneumatic

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ahmed salem
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Fluid Pressure Drop Along Pipe Length of Uniform Diameter


Fluid Flow Table of Contents Home
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Pressure drop in pipes is caused by: Beam Deflections and Stress
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To determine the fluid (liquid or gas) pressure drop along a pipe or pipe Fluids Flow Engineering
component, the following calculations, in the following order. Friction Engineering
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Economics Engineering
Re = ρ v l / µ Re = Reynolds Number (unitless) Electronics Instrumentation
ω = Velocity of fluid flow (m/sec) Engineering Mathematics
Re = ω l / v Engineering Standards
D = Diameter of Pipe (m) Finishing and Plating
v = Kinematic Viscosity (m2/s) Friction Formulas Apps
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ρ = Density of fluid (kg/m3) Machine Design Apps
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Air Kinematic Viscosity m2/a Strength of Materials
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1.2462E-5 -10 14 Structural Shapes
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1.3324E-5 0 32 Thermodynamics
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1.4207E-5 10 50 Vibration Engineering
1.5111E-5 20 68 Videos Design Manufacture
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1.6438E-6 1 33.8
1.267E-6 10 50 Scientific Calculator Popup

9.7937E-7 20 6

Kinematic Viscosity Table Chart of Liquids


Unit Converter

Conversion Property
If the Reynolds number < 2320, than you have laminar flow. Acceleration ▼

Laminar flow is characterized by the gliding of concentric cylindrical layers past


one another in orderly fashion. The velocity of the fluid is at its maximum at the 0
Meter/sq.sec (m/sec^2)
pipe axis and decreases sharply to zero at the wall. The pressure drop caused by

friction of laminar flow does not depend of the roughness of pipe.


Convert To ↓

0
Meter/sq.sec (m/sec^2) ▼

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If the Reynolds number > 2320, you have turbulent flow.

There is an irregular motion of fluid particles in directions transverse to the


direction of the main flow. The velocity distribution of turbulent flow is more
uniform across the pipe diameter than in laminar flow. The pressure drop caused
by friction of turbulent flow depends on the roughness of pipe.

Select pipe friction Coefficient:

The pipe friction coefficient is a dimensionless number. The friction factor for
laminar flow condition is a function of Reynolds number only, for turbulent flow it
is also a function of the characteristics of the pipe wall.

Determine Pipe friction coefficient at laminar flow:

λ = 64 / Re

Where:

λ = Pipe Friction Coefficient


Re = Reynolds number
Note: Perfectly smooth pipes will have a roughness of zero.

Determine Pipe friction coefficient at turbulent flow (in the most cases)
Colbrook Equation:

or

Where:

= Pipe Friction Coefficient


g = Acceleration of Gravity (9.8 m/s/s)
Re = Reynolds Number (unitless)
k = Absolute Roughness (mm)
D = Diameter of Pipe (m)
lg = Short for Log

The solutions to this calculation is plotted vs. the Reynolds number to create a
Moody Chart.

Following table gives typical roughness values in millimeters for commonly used
piping materials.

Surface Material Absolute Roughness Coefficient - k (mm)

Aluminum, Lead 0.001 - 0.002

Drawn Brass, Drawn Copper 0.0015

Aluminum, Lead 0.001 - 0.002

PVC, Plastic Pipes 0.0015

Fiberglass 0.005

Stainless steel 0.015

Steel commercial pipe 0.045 - 0.09

Stretched steel 0.015

Weld steel 0.045

Galvanized steel 0.15

Rusted steel 0.15 - 4

Riveted steel 0.9 - 9

New cast iron 0.25 - 0.8

Worn cast iron 0.8 - 1.5

Corroding cast iron 1.5 - 2.5

Asphalted cast iron 0.012

Galvanized iron 0.015

Smoothed cement 0.3

Ordinary concrete 0.3 - 3

Well planed wood 0.18 - 0.9

Ordinary wood 5

Determine Pressure drop in circular pipes:

Where:

Δp = Pressure Drop (Pa or kg / m-s 2)


λ = Pipe Friction Coefficient
L = Length of Pipe (m)
D = Pipe Diameter (m)
p = Density (kg/m3)
ω = Flow Velocity (m/s)

If you have valves, elbows and other elements along your pipe then you calculate
the pressure drop with resistance coefficients specifically for the element. The
resistance coefficients are in most cases found through practical tests and through
vendor specification documents. If the resistance coefficient is known, than we can
calculate the pressure drop for the element.

Where:

= Pressure Drop (kg/m2)

= Resistance Coefficient (determined by test or vendor specification)


p = Density (kg/m3)
ω = Flow Velocity

Pressure drop by gravity or vertical elevation

Where:

Δp = Pressure Drop (kg/m2)


p = Density (kg/m3)
g = Acceleration of Gravity (9.8 m/s/s)
ΔH = Vertical Elevation or Drop (m)

Pressure drop of gasses and vapor

Compressible fluids expands caused by pressure drops (friction) and the velocity
will increase. Therefore is the pressure drop along the pipe not constant.

Where:

p1 = Pressure incoming (kg/m2)


T1 = Temperature incoming (°C)

p2 = Pressure leaving (kg/m2)


T2 = Temperature leaving (°C)

We set the pipe friction number as a constant and calculate it with the input-data.
The temperature, which is used in the equation, is the average of entrance and
exit of pipe.

Note: You can calculate gases as liquids, if the relative change of density is
low (change of density/density = 0.02).

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