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Capilar design

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zesaint007

Chemical
Dec 8, 2005
9
Hello everybody,

I am driving nuts with a very easy problem ...In fact i would like to control my flow rate using the concept of capilarity. My flow rate is 15.8 lpm, my tubing is 3/16in so i ve calculated my maximum speed inside the tubing. Then i've found the desired capilar diameter for a desired flow rate of 1.78 lpm...I've found 0.063 in...(Q=V*A)
Unfortunatly this design its not controlling nothing...Where is my mistake?? What sould i do instead of that?
I really apreciate your answer here
Greg
 
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If the unit "lpm" means a liter per minute then you are in a range of an usual rotameter or a turbine flow meter (~400$). If you still insist to use a capillary tube then you should measure a delta P across the tube and this will be in correlation to your flow.
Your mistake is that you do not measure anything that correlates and changes with flow.
m777182
 
You did not define what is limiting the maximum speed.

There might be 3 cases to limiting the max speed in a capillary tube:

acoustically choked - for a compressible fluid ,the speed of sound would limit the velocity. In the case of a very short capillary ( L/d <3) then line friction could be ignored, but line geometry may cause oblique shick waves to form and this would limit the flow.

frictionally choked, compressible flow- for an L/d > 3 ( and usually in the range of 3- 100) one would have frictionally choked curves, usually approximated as adiatic flow, using the Fanno curves and its definining equations for a perfect gas

frictionally choked, incompressible or 2-phase flow- coventional pressure drop equations can predict the choke flowrate.
 
Thank you for your answers.

What is limiting my maximum speed here is in fact my pump (15.8 liter per minute, vacuum at 15 in of mercury, size of 3/16 in I.D). I am pumping ambient air. Regarding my problem, could you give me more precision about :

frictionally choked, compressible flow- for an L/d > 3 ( and usually in the range of 3- 100) one would have frictionally choked curves, usually approximated as adiatic flow, using the Fanno curves and its definining equations for a perfect gas.

Best regards and thanks again,

Greg
 
For typical frictionally choked flow in a pipeline with compressible fluid, see thread 378-6648.

For a short pipe which behaves as an orifice, see thread 798-51260, or se A.J. Ward-Smith Int J Heat Fluid V1 no 3 pp123-132 1979
 
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