dragonsaver
Materials
- Sep 10, 2003
- 8
I haven't used my fluid dynamics in over 20 years and I can't remember how to do the calculations. What I want is probably quite easy for those of you that work with this daily.
If I have a 6" pipe with a flow of 400 USGPM (should have a velocity of 4.44 ft.sec)and I insert an injection quill into the stream it should produce turbulent flow at the point of injection. If I then inject a chemical through the quill at 1.5 USGPM the velocity from the tip of the quill should be approx 8.5 ft/sec.
My question is will I get thorough mixing of the chemical due to the turbulent flow or will the high velocity of the injected chemical put the chemical against the pipe creating a high concentration gradient which will not mix with the balance of the pipe fluid downstream.
Thanks for your assistance.
If I have a 6" pipe with a flow of 400 USGPM (should have a velocity of 4.44 ft.sec)and I insert an injection quill into the stream it should produce turbulent flow at the point of injection. If I then inject a chemical through the quill at 1.5 USGPM the velocity from the tip of the quill should be approx 8.5 ft/sec.
My question is will I get thorough mixing of the chemical due to the turbulent flow or will the high velocity of the injected chemical put the chemical against the pipe creating a high concentration gradient which will not mix with the balance of the pipe fluid downstream.
Thanks for your assistance.