Good Morning,
Could anyone help me to find the formula to design the pipe diameter and thickness if I know the pressure, temperature, CFM, type of gas and length of pipe?
What do you require for fluid velocity? Once you determine that, use volumetric flow rate and velocity to get required cross sectional area (which will give diameter).
Are you moving the fluid a long distance (and worried about pressure drop)? Otherwise velocity and CFM will drive line size.
Note that many online calculators etc are only valid for low pressure systems where Pin and P out only change by 10% or less
Thickness is from the relevant design code or material spec.
High pressure, long pipelines, large differences in Pin to P out are more complex, but often a rough approximation can be made or you divide your pipe into segments and iterate between them.
Thank you.
I don't have the velocity. Following are rest of my parameters:
Pressure = 450 PSI
Pipe Capacity = 100 CFM
Pipe Length = 300 ft
Gas = Nitrogen
Yes, I did some research, but couldn't find out an appropriate answer.
At that pressure your 100 cfm is about 3 cfm in the pipe. That's about 7.5 cu inches per second. So work out internal area of your pipe sizes and then velocity to see which pipe size works.
Remember - More details = better answers
Also: If you get a response it's polite to respond to it.