978industries
Mechanical
- Jan 16, 2017
- 2
So I am working on a project at work and need some help. I am trying to calculate how much the water pressure, velocity and flow rate would increase inside a pipe that is being heated, when it's flowing through the pipe, and coming out the other end. Please see the example below.
Example:
So let say the pipe section that is being heated is 10 feet long and 1 inch in diameter. The pipe has an inlet water temperature of 68ºF/20ºC and the water exiting the pipe will be 248ºF/120ºC (180ºF/100ºC increase). The outlet of the pipe is open ended without any nozzle on it, so water is coming out the other end. The pipe is laying horizontally and at the same level as the pump. The water flowing through it is not under any pressure from the pump, and it's flowing at 1 gallon per minute and moving at 1 inch per second (these are all just example numbers).
I have spent the weekend trying to find an equation to determine what the overall pressure increase would be, the exiting velocity would be, and the increase in the flow rate would be, but I can't find anything to represent a pipe with moving water and an open exit point. Everything I see is for moving water in a sealed pipe, non-moving water in a sealed container, or non-moving water in an open container. But nothing for this type of scenario.
As the water temperature increases, the overall volume of the water should increase as well because of thermal expansion, right? And as that volume increases, the exiting pressure, velocity, and flow rate should also be increasing, right? If I need to find more data on this type of scenario, please let me know what else would be needed to solve this problem. Thermal dynamics is not my strong suit. I know the gist of it, but I'm striking out with this currently.
I'm just stuck and can't find the correct equation I need to solve this problem. If someone could explain how to determine the answers from the hypothetical example above, and provide the equations they used, that would be awesome! I just can't figure it out!
Thank you in advance!
Example:
So let say the pipe section that is being heated is 10 feet long and 1 inch in diameter. The pipe has an inlet water temperature of 68ºF/20ºC and the water exiting the pipe will be 248ºF/120ºC (180ºF/100ºC increase). The outlet of the pipe is open ended without any nozzle on it, so water is coming out the other end. The pipe is laying horizontally and at the same level as the pump. The water flowing through it is not under any pressure from the pump, and it's flowing at 1 gallon per minute and moving at 1 inch per second (these are all just example numbers).
I have spent the weekend trying to find an equation to determine what the overall pressure increase would be, the exiting velocity would be, and the increase in the flow rate would be, but I can't find anything to represent a pipe with moving water and an open exit point. Everything I see is for moving water in a sealed pipe, non-moving water in a sealed container, or non-moving water in an open container. But nothing for this type of scenario.
As the water temperature increases, the overall volume of the water should increase as well because of thermal expansion, right? And as that volume increases, the exiting pressure, velocity, and flow rate should also be increasing, right? If I need to find more data on this type of scenario, please let me know what else would be needed to solve this problem. Thermal dynamics is not my strong suit. I know the gist of it, but I'm striking out with this currently.
I'm just stuck and can't find the correct equation I need to solve this problem. If someone could explain how to determine the answers from the hypothetical example above, and provide the equations they used, that would be awesome! I just can't figure it out!
Thank you in advance!