vonlueke
Structural
- Dec 2, 2001
- 270
Could someone please advise me on how to calculate tank drainage time for a tank-full of still water in a large, relatively shallow, rectangular, open tank having a circular drain hole in the bottom (or direct me to the correct forum or thread)? (The eng-tips search function doesn't work, in case this was already covered.)
The water falls vertically downward out of the drain hole into the atmosphere, not into an outlet pipe or fitting. The relatively-large drain hole is just a circular hole cut in the 6-mm-thick, flat, metal plate tank bottom, and the hole has essentially sharp edges (or 0.4 mm edge radii, to be exact).
I need to determine a drain hole diameter D so that, starting from a full tank (with no more water being added), the tank will drain in a certain drainage time t.
I tried to derive a simplistic differential equation and got a solution of drainage time t = [2(A1)/(A2)][h/(2g)]^0.5, where A1 = rectangular tank length times width, h = tank depth (i.e., water initial depth), A2 = drain hole area = 0.25*pi*D^2, and g = 9.80665 m/s^2.
However, the above solution neglects any transition or head losses or whatever, necking of the fluid exit stream, or whatever is significant to approximate this problem. I would say, if feasible, assume no Coriolis effect since the tank is relatively shallow and very wide and long. Could anyone advise me on how to solve this problem or provide a formula, because I didn't find a problem like this yet in my fluids nor hydraulics text book? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
The water falls vertically downward out of the drain hole into the atmosphere, not into an outlet pipe or fitting. The relatively-large drain hole is just a circular hole cut in the 6-mm-thick, flat, metal plate tank bottom, and the hole has essentially sharp edges (or 0.4 mm edge radii, to be exact).
I need to determine a drain hole diameter D so that, starting from a full tank (with no more water being added), the tank will drain in a certain drainage time t.
I tried to derive a simplistic differential equation and got a solution of drainage time t = [2(A1)/(A2)][h/(2g)]^0.5, where A1 = rectangular tank length times width, h = tank depth (i.e., water initial depth), A2 = drain hole area = 0.25*pi*D^2, and g = 9.80665 m/s^2.
However, the above solution neglects any transition or head losses or whatever, necking of the fluid exit stream, or whatever is significant to approximate this problem. I would say, if feasible, assume no Coriolis effect since the tank is relatively shallow and very wide and long. Could anyone advise me on how to solve this problem or provide a formula, because I didn't find a problem like this yet in my fluids nor hydraulics text book? Any help would be greatly appreciated.