BenThayer
Chemical
- Jan 9, 2004
- 218
doing a quick sanity check here.
we need to restrict the flow for a given situation. there is concern that we may not be able to adequately clean between batches if we use the typical restriction orifice and so we were considering reducing the line size.
so for a given restriction of 100 gpm and 50 psi pressure drop, we are expecting an orifice of about 0.88 inches.
but if we try to extrapolate dP for a typical line size, we get 100 gpm giving us ~50.5 psig dP in ~1.4 feet of 1/2" sch 40 pipe (ID = 0.622")
note that example calcs are for water, s.g. of 1.0
Why the difference? Bad assumptions or recoverable pressure drop coming into play?
thanks, ben
we need to restrict the flow for a given situation. there is concern that we may not be able to adequately clean between batches if we use the typical restriction orifice and so we were considering reducing the line size.
so for a given restriction of 100 gpm and 50 psi pressure drop, we are expecting an orifice of about 0.88 inches.
but if we try to extrapolate dP for a typical line size, we get 100 gpm giving us ~50.5 psig dP in ~1.4 feet of 1/2" sch 40 pipe (ID = 0.622")
note that example calcs are for water, s.g. of 1.0
Why the difference? Bad assumptions or recoverable pressure drop coming into play?
thanks, ben