raingal79
Chemical
- Mar 27, 2003
- 16
Dear all,
I would like to ask about liquid thermal expansion in a blocked section of pipe. I'm wanted to calculate the estimated pressure rise in a pipe and have searched through the internet for information. I found that we can do so by using:
dP = expansion coeff * dT / isothermal compressibility
However, it proved to be very challenging to find out the coefficient of thermal expansion (/degC) and isothermal compressibilty (/bar) values for common liquid e.g. acetic acid, ethylene glycol etc. IS there somewhere I could retrieve these info?
Another discrepancy - is there a difference between coefficient of cubical expansion (0.00021/degC for water) VS coefficient of thermal expansion (1/degC for water)? It makes a lot of difference to the estimated pressure rise calculation.
Appreciate some advice. Thanks.
I would like to ask about liquid thermal expansion in a blocked section of pipe. I'm wanted to calculate the estimated pressure rise in a pipe and have searched through the internet for information. I found that we can do so by using:
dP = expansion coeff * dT / isothermal compressibility
However, it proved to be very challenging to find out the coefficient of thermal expansion (/degC) and isothermal compressibilty (/bar) values for common liquid e.g. acetic acid, ethylene glycol etc. IS there somewhere I could retrieve these info?
Another discrepancy - is there a difference between coefficient of cubical expansion (0.00021/degC for water) VS coefficient of thermal expansion (1/degC for water)? It makes a lot of difference to the estimated pressure rise calculation.
Appreciate some advice. Thanks.