howardoark
Geotechnical
- Nov 9, 2005
- 91
Hi, Civil Engineer here, so sorry to ask a really basic question.
We have a differential pressure gauge to measure the difference in total head and static head in a pipe and hence get the velocity head - we're extracting polluted air from the subsurface. The gauge is calibrated for standard conditions (1 atmosphere, 70 degrees F). The vacuum is very small and relative humidity is pretty close to 36% so we're ignoring those factors. To convert the gauge reading to actual velocity (in feet per minute) we use 1096.7*SQRT(velocity head in inches WC/density of air in pcf). To convert that back to SCFM we multiply actual velocity by Ta/530 times the pipe cross-sectional area where Ta is the absolute temperature of the air in degrees Rankine. At least that's what I'm doing.
There is some confusion because the gauge is calibrated for standard conditions so some folk think it is giving them SCFM directly.
Thanks
Jeff
We have a differential pressure gauge to measure the difference in total head and static head in a pipe and hence get the velocity head - we're extracting polluted air from the subsurface. The gauge is calibrated for standard conditions (1 atmosphere, 70 degrees F). The vacuum is very small and relative humidity is pretty close to 36% so we're ignoring those factors. To convert the gauge reading to actual velocity (in feet per minute) we use 1096.7*SQRT(velocity head in inches WC/density of air in pcf). To convert that back to SCFM we multiply actual velocity by Ta/530 times the pipe cross-sectional area where Ta is the absolute temperature of the air in degrees Rankine. At least that's what I'm doing.
There is some confusion because the gauge is calibrated for standard conditions so some folk think it is giving them SCFM directly.
Thanks
Jeff