Docseven
Mechanical
- Dec 1, 2014
- 9
I have tried a number of equations and keep getting drastically different results.
With liquid water (say 15C) in a tank connected to a system open to atmosphere with 100 feet of head via an 8 foot section of 2" pipe, if the tank is pressurized with air in order to drive the tank water into the system, such that the air space is regulated to 5 PSIG above the static head pressure at the bottom of the system, what would the flow rate through the 2" pipe be? The tank discharge is level with the bottom of the system and there are 10 feet of liquid above the tank discharge in the tank. Once I figure out a satisfactory solution to this I would like to run it for a 3/4" pipe as well.
Just scratch on the envelope, I tried using Hazen-Williams assuming that the delta P is approx 10 PSIG (10 ft water plus the pressurized surface), a C of 120, and got 371 gpm.
That is,
10 psig / 8 ft = 4.52 * Q^1.85 / (120^1.85 * 2^4.87), solve for Q.
Dropping to a 3/4" pipe resulted in a 28 gpm result.
Is this on the right track?
Photo attached to post.
With liquid water (say 15C) in a tank connected to a system open to atmosphere with 100 feet of head via an 8 foot section of 2" pipe, if the tank is pressurized with air in order to drive the tank water into the system, such that the air space is regulated to 5 PSIG above the static head pressure at the bottom of the system, what would the flow rate through the 2" pipe be? The tank discharge is level with the bottom of the system and there are 10 feet of liquid above the tank discharge in the tank. Once I figure out a satisfactory solution to this I would like to run it for a 3/4" pipe as well.
Just scratch on the envelope, I tried using Hazen-Williams assuming that the delta P is approx 10 PSIG (10 ft water plus the pressurized surface), a C of 120, and got 371 gpm.
That is,
10 psig / 8 ft = 4.52 * Q^1.85 / (120^1.85 * 2^4.87), solve for Q.
Dropping to a 3/4" pipe resulted in a 28 gpm result.
Is this on the right track?
Photo attached to post.