Im Nari
Mechanical
- Jun 4, 2022
- 3
Hi All. I've been lurking on this site for quite a while and I've learned a ton. I've come across a problem, though, that I'm having a lot of trouble with. I'm not sure that I'm approaching it in a valid way, and I figured I should reach out to those possibly in the know to see if I'm overlooking a simpler approach.
I'm currently designing a drainage system which will, upon emergency shutdown of equipment in an industrial facility, receive hot condensate and drain it to a lift station, where it will then be pumped elsewhere. I'm interested in the inlet temperature of the fluid into the wet well of the lift station, as it will inform me if I will have adequate NPSHa for the pumps or if I need to implement other precautions during drainage events. I've been scouring the web attempting to find resources outlining how to calculate this exit temperature and I've found the following, which seem the most relevant to this situation:
Heat Transfer In Buried Liquid Pipelines
Heat Transfer Model of Above and Underground Insulated Piping Systems
Additionally I have read chapter 14 of Transport Phenomena from Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot in an attempt to understand this further. The issue I'm running up against is this: all of these sources are concerning the fluid's temperature distribution in laminar and turbulent pipe flow, while I'm dealing with channel flow in a partially filled pipe. Does anyone know of a method I can use for achieving what is outlined in the above sources for channel flow in an underground drainage line?
I thought there might be some way to approximate the channel flow as some equivalent pipe flow, for which I can just use the above techniques, but I don't know where I'd begin with that, or if that is even a valid approach to begin with.
Any insight would be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Nari
I'm currently designing a drainage system which will, upon emergency shutdown of equipment in an industrial facility, receive hot condensate and drain it to a lift station, where it will then be pumped elsewhere. I'm interested in the inlet temperature of the fluid into the wet well of the lift station, as it will inform me if I will have adequate NPSHa for the pumps or if I need to implement other precautions during drainage events. I've been scouring the web attempting to find resources outlining how to calculate this exit temperature and I've found the following, which seem the most relevant to this situation:
Heat Transfer In Buried Liquid Pipelines
Heat Transfer Model of Above and Underground Insulated Piping Systems
Additionally I have read chapter 14 of Transport Phenomena from Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot in an attempt to understand this further. The issue I'm running up against is this: all of these sources are concerning the fluid's temperature distribution in laminar and turbulent pipe flow, while I'm dealing with channel flow in a partially filled pipe. Does anyone know of a method I can use for achieving what is outlined in the above sources for channel flow in an underground drainage line?
I thought there might be some way to approximate the channel flow as some equivalent pipe flow, for which I can just use the above techniques, but I don't know where I'd begin with that, or if that is even a valid approach to begin with.
Any insight would be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Nari