Gigawatts
Mechanical
- Jul 26, 2013
- 4
I am working on a fluid mechanics problem within a piping system and could use a little help:
There is a piping system that starts as a singular line and then branches out into two lines (equal pipe sizes). I have a known initial flowrate; and I realize that (assuming incompressible flow) the flowrate should remain constant. Additionally, I understand that (given the branch areas are equal), each branch experiences a constant flowrate that is 50% of the initial flow. However, in one of the branches there is a valve that is open only a very small amount, enough to still leak fluid through that valve. If I'm just using flowrates and not using Bernouilli's energy equation, does that branch still experience exactly 50% of the original flowrate? Perhaps there's something I'm overlooking because it doesn't seem as though that is possible. Thank you in advance for any input!
There is a piping system that starts as a singular line and then branches out into two lines (equal pipe sizes). I have a known initial flowrate; and I realize that (assuming incompressible flow) the flowrate should remain constant. Additionally, I understand that (given the branch areas are equal), each branch experiences a constant flowrate that is 50% of the initial flow. However, in one of the branches there is a valve that is open only a very small amount, enough to still leak fluid through that valve. If I'm just using flowrates and not using Bernouilli's energy equation, does that branch still experience exactly 50% of the original flowrate? Perhaps there's something I'm overlooking because it doesn't seem as though that is possible. Thank you in advance for any input!