Maher K
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 16, 2020
- 8
I have a valve inside a concrete valve chamber. Upstream the valve there is a dismantling joint that connects the valve to a flanged pipe which have a puddle flange at the place where it intersects with the wall of the chamber. The same is on the downstream side of the valve without having a dismantling joint.
When the valve is closed, a force is generated along the direction of the pipe which depends can be calculated by multiplying the column of water (water pressure) by the cross sectional area of the valve.
As far as I know, the use of a puddle flange at the locations where the pipe intersects with the walls of the chamber is to ensure a watertight and pressure-tight seal.
Now the question is this, is the generated force/thrust transferred to the walls of the chamber? If yes, is it on the upstream wall only or distributed equally between the upstream and downstream walls? I am concerned whether I have to take into design any force when designing the walls of the chamber