mugged
Aerospace
- Jun 12, 2012
- 13
Hello, so I have a pneumatic device with a fixed volume (strange 3D shape) that I'd like measure the volume of. I think traditionally this sort of experiment is done with incompressible fluids like water but I dont want to get it wet.
If I were to do an experiment with a flow meter and charge the volume cavity with say 4 times atmospheric pressure (like 70 psi) and obtain a flow rate over time curve, like a liters/sec vs sec. Would this be enough information to back out the volume of the cavity, the area under the curve represents the total liters or volume? For the setup it would be pressurized air source with pressure sensor -> tube -> flow meter -> tube -> flow restrictor to control velocity -> tube -> valve to open/shut -> tube -> device in question.
Of course it's compressed air so I have to adjust back down to atmosphere to get geometric volume and account for any volume of connection tubes, etc. But am I missing anything here? Having a lot of trouble finding anything online for this sort of thing.
If I were to do an experiment with a flow meter and charge the volume cavity with say 4 times atmospheric pressure (like 70 psi) and obtain a flow rate over time curve, like a liters/sec vs sec. Would this be enough information to back out the volume of the cavity, the area under the curve represents the total liters or volume? For the setup it would be pressurized air source with pressure sensor -> tube -> flow meter -> tube -> flow restrictor to control velocity -> tube -> valve to open/shut -> tube -> device in question.
Of course it's compressed air so I have to adjust back down to atmosphere to get geometric volume and account for any volume of connection tubes, etc. But am I missing anything here? Having a lot of trouble finding anything online for this sort of thing.