sysengineer
Electrical
- Feb 16, 2012
- 56
I have an application where a vortex flow meter is installed upstream of a flow control valve which is regulating nitrogen flow through a vent system. The upstream pressure is usually constant but varies between 8 to 11 bara. The downstream pressure is approximately 1 bara.
The meter appears to have been incorrectly specified and is reporting actual flow rate of around 3 m3/h which is outside of the recommended turn down. The meter range is 0 to 20 m3/h and the required flow rate is 12 Nm3/h. Currently there is a dynamic pressure / temperature compensation algorithm to convert actual flow rate to normal flow rate.
A solution appears to be to move the meter downstream of the flow control valve in which case the actual flow rate will be close to the required flow rate at normal conditions.
I am trying to understand how the change of conditions makes this a feasible solution. Presumably there is a change in velocity downstream of the flow control valve in which case the vortex meter will see an increase in volumetric flow rate?
Is there anything else to consider?
The meter appears to have been incorrectly specified and is reporting actual flow rate of around 3 m3/h which is outside of the recommended turn down. The meter range is 0 to 20 m3/h and the required flow rate is 12 Nm3/h. Currently there is a dynamic pressure / temperature compensation algorithm to convert actual flow rate to normal flow rate.
A solution appears to be to move the meter downstream of the flow control valve in which case the actual flow rate will be close to the required flow rate at normal conditions.
I am trying to understand how the change of conditions makes this a feasible solution. Presumably there is a change in velocity downstream of the flow control valve in which case the vortex meter will see an increase in volumetric flow rate?
Is there anything else to consider?