Andrew88
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 7, 2017
- 42
Hello,
I have a task where the chamber and tank are connected together by a pipe that conveys fluid based on gravity principle. The pipe inlet will be open and in a form of a weir. The outlet into the tank submerged.
What is the maximum liquid level I can reach in that tank so that the inlet is not submerged (top of pipe)? Not sure how to crack on with headloss calcs if only one end is submerged.
If I were to treat this as an open channel flow then the gradient of about 0.8% for this pipe size would give approximately 100 l/s which I want to achieve but this approach must be incorrect as the end is submerged.
Would it be conservative if I were to assume that I have a pressurized system and calculate level from this approach? I need to be sure that the water level wouldn't rise above crown of inlet pipe while keeping the water level in the tank as high as possible (with given pipeline parameters.
Thanks for tips in advance.
Jed
I have a task where the chamber and tank are connected together by a pipe that conveys fluid based on gravity principle. The pipe inlet will be open and in a form of a weir. The outlet into the tank submerged.
What is the maximum liquid level I can reach in that tank so that the inlet is not submerged (top of pipe)? Not sure how to crack on with headloss calcs if only one end is submerged.
If I were to treat this as an open channel flow then the gradient of about 0.8% for this pipe size would give approximately 100 l/s which I want to achieve but this approach must be incorrect as the end is submerged.
Would it be conservative if I were to assume that I have a pressurized system and calculate level from this approach? I need to be sure that the water level wouldn't rise above crown of inlet pipe while keeping the water level in the tank as high as possible (with given pipeline parameters.
Thanks for tips in advance.
Jed