Lijantropo
Chemical
- Jun 26, 2009
- 56
Hello Dear Colleagues,
I'm wondering if it's possible to have a partially-filled pipe but under pressure (no gravity flow).
I was thinking of a pair of tanks and a pump. The second tank is higher than the first one, and it operates at 50 psi. The pump have to overcome the static height and the pressure drop, but, what happens if the pipe is originally filled with vapor from the second tank. I believe I will have a two-phase system, but if the flow is low, is it the possibility to only have a fraction of the pipe filled with the fluid.
I have been looking for a way to explain this (using equations) but I only found for atmospheric system, under gravity flow.
Does anyone have any source (paper, book, or reference) that deals with this subject?
I really appreciate your comments.
Best regards,
Lij.
I'm wondering if it's possible to have a partially-filled pipe but under pressure (no gravity flow).
I was thinking of a pair of tanks and a pump. The second tank is higher than the first one, and it operates at 50 psi. The pump have to overcome the static height and the pressure drop, but, what happens if the pipe is originally filled with vapor from the second tank. I believe I will have a two-phase system, but if the flow is low, is it the possibility to only have a fraction of the pipe filled with the fluid.
I have been looking for a way to explain this (using equations) but I only found for atmospheric system, under gravity flow.
Does anyone have any source (paper, book, or reference) that deals with this subject?
I really appreciate your comments.
Best regards,
Lij.