DanielWW
Mechanical
- Sep 9, 2013
- 10
Hello,
I am trying to calculate the non recoverable pressure drop of a compressible fluid through an orifice. In Crane 410, it says that the pressure loss coefficient K can be calculated by K=[√(1-β^4 (1-C_d^2 ) )/(C_d β^2 )-1]^2. Can this coefficient be used for both compressible and incompressible flows? I plan on using it with an equation for isothermal compressible flow found in API 521: f*l/d=1/Ma_1^2*[1-(p_2/p_1)^2]-ln(p_1/p_2)^2. I would substitute K for the f*l/d term and solve the equation for p2 in excel using Goal Seek.
Does that procedure make sense? Is there a better way to go about it? I just started as an engineer so please forgive me if I'm way off here, . Thanks in advance for your help!
I am trying to calculate the non recoverable pressure drop of a compressible fluid through an orifice. In Crane 410, it says that the pressure loss coefficient K can be calculated by K=[√(1-β^4 (1-C_d^2 ) )/(C_d β^2 )-1]^2. Can this coefficient be used for both compressible and incompressible flows? I plan on using it with an equation for isothermal compressible flow found in API 521: f*l/d=1/Ma_1^2*[1-(p_2/p_1)^2]-ln(p_1/p_2)^2. I would substitute K for the f*l/d term and solve the equation for p2 in excel using Goal Seek.
Does that procedure make sense? Is there a better way to go about it? I just started as an engineer so please forgive me if I'm way off here, . Thanks in advance for your help!