EGAtomic
Materials
- Apr 24, 2014
- 11
I am wondering how to correctly calculate the pressure increase in a bypass line. The situation I have is this: we have a 1"sched 40 bypass line (total volume of 434in^3) that is used to divert some process fluid so that it can be sampled for analysis. The 1" line has a tee with a 1/8" sampling line that is then connected to a pump, the pump extracts a set amount for analysis. After the pump takes its set sample it runs through a clean cycle and pumps solution back into the 1" bypass line so that the 1/8" line is clean for the next sample. The problem arises during the clean cycle: the bypass line is isolated from the main line by valves (so no flow in bypass line) and the pressure in the bypass line starts at around 10psi but when the pump goes through the clean cycle it rises the pressure inside the bypass line by about 30psi; and the pressure on the pump increases almost immediately increase to 85psi. The flow rate for the clean cycle is small only 2.5 liters/hr; so I can't seem to figure out why the pressure in the bypass line increases so much. I have done so many calculations already and I must be missing something because I only come up with a 2psi increase, so I am not sure where the 30psi is coming from. Any help would be appreciated