robertogrramos
Mechanical
- May 2, 2017
- 7
Hi all!
I'm trying to get my head around something... on a pressure vessel with an ideal gas when there is a 'leak', or any output of the stored gas, if there is no inlet, the pressure inside the tank decreases (PV=nRT), right?
But with a pressure vessel filled with water, that is incompressible, what happens to the pressure then?
I'm thinking that if there is only one nozzle, even if it is open, if there aren't any other nozzle to enter new water or air, there will be no 'leak'. The water will remain on the vessel, right?
But imagine a situation where you have a vessel that is pressurized at 200 kPa and on the inlet nozzle there is a check valve. If the pressure drops at the upstream to 100 kPa, the pressure at the vessel will remain 200 kPa, because of the check valve.
On this case, with the pressure at the upstream lower than the pressure at the vessel, if we try to open a valve at the outlet whats going to happen?
A)Will the water remain on the vessel like if there weren't an inlet nozzle?
B)OR will we have a flow on the outlet, new water coming from the inlet and the pressure on the vessel drops to 100 kPa?
C)If B is correct does this depends on the pressure difference, or will this happens disregardless the pressure at the upstream?
I'm trying to get my head around something... on a pressure vessel with an ideal gas when there is a 'leak', or any output of the stored gas, if there is no inlet, the pressure inside the tank decreases (PV=nRT), right?
But with a pressure vessel filled with water, that is incompressible, what happens to the pressure then?
I'm thinking that if there is only one nozzle, even if it is open, if there aren't any other nozzle to enter new water or air, there will be no 'leak'. The water will remain on the vessel, right?
But imagine a situation where you have a vessel that is pressurized at 200 kPa and on the inlet nozzle there is a check valve. If the pressure drops at the upstream to 100 kPa, the pressure at the vessel will remain 200 kPa, because of the check valve.
On this case, with the pressure at the upstream lower than the pressure at the vessel, if we try to open a valve at the outlet whats going to happen?
A)Will the water remain on the vessel like if there weren't an inlet nozzle?
B)OR will we have a flow on the outlet, new water coming from the inlet and the pressure on the vessel drops to 100 kPa?
C)If B is correct does this depends on the pressure difference, or will this happens disregardless the pressure at the upstream?