Orifice, Nozzle and Venturi Flow Rate Meters: Water & Air Flowmeters
Orifice, Nozzle and Venturi Flow Rate Meters: Water & Air Flowmeters
Orifice, Nozzle and Venturi Flow Rate Meters: Water & Air Flowmeters
Page 1 of 4
Resources, Tools and Basic Information for Engineering and Design of Technical Applications!
Flow Pressure Flow Meters
+2 Share this on Google+ Recommend 61
Orifice Fittings
Tweet
Custom Search
Home Acoustics Air Psychrometrics Basics Combustion Drawing Tools - 2D Schematic Drawings Dynamics Economics Electrical Environment Fluid Mechanics Gas and Compressed Air HVAC Systems - Air Conditioning - Heating - Noise and Attenuation - Ventilation Hydraulics and Pneumatics Insulation Material Properties Mathematics Mechanics - Beams and Columns Miscellaneous Physiology Piping Systems - Codes and Standards - Corrosion - Design Strategies - Dimensions - Fluid Flow and Pressure Drop - Heat Loss and Insulation - Pressure Ratings - Temperature Expansion - Valve Standards Process Control - Control Valves - Documentation - Fluid Flow Meters - Risk, Reliability and Safety - Temperature Measurement Pumps Standards Organizations Steam and Condensate - Control Valves and Equipment - Flash Steam - Heat Loss and Insulation - Pipe Sizing - Thermodynamics Thermodynamics Water Systems
Sponsored Links
For a given geometry (A), the flow rate can be determined by measuring the pressure difference p1 - p2. The theoretical flow rate q will in practice be smaller (2 - 40%) due to geometrical conditions. The ideal equation (3) can be modified with a discharge coefficient: q = cd A2 [ 2(p1 - p2) / (1 - (A2 / A1)2) ]1/2 where cd = discharge coefficient The discharge coefficient cd is a function of the jet size - or orifice opening - the area ratio = Avc / A2 where Avionics Intelligence (3b) E&P (Hart's E&P)
Avc = area in "vena contracta" "Vena Contracta" is the minimum jet area that appears just downstream of the restriction. The viscous effect is usually expressed in terms of the nondimensional parameter Reynolds Number - Re. Due to the Benoulli and Continuity Equation the velocity of the fluid will be at it's highest and the pressure at the lowest in "Vena Contracta". After the metering device the velocity will decrease to the same level as before the obstruction. The pressure recover to a pressure level lower than the pressure before the obstruction and adds a head loss to the flow. Equation (3) can be modified with diameters to: q = cd /4 D22 [ 2(p1 - p2) / (1 - d4) ]1/2 where D2 = orifice, venturi or nozzle inside diameter D1 = upstream and downstream pipe diameter d = D2 / D1 diameter ratio (4)
0.0
o o
Engineering Standards
C F
Convert!
Length
1.0
m km in ft yards miles nautical miles
Convert!
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/orifice-nozzle-venturi-d_590.html
6/20/2013
Page 2 of 4
Volume
= 3.14 Equation (4) can be modified to mass flow for fluids by simply multiplying with the density: m = cd /4 D22 [ 2(p1 - p2) / (1 - d4) ]1/2 (5)
1.0
m3 liters in3 ft3 us gal
Convert!
Velocity
When measuring the mass flow in gases, its necessary to considerate the pressure reduction and change in density of the fluid. The formula above can be used with limitations for applications with relatively small changes in pressure and density.
1.0
m/s km/h ft/min ft/s mph knots
Convert!
Pressure
1.0
Pa (N/m2) bar mm H2O kg/cm2 psi inches H2O
Convert!
Flow
1.0
m3/s m3/h US gpm cfm
Convert!
Flange location - Tap location 1 inch upstream and 1 inch downstream from face of orifice "Vena Contracta" location - Tap location 1 pipe diameter (actual inside) upstream and 0.3 to 0.8 pipe diameter downstream from face of orifice Pipe location - Tap location 2.5 times nominal pipe diameter upstream and 8 times nominal pipe diameter downstream from face of orifice The discharge coefficient - cd - varies considerably with changes in area ratio and the Reynolds number. A discharge coefficient cd = 0.60 may be taken as standard, but the value varies noticeably at low values of the Reynolds number. Discharge Coefficient - cd Diameter Ratio d = D2 / D1 Reynolds Number - Re 10
4
The pressure recovery is limited for an orifice plate and the permanent pressure loss depends primarily on the area ratio. For an area ratio of 0.5, the head loss is about 70 - 75% of the orifice differential. Avionics Intelligence The orifice meter is recommended for clean and dirty liquids and some slurry services. The rangeability is 4 to 1 The pressure loss is medium Typical accuracy is 2 to 4% of full scale The required upstream diameter is 10 to 30 The viscosity effect is high The relative cost is low
References
Engineering Standards
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). 2001. Measurement of fluid flow using small bore precision orifice meters. ASME MFC-14M-2001. International Organization of Standards (ISO 5167-1:2003). Measurement of fluid flow by means of pressure differential devices, Part 1: Orifice plates, nozzles, and Venturi tubes inserted in circular crosssection conduits running full. Reference number: ISO 5167-1:2003. International Organization of Standards (ISO 5167-1) Amendment 1. 1998. Measurement of fluid flow by means of pressure differential devices, Part 1: Orifice plates, nozzles, and Venturi tubes inserted in circular cross-section conduits running full. Reference number: ISO 5167-1:1991/Amd.1:1998(E). American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). B16.36 - 1996 - Orifice Flanges
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/orifice-nozzle-venturi-d_590.html
6/20/2013
Page 3 of 4
The fluid slows down in a cone with smaller angle (5 - 7o) where most of the kinetic energy is converted back to pressure energy. Because of the cone and the gradual reduction in the area there is no "Vena Contracta". The flow area is at a minimum at the throat. High pressure and energy recovery makes the venturi meter suitable where only small pressure heads are available. A discharge coefficient cd = 0.975 can be indicated as standard, but the value varies noticeably at low values of the Reynolds number. The pressure recovery is much better for the venturi meter than for the orifice plate. The venturi tube is suitable for clean, dirty and viscous liquid and some slurry services. The rangeability is 4 to 1 Pressure loss is low Typical accuracy is 1% of full range Required upstream pipe length 5 to 20 diameters Viscosity effect is high Relative cost is medium
References
International Organization of Standards - ISO 5167-1:2003 Measurement of fluid flow by means of pressure differential devices, Part 1: Orifice plates, nozzles, and Venturi tubes inserted in circular crosssection conduits running full. Reference number: ISO 5167-1:2003. American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME FED 01-Jan-1971. Fluid Meters Their Theory And Application- Sixth Edition
The Nozzle
Nozzles used for determining fluid's flowrate through pipes can be in three different types: The ISA 1932 nozzle - developed in 1932 by the International Organization for Standardization or ISO. The ISA 1932 nozzle is common outside USA. The long radius nozzle is a variation of the ISA 1932 nozzle. The venturi nozzle is a hybrid having a convergent section similar to the ISA 1932 nozzle and a divergent section similar to a venturi tube flowmeter. Discharge Coefficient - cd Diameter Ratio d = D2 / D1 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Reynolds Number - Re 104 0.968 0.957 0.95 0.94 105 0.988 0.984 0.981 0.978 106 0.994 0.993 0.992 0.991 107 0.995 0.995 0.995 0.995
The flow nozzle is recommended for both clean and dirty liquids The rangeability is 4 to 1 The relative pressure loss is medium Typical accuracy is 1-2% of full range Required upstream pipe length is 10 to 30 diameters The viscosity effect high The relative is medium
References
American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME FED 01-Jan-1971. Fluid Meters Their Theory And Application- Sixth Edition International Organization of Standards - ISO 5167-1:2003 Measurement of fluid flow by means of pressure differential devices, Part 1: Orifice plates, nozzles, and Venturi tubes inserted in circular crosssection conduits running full. Reference number: ISO 5167-1:2003.
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/orifice-nozzle-venturi-d_590.html
6/20/2013
Page 4 of 4
q = (0.002826 m2) [ 2 (0.01 105 N/m2) / (820 kg/m3)(1 - ( (0.002826 m2) / (0.00785 m2) )2) ]1/2 = 0.0047 (m3/s) The mass flow can be calculated as: m=q = (0.0047 m3/s) (820 kg/m3) = 3.85 (kg/s)
Accuracy
Due to the non linearity the turn down rate is limited. The accuracy strongly increases in the lower part of the operating range. More about Flow Meters as Orifices, Venturi meters, and Nozzles Fluid Mechanics The Bernoulli Equation The Continuity Equation TurnDown Ratio and Flow Measurement Devices - An introduction to Turn Down Ratio and flow measurement accuracy.
Sponsored Links
Related Topics
Fluid Flow Meters - Flow metering basics - Orifice, Venturi, Flow Nozzles, Pitot Tubes, Target, Variable Area, Positive Displacement, Turbine, Vortex, Electromagnetic, Ultrasonic Doppler, Ultrasonic Time-oftravel, Mass Coriolis, Mass Thermal, Weir V-notch, Flume Parshall and Sluice Gate flow meters and more Fluid Mechanics - The study of fluids - liquids and gases. Involves various properties of the fluid, such as velocity, pressure, density and temperature, as functions of space and time.
Related Documents
Equation of Continuity - The Equation of Continuity is a statement of mass conservation Flow of Liquids from Containers - Flow from tanks Flowmeters and Turndown Ratio - An introduction to turndown ratio for flow measurement devices as orifices, venturi meter etc. Nozzles - Gas flow through nozzles - sonic chokes Orifices - Air Discharge - Air volume through orifices
Engineering ToolBox - SketchUp Edition - enabled for use with the amazing, fun and free Google SketchUp
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/orifice-nozzle-venturi-d_590.html
6/20/2013