Flow in Pipe
Flow in Pipe
Flow in Pipe
Eric G. Paterson
Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering
The Pennsylvania State University
Spring 2005
Note to Instructors
These slides were developed1, during the spring semester 2005, as a teaching aid
for the undergraduate Fluid Mechanics course (ME33: Fluid Flow) in the Department of
M h i l and
Mechanical dNNuclear
l E
Engineering
i i att PPenn St
State
t U
University.
i it Thi
This course h hadd ttwo
sections, one taught by myself and one taught by Prof. John Cimbala. While we gave
common homework and exams, we independently developed lecture notes. This was
also the first semester that Fluid Mechanics: Fundamentals and Applications was
used at PSU. My section had 93 students and was held in a classroom with a computer,
projector, and blackboard. While slides have been developed for each chapter of Fluid
Applications I used a combination of blackboard and
Mechanics: Fundamentals and Applications,
electronic presentation. In the student evaluations of my course, there were both positive
and negative comments on the use of electronic presentation. Therefore, these slides
should onlyy be integrated
g into yyour lectures with careful consideration of yyour teachingg
style and course objectives.
Eric Paterson
Penn State, University Park
August 2005
1 These slides were originally prepared using the LaTeX typesetting system (http://www.tug.org/)
and the beamer class (http://latex-beamer
(http://latex beamer.sourceforge.net/),
sourceforge net/) but were translated to PowerPoint for
wider dissemination by McGraw-Hill.
For p
pipes
p of constant
diameter and
incompressible
p flow
Vavg stays the same
down the pipe, even if
the velocity profile
Vavg Vavg changes
Wh ? C
Why? i off
Conservation
Mass
same same
same
For p
pipes
p with variable diameter,, m is still the
same due to conservation of mass, but V1 ≠ V2
D1
D2
V1 m V2 m
Lh
Comparison
p of laminar and turbulent flow
There are some major differences between laminar and
turbulent fully developed pipe flows
Laminar
Can solve exactly (Chapter 9)
Flow is steady
Velocity profile is parabolic
Pipe roughness not important
IInstantaneous
t t
profiles
τw τw
τw = shear stress at the wall,,
acting on the fluid
τw,turb > τw,lam
ME33 : Fluid Flow 13 Chapter 8: Flow in Pipes
Fully Developed Pipe Flow
Pressure drop
There is a direct connection between the pressure drop in a pipe and
the shear stress at the wall
Consider a horizontal pipe, fully developed, and incompressible flow
τw
L
1 2
Conservation of x-momentum
or
hL = irreversible head
loss & it is felt as a pressure
drop in the pipe
From energy
gy CV analysis
y
E
Equating
ti ththe ttwo gives
i
In design
g and analysis
y of p
piping
p g systems,
y 3
problem types are encountered
1. Determine ∆p (or hL) given L, D, V (or flow rate)
Can be solved directly using Moody chart and Colebrook
equation
2. Determine V, given L, D, ∆p
3. Determine D, given L, ∆p, V (or flow rate)
Types 2 and 3 are common engineering
design problems, i.e., selection of pipe
diameters to minimize construction and
pumping costs
However, iterative approach
pp required
q since
both V and D are in the Reynolds number.
ME33 : Fluid Flow 22 Chapter 8: Flow in Pipes
Types of Fluid Flow Problems
Explicit
p relations have been developedp which
eliminate iteration. They are useful for quick,
direct calculation,, but introduce an additional 2%
error
If the p
piping
p g system
y has constant diameter
Two g
general types
yp of
networks
Pipes in series
Volume flow rate is
constant
Head loss is the
summation of parts
Pi
Pipes iin parallel
ll l
Volume flow rate is the
sum of the components
Pressure loss across all
branches is the same
ME33 : Fluid Flow 28 Chapter 8: Flow in Pipes
Piping Networks and Pump Selection
For p
parallel p
pipes,
p p
perform CV analysis
y between
points A and B