Hey guys help with Venturi Meter question

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A venturi meter with a 75 mm throat diameter is used in a 150 mm pipeline, with an entry pressure of 70 kN/m² gauge and a throat pressure not falling below 25 kN/m² absolute. The maximum flow rate calculated is 0.079 m³/s, but some users are struggling with their calculations, yielding lower values. Key issues identified include the need to convert gauge pressure to absolute pressure by adding atmospheric pressure. The correct formula for flow rate incorporates the coefficient of discharge and requires careful attention to unit conversions. Understanding the difference between gauge and absolute pressure is crucial for accurate calculations.
vip_uae
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A venturi meter with a 75 mm diameter throat is installed in a horizontal 150 mm diameter pipeline. The pressure at entry to the meter is 70 kN/m2 gauge and the pressure at the meter throat must not fall below 25 kN/m2 absolute. Calculate the maximum flow for which the meter may be used, given that the density of the flowing fluid is 900 kg/m3 and the coefficient of discharge for the meter is 0.96.


Answer = [0.079 m3/s]

ive been trying this question for the past hour and seriously my head is abt to explode coz i am getting a tottaly different answer i even tried all the formulas on the net i am still gettin my answer

Flow rate (Q) = 0.0456275

and i got this answer
0.0438

soo pleasez guys help me out thanks
 
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can you show your attempt, it would be better if you debug it step by step
 
Thanks for the reply i used this formula

Q= Cd x At
-------- x Sqrt 2 x ( P1 - Pt)
sqrt ( 1 - (At/A1)^2 ) ------- + G
row

Cd drag coff

At Area throat

A1 Area pipe

P1 first pressure

Pt Preasure at throat

G as in gravity

i replaced all the values in and that's it
 
Your entry pressure is in gauge and throat pressure is absolute. Have you considered that?
 
Oh no i haven't noticed that at all... can u explain the difference please
 
any one please explain for me :)
 
The difference between gauge and absolute pressure is the value of atmospheric pressure. The gauge value uses atmospheric pressure as the 0 or base for the pressure whereas the absolute value uses 0 pressure as the reference. So there is a 14.7 psi or 101 kPa difference between the two values.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Difference_between_gauge_and_absolute_pressure
 
Well I've been trying to do what you told me exactly but i still get a lower value please show me the steps for it ...
 
vip_uae said:
Well I've been trying to do what you told me exactly but i still get a lower value please show me the steps for it ...

Since the venturi meter is horizontal and assuming the friction is ignored, the flow rate through the meter (and thus inlet) would be:

Q = A_2 \cdot v_2 \cdot C_d

And the energy balance reduces to:

\frac{P_1}{\rho} + \frac{v_1^2}{2g} = \frac{P_2}{\rho} + \frac{v_2^2}{2g}

Using the Continuity equation to find v_1 in terms of v_2:

A_1v_1 = A_2v_2

v_1 = \frac{A_2}{A_1} \cdot v_2

Using the continuity equation along with an energy balance gives a velocity in the throat of:

v_2 = \sqrt{\frac{\frac{2g(P_1 - P_2)}{\rho}}{1 - (\frac{A_2}{A_1})^2}}

Since P_1 is a gauge pressure, add 101.325 to get 171.325 kPa absolute at the entrance (since 1 kN/m^2 = 1 kPa).

You should be able to plug in the given values now to get the flow rate.

Hope this helps.

CS

PS
You might want to check the math as I ran through that really quick on my scratch pad!
 
  • #10
Thats Gr8 ... i have found the problem... when i am calculating i forgot to multiply the pressure by 10^3 that's why its giving me a lower value :)

thanks
 
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