CLOSED CONDUITS I
CHAPTER 5 (1) -- ROBERSON ET AL., WITH ADDITIONS
Orange County Sanitation District's ocean outfall pipeline, Huntington Beach, California.
ENERGY EQUATION
- INITIAL DESIGN INVOLVES DETERMINING SIZE OF
CONDUIT WITH THE LEAST COST FOR THE GIVEN
DISCHARGE.
- THE ENERGY EQUATION IS:
- p1/γ + αV12/(2g) + z1 + hp =
p2/γ + αV22/(2g) + z2 + ht + hL
p1/γ = pressure head at point 1
αV12/(2g) = velocity head at point 1
z1 = elevation (head) at point 1
hp = head supplied by a pump
p2/γ = pressure head at point 2
αV22/(2g) = velocity head at point 2
z2 = elevation (head) at point 2
ht = head supplied to a turbine
hL = head loss between points 1 and 2
Calleguas Brine Line under construction, Port Hueneme, California.
VELOCITY HEAD
- IT IS OBTAINED FROM Q AND A (V = Q/A),
WHERE A IS THE CROSS-SECTIONAL AREA
OF THE PIPE, BASED ON THE DIAMETER.
- α = 1 WHEN THE VELOCITY IS UNIFORM ACROSS
THE SECTION.
- IN LAMINAR FLOW, α HAS A VALUE OF 2.
- IN TURBULENT FLOW, α HAS A VALUE CLOSE
TO 1 (1.04 < α < 1.06).
- IN HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING, α IS ASSUMED TO
BE 1.
PUMP OR TURBINE HEAD
- HEAD SUPPLIED BY PUMP [OR DELIVERED TO TURBINE]
IS DIRECTLY RELATED TO THE POWER P
SUPPLIED TO [OR TAKEN FROM] THE FLOW:
P = γ Q hp
P = γ Q ht
- UNAVOIDABLE LOSSES MAKE IT NECESSARY TO
INCLUDE AN EFFICIENCY FACTOR e:
- P = e γ Q ht
- POWER = ENERGY/TIME = (FORCE × LENGTH) / TIME
- P (N × M / SEC) = γ [N/M3] Q [M3/S] ht [M]
- 1 N × M = 1 JOULE
- 1 N × M / S = 1 WATT
- SI UNITS: POWER IS MEASURED IN WATTS.
- A DISCHARGE Q = 10 M3/S AND A FALL ht = 5 M
WILL CREATE A POWER OF:
- P = 9810 (N/M3) × 10 (M3/S ) × 5 (M) =
- P = 490,500 W = 490.5 KW
- A DISCHARGE OF 1 M3/S AND A FALL OF 1 M
WILL CREATE A POWER OF:
- P = 9810 (N/M3) × 1 (M3/S ) × 1 (M) =
- P = 9810 W = 9.81 KW
- CONSIDERING EFFICIENCY (LOSSES):
- P ≅ 8 KW
- RULE-OF-THUMB:
- P (KW) = 8 Q (M3/S) h (M)
- IN U.S. CUSTOMARY UNITS:
- P (FT ⋅ LB/S)= γ (LB/FT3) × Q (FT3/S) × ht (FT)
- U.S. UNITS: POWER IS MEASURED IN HP
(HORSEPOWER).
- 1 HP = 550 FT ⋅ LB/S
- A DISCHARGE Q = 10 M3/S = 353.15 FT3/S AND A FALL
ht= 5 M = 16.404 FT WILL CREATE A POWER OF:
- P = 62.4 (LB/FT3) × 353.15 (FT3/S ) × 16.404 (FT) =
- P = 361,488 FT ⋅ LB/S = 361,488/ 550 = 657.2 HP
- THEREFORE: 657.2 HP = 490.5 KW
- THUS: 1 HP = 0.746 KW
HEAD LOSS UNDER LAMINAR FLOW
- THE HEAD LOSS ACCOUNTS FOR THE
CONVERSION OF MECHANICAL ENERGY TO
INTERNAL (HEAT) ENERGY, WHICH IS LOST.
- HEAD LOSS RESULTS FROM VISCOUS
RESISTANCE TO FLOW, OR FROM VISCOUS
DISSIPATION OF TURBULENCE IN
SEPARATED FLOW.
- IN LAMINAR FLOW, THE HEAD LOSS IS DUE TO
VISCOUS RESISTANCE.
- IN THIS CASE, THE HEAD LOSS IS A FUNCTION OF
THE FIRST POWER OF THE VELOCITY.
- IN TURBULENT FLOW, THE HEAD LOSS IS
RELATED TO THE DISSIPATION OF THE
KINETIC ENERGY OF TURBULENCE.
- HEAD LOSS FOR LAMINAR FLOW (INTEGRATING THE VELOCITY DISTRIBUTION ACROSS THE CROSS SECTION):
-
hL= 32 μ L V / (γ D2)
- UNITS FOR HEAD LOSS: [(N*S/M2) (M) (M/S)] / [(N/M3) (M2)] = M
- ENERGY GRADELINE: hL/L = 32 μ V / (γ D2)
- μ = ρ ν
- γ = ρ g
- hL/L = 32 ν V / (g D2)
- hL/L = 32 [ν/(V D)] [V2 / (gD)]
- REYNOLDS NUMBER (BASED ON PIPE DIAMETER): Re = V D/ ν
- hL/L = (32 /Re) [V2 / (gD)]
- FROUDE NUMBER (BASED ON PIPE DIAMETER): (Fr) = V2 / (gD)
- Sf = (32 /Re) (Fr)2
- Sf = f (Fr)2
- IN LAMINAR PIPE FLOW, THE FRICTION COEFFICIENT f IS INVERSELY PROPORTIONAL TO THE REYNOLDS NUMBER.
- SINCE DISCHARGE Q = V A = V π (D2/4)
- V = 4Q / (πD2)
- hL = 128 μ L Q / (γ π D4)
- μ = ρ ν
- γ = ρ g
- hL = 128 ν L Q / (g π D4)
- LOSSES ARE SEEN TO VARY DIRECTLY WITH VISCOSITY,
LENGTH, AND DISCHARGE, AND INVERSELY WITH THE
FOURTH POWER OF THE DIAMETER.
- LESSER DIAMETER MEANS MORE LOSSES.
- TUBE ROUGHNESS DOES NOT ENTER INTO THE
EQUATIONS FOR LAMINAR FLOW IN PIPE.
- Q = g hL π D4/(128 ν L)
- HAGEN-POISEUILLE EQUATION FOR PIPE DISCHARGE UNDER LAMINAR FLOW:
- Q = γ hL π D4/(128 μ L)
- UNITS: M3/S = (N/M3) (M) (M4) / [(N*S/M2) (M)]
HEAD LOSSES IN TURBULENT FLOW
- SMOOTH PIPES:
- FLOW IS TURBULENT WHEN REYNOLDS NUMBER:
Re = VD/ν = VDρ/μ > 3000
- THE SHEAR STRESS IS PRIMARILY IN THE
FORM OF REYNOLDS STRESSES, ARISING
FROM TURBULENT VELOCITY FLUCTUATIONS.
- REYNOLDS STRESSES VARY LINEARLY FROM
ZERO AT THE CENTER OF THE PIPE, OUTWARDS.
- NEAR THE WALL, IN THE VISCOUS SUBLAYER,
REYNOLDS STRESSES DECREASE, AND A TRUE
VISCOUS SHEAR STRESS TAKES OVER.
- IN THE VISCOUS SUBLAYER:
-
u / u* = u* y /ν
for: 0 < u* y /ν < 10
y = distance from pipe wall
ν = kinematic viscosity
- u* = shear velocity = (τo/ρ)1/2
UNITS: (N/M2)/(N*S2/M4) = M/S
- τo = shear stress at pipe wall
- IMMEDIATELY OUTSIDE THE VISCOUS
SUBLAYER, THE VELOCITY DISTRIBUTION IS OF
LOGARITHMIC FORM:
-
u / u* = 5.75 log10 (u* y /ν) + 5.5
for 20 < u* y / ν < 10000
- VELOCITY DISTRIBUTION FOR TURBULENT FLOW
CAN BE APPROXIMATED QUITE WELL BY A
POWER LAW FORMULA:
- u / umax = (y/ro) m
- umax = velocity at pipe center
- ro = radius of pipe
- m = exponent that varies with the Reynolds number (TABLE 5-1)
TABLE 5-1 EXPONENTS FOR POWER LAW EQUATION
Re | 4 × 103 | 2.3 × 104 | 1.1 × 105 | 1.1 × 106 | 3.2 × 106
m | 1/6 | 1/6.6 | 1/7.0 | 1/8.8 | 1/10
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HEAD LOSS FOR TURBULENT FLOW IN PIPES:
DARCY-WEISBACH FORMULA
-
hf = f (L/D) V2/(2g)
- UNITS: (M/M) (M/S)2 / (M/S2) = M
- LAMINAR FLOW HEAD LOSS = 32 μ LV/(γD2)
- LAMINAR FLOW HEAD LOSS = 32 ν LV/(gD2)
- TURBULENT FLOW HEAD LOSS = (f/2) LV2/(gD)
- IF f IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE RECIPROCAL
OF THE REYNOLDS NUMBER (LAMINAR FLOW):
-
f ∝ [1/(Re)]
-
f = 64/ Re = 64 / [(VD)/ν)] = 64 ν/(VD)
- REPLACING IN DARCY-WEISBACH FORMULA:
-
LAMINAR FLOW HEAD LOSS = 32 ν LV/(gD2) OK!
- THEREFORE, IN LAMINAR FLOW f IS NOT A CONSTANT.
- IN TURBULENT FLOW, THE EXPONENT OF
REYNOLDS NUMBER DECREASES TO ZERO.
- FULLY DEVELOPED ROUGH TURBULENT FLOW:
-
DARCY-WEISBACH f IS INDEPENDENT OF THE
REYNOLDS NUMBER.
- NIKURADSE DATA JUSTIFIES FORMULA FOR
TURBULENT FLOW IN ROUGH PIPES:
-
u / u* = 5.75 log10 (y /ks) + 8.5
-
y = distance from the geometric mean of the wall
surface
-
ks = size of sand grains
- THE UNIFORM CHARACTER OF SANDS GRAINS
USED BY NIKURADSE PRODUCES A DIP IN THE
f vs Re RELATION, BEFORE REACHING A CONSTANT VALUE OF f.
- TESTS IN COMMERCIAL PIPES BY MOODY REVEAL NO SUCH
DIP.
- IN MOODY DIAGRAM
ks = equivalent sand roughness; D = pipe diameter
Moody diagram for fully developed turbulent flow in pipes.
- FOR CERTAIN PROBLEMS,
THE DARCY-WEISBACH EQUATION
IS EXPRESSED AS FOLLOWS:
- hf = f (L/D) V2/(2g)
- f = (2ghf/L) (D/V2)
- f1/2 = (2 g hf D/L)1/2 (1/V)
- f 1/2 Re = (2 g hf D/L)1/2 (1/V) (VD/ν)
- f 1/2 Re = (D3/2/ ν) (2 g hf /L) 1/2
- UNITS: [(M3/2/ (M2/S)] [(M/S2) (M/M)]1/2 DIMENSIONLESS
- DARCY-WEISBACH FORMULA IS APPLICABLE TO
ANY FLUID AND ANY SYSTEM OF UNITS.
PROBLEMS
1. GIVEN KIND AND SIZE OF PIPE, AND FLOW
RATE, DETERMINE THE HEAD LOSS.
2. GIVEN HEAD, KIND AND SIZE OF PIPE, DETERMINE THE FLOW RATE.
3. GIVEN FLOW RATE, KIND OF PIPE, AND HEAD, DETERMINE THE SIZE OF PIPE.
Type of pipe problem | Q | hf | D | ks
1 | X | |
| 2 X | | |
| 3 | | X |
| | | | |
PROBLEM 1 EXAMPLE
- Q = 0.05 M3/S; T = 20oC; D = 0.2 M, ASPHALTED CAST-IRON PIPE; FIND hf/L (M/KM)
- SOLUTION:
- L = 1000 M
- VELOCITY: V = Q /[(π/4) D2] = 1.59 M/S
- ν = 1.0 X 10-6 M2/S
- Re = VD/ν = 318,000
- FROM FIG. 5-5: ks / D = 0.0007
- FROM FIG. 5-4: f = 0.019
- THEN:
hf = f (1000/D) V2/(2g) = 12.2 M
PROBLEM 2 EXAMPLE
- hf/L = 0.0122; T = 20oC; D = 0.2 M; ASPHALTED CAST-IRON PIPE; FIND Q (M3/S)
SOLUTION:
- ν = 1.0 X 10-6 M2/S
- FROM FIG. 5-5: ks / D = 0.0007
- f 1/2 Re = (D3/2/ν) (2ghf /L)1/2 =
[0.23/2 /(1.0 X 10-6) ] [(2) (9.81) (0.0122)]1/2 = 43,760
- FROM FIG. 5-4: f = 0.019
- V = [ (hf/L) 2gD / f ]1/2=
[(0.0122) (2) (9.81) (0.2) / 0.019]1/2 = 1.59 M/S
- Q = VA = V (π/4)D2 = 1.59 (3.1416/4) (0.2)2 = 0.05 M3/S.
- MANY TYPE 2 PROBLEMS CANNOT BE SOLVED
DIRECTLY.
- FOR EXAMPLE, WATER FLOWING FROM A
RESERVOIR INTO A PIPE AND INTO THE
ATMOSPHERE.
- PART OF THE AVAILABLE ENERGY REMAINS IN
KINETIC ENERGY AS THE FLOW LEAVES THE
PIPE.
- THEREFORE, ONE DOES NOT KNOW HOW MUCH
HEAD LOSS THERE IS.
- TO GET A SOLUTION, ONE MUST ITERATE ON f.
- CONVERGENCE IS BECAUSE f CHANGES MORE
SLOWLY THAN Re.
PROBLEM 3 EXAMPLE
- Q = 0.05 M3/S; T = 20o; ASPHALTED CAST-IRON PIPE; hf/L = 0.0122; FIND D.
- SOLUTION:
- ν = 1.0 X 10-6 M2/S
- FIRST ASSUME f = 0.015
- hf = f (L/D) V2/(2g)
- hf = f (L/D) (Q/A)2/(2g)
- hf = f (L/D) [Q/(πD2/4)]2/(2g)
- D5 = f Q2/[(π/4)2(2g) (hf/L)] =
- D5 = 0.015 (0.05)2 / [(0.6169)(2)(9.81)(0.0122)] = 0.000254
- D = 0.19 M
- NOW COMPUTE A MORE ACCURATE f :
- ks / D = 0.0007
- V = Q/A = 0.05 /[(3.1416/4) (0.19)2] = 1.763 M/S
- Re = VD/ν = 1.763 (0.19) /(1.0 × 10-6 ) = 334,970
- FROM FIG. 5-4: f = 0.019
- NOW, RECOMPUTE DIAMETER:
- Dnew5 / fnew = Dold5 / fold
- Dnew = [(0.19)5 (0.019/0.015) ] 1/5 = 0.2 M. OK!
HEAD LOSS USING HAZEN-WILLIAMS FORMULA
- HAZEN-WILLIAMS FORMULA: EMPIRICAL EQUATION IN U.S. UNITS USED BY
WATERWORKS ENGINEERS
- V = 1.318 Ch R 0.63 S 0.54
- V = mean velocity (fps)
- Ch = Hazen-Williams friction coefficient (depends
on pipe roughness).
- R = hydraulic radius (ft)
- S = slope of energy gradeline (ft/ft)
- CHEZY EQUATION:
- V = C R 0.5 S 0.5
- MANNING EQUATION:
- V = (1/n) R 0.67 S 0.5
- THE HAZEN-WILLIAMS FORMULA IS ACCURATE
WITHIN A CERTAIN RANGE OF DIAMETERS AND
FRICTION SLOPES.
- IT IS USED INDISCRIMINATELY IN PIPE DESIGN.
- IT MAY BE INACCURATE FOR FLUIDS OTHER
THAN WATER AND FOR PIPE DIAMETERS
SMALLER THAN 2 IN AND LARGER THAN 6 FT.
- TO SOLVE FOR HEAD LOSS WITH HAZEN-
WILLIAMS: (R = D/4)
- V = 1.318 Ch R 0.63 (hf/L) 0.54
- (hf/L) 0.54 = (V/Ch) (D/4)-0.63 (1.318)-1
- hf = L [(V/Ch) (D/4)-0.63 (1.318)-1] 1.852
- hf = L (V/Ch ) 1.852 [(D/4)-0.63 (1.318)-1] 1.852
- hf = L D -1.167 (V/Ch ) 1.852 [(1/4) -0.63 (1.318) -1] 1.852
- hf = 3.022 L D -1.167 (V/Ch ) 1.852
- TO SOLVE FOR DISCHARGE WITH
HAZEN-WILLIAMS:
- V= Q/A
- A = (π/4)D2
- R = D/4
- V = Q/A = 1.318 Ch (D/4) 0.63 S 0.54
- Q = 1.318 Ch (D/4) 0.63 S 0.54 (π/4)D2
- Q = 1.318 Ch D 2.63 S 0.54 (π/4)(1/4) 0.63
- Q = 0.432 Ch D 2.63 S 0.54
- ONLINE HAZEN-WILLIAMS
- D = 1 ft, S = 0.001.
- Assume C = 130 (AS FOR FIG. 5-6):
- Q = 1.347 CFS.
Orange County Sanitation District's ocean outfall pipeline, Huntington Beach, California.
HEAD LOSS IN NONCIRCULAR CONDUITS
-
IN DARCY-WEISBACH FORMULA:
- hf = f (L/D) V2/(2g)
- HYDRAULIC RADIUS R = A/P
- IN CIRCULAR PIPE FLOWING FULL:
-
R = [(π/4)]D2/ (πD) = D/4
- THEREFORE, THE DARCY-WEISBACH FORMULA IN
TERMS OF HYDRAULIC RADIUS IS:
- hf = f/4 (L/R) V2/(2g)
- USE THIS FORMULA FOR NONCIRCULAR PIPES:
-
WITH RELATIVE ROUGHNESS ks/(4R) and
-
Re = V (4R)/ν
- ALSO, NOTE THAT
- hf/L = [f/(8g)] (1/R) V2
- V = (8g/f) 0.5 R 0.5 (hf/L) 0.5
- V = (8g/f) 0.5 R 0.5 Sf 0.5
- THIS LOOKS LIKE THE CHEZY EQUATION!
- DARCY-WEISBACH EQUATION IS A DIMENSIONLESS CHEZY EQUATION.
- C = (8g/f) 0.5
- C2 = 8g/f
- f/8 = g/C2
- DARCY-WEISBACH: f = 8g/C2
EXAMPLE 5-3
- A CONCRETE-LINED TUNNEL HAS A CROSS-
SECTION DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS. THE TOP
PART IS A 20-FT DIAMETER SEMICIRCLE; THE
BOTTOM PART IS RECTANGULAR, 20 FT WIDE BY
10 FT HIGH. MEAN VELOCITY = 12 FPS.
ESTIMATE THE HEAD LOSS IN FT/MI.
- SOLUTION:
- THE HYDRAULIC RADIUS IS:
-
R = A/P = [(π102/2) + (20) (10) ] /[20 + (10)(2) + π 10] = 357/71.4 =
- R = 5 FT.
- ASSUME TEMP= 60oF
- THE REYNOLDS NUMBER IS:
-
Re= V (4R) /ν = (12) (4) (5) / (1.22 × 10 -5)
- Re = 19,672,131
- ASSUME ROUGHNESS ks = 0.01 ft (rough concrete lining)
- RELATIVE ROUGHNESS ks / (4R) = 0.0005
- FROM MOODY DIAGRAM, WITH Re and ks/(4R),
WE OBTAIN:
- f = 0.017
- THE HEAD LOSS PER MILE IS:
- hf = f (L/4R) V2/(2g)
- hf = 0.017 (5280 FT/MI / 20) 122/[(2) (32.2)] = 10 FT/MI
HEAD LOSS DUE TO TRANSITIONS AND FITTINGS
- OTHER LOSSES ARE CAUSED BY THE INLET,
OUTLET, BENDS, ETC., THAT ALTER THE UNIFORM FLOW REGIME.
- ADDITIONAL TURBULENCE IS CREATED BY THE
FITTINGS.
- ENERGY CREATED BY THE TURBULENCE IS DISSIPATED INTO HEAT.
- HEAD LOSS IS EXPRESSED AS:
- hL= K V2/(2g)
- K IS THE LOSS COEFFICIENT FOR THE FITTING.
EXAMPLE 5-4
- THE CONDUIT OF THE PREVIOUS EXAMPLE IS
USED TO CONVEY WATER FROM A RESERVOIR
AT ELEVATION 5000 FT, THROUGH TURBINES,
AND THEN TO ANOTHER RESERVOIR AT ELEVATION 3000 FT.
- THE TUNNEL IS 5 MI LONG AND
HAS TWO LONG-RADIUS 45 DEGREE BENDS
PLUS TWO WIDE-OPEN GATE VALVES AND WELL
DESIGNED INLETS AND OUTLETS.
- WHAT POWER CAN BE DELIVERED TO THE TURBINES, ASSUMING THE FLOW PASSAGE
ASSOCIATED WITH THE TURBINES RESULTS IN A LOSS
COEFFICIENT OF 0.2 OF VELOCITY HEAD?
- ASSUME V = 12 FPS; ASSUME HEAD LOSS FOR
GATE VALVE IS NEGLIGIBLE.
- SOLUTION:
- WRITE THE ENERGY EQUATION BETWEEN
RESERVOIRS 1 AND 2:
- THE ENERGY DIFFERENCE GOES TO
TOTAL HEAD LOSSES PLUS HEAD DELIVERED TO
TURBINE.
- THE LINE LOSSES ARE: 10 FT/MI X 5 MI = 50 FT.
- hL = 50 + [V2/(2g)] [ 2Kb + Ke + KE + Kt]
- hL = 50 + [122/(64.4] [ 2(0.1) + 0.12 + 0.15 + 0.2]
- KE IS ESTIMATED ASSUMING θ = 10o
- BEND (b), ENTRANCE (e) AND EXIT (E) LOSS COEFFICIENTS FROM TABLE 5-3.
- KE IS ESTIMATED ASSUMING θ = 10o
- hL = 50 + 1.5 = 51.5 FT
- THE HEAD DELIVERED TO TURBINES IS THEN:
- ht = 5000 - 3000 - 51.5 = 1948.5 FT.
- THE DISCHARGE IS:
- Q = V A = 12 [(π102/2) + (20) (10)] = 4285 CFS.
- THE POWER DELIVERED TO TURBINES IS:
- P (FT ⋅ LB/S) = γ (LB/FT3) Q (FT3/S) ht (FT)
- 1 HP = 550 FT ⋅ LB/SEC
- P (HP) = 62.4 (LB/FT3) 4285 (FT3/S) 1948.5 (FT) / 550
- P (HP) = 947,268 HP
- 1 HP = 0.746 KW
- P (KW) = 706,662 KW
- P (MW) = 706 MW
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