Download presentation
1
CE 3372 Water Systems Design
Closed Conduit Hydraulics-I
2
Flow in Closed Conduits
Diagram Energy Equation Head Loss Models Pipe loss Fitting loss Moody Chart Problems Direct Method (Jain equations) Branched Systems Looped System
3
Diagram
4
Diagram Suction Side Lift Station Discharge Side
5
Mean Section Velocity In most engineering contexts, the mean section velocity is the ratio of the volumetric discharge and cross sectional area. The velocity distribution in a section is important in determining frictional losses in a conduit.
6
Energy Equation The energy equation relates the total dynamic head at two points in a system, accounting for frictional losses and any added head from a pump.
7
Energy Equation 2 1
8
Head Loss Models Darcy-Weisbach Hazen-Williams Chezy-Mannings
9
Darcy-Weisbach Frictional loss proportional to
Length, Velocity^2 Inversely proportional to Cross sectional area Loss coefficient depends on Reynolds number (fluid and flow properties) Roughness height (pipe material properties)
10
Darcy-Weisbach Frictional loss proportional to
Length, Velocity^2 Inversely proportional to Cross sectional area Loss coefficient depends on Reynolds number (fluid and flow properties) Roughness height (pipe material properties)
11
Darcy-Weisbach DW Head Loss Equation
DW Equation, Discharge Form, CIRCULAR conduits
12
Hazen-Williams Frictional loss proportional to
Length, Velocity^(1.8) Inversely proportional to Cross section area (as hydraulic radius) Loss coefficient depends on Pipe material and finish WATER ONLY!
13
Hazen-Williams HW Head Loss Discharge Form
14
Hydraulic Radius HW is often presented as a velocity equation using the hydraulic radius The hydraulic radius is the ratio of cross section flow area to wetted perimeter
15
Hydraulic Radius For circular pipe, full flow (no free surface) AREA D
PERIMETER D
16
Chezy-Manning Frictional loss proportional to
Length, Velocity^2 Inversely proportional to Cross section area (as hydraulic radius) Loss coefficient depends on Material, finish
17
Chezy-Manning CM Head Loss Discharge form replaces V with Q/A
18
Fitting (Minor) Losses
Fittings, joints, elbows, inlets, outlets cause additional head loss. Called “minor” loss not because of magnitude, but because they occur over short distances. Typical loss model is
19
Fitting (Minor) Losses
The loss coefficients are tabulated for different kinds of fittings
20
Moody Chart Moody-Stanton chart is a tool to estimate the friction factor in the DW head loss model Used for the pipe loss component of friction
21
Examples Three “classical” examples using Moody Char
Head loss for given discharge, diameter, material Discharge given head loss, diameter, material Diameter given discharge, head loss, material
22
Direct (Jain) Equations
An alternative to the Moody chart are regression equations that allow direct computation of discharge, diameter, or friction factor.
23
Branched System Distribution networks are multi-path pipelines
One topological structure is branching
24
Branched System Node Links Inflow = Outflow Energy is unique value
Head loss along line
25
Branched System Head loss in each pipe Common head at the node
26
Branched System Continuity at the node
27
Branched System 4 Equations, 4 unknowns Non-linear so solve by
Newton-Raphson/Quasi-Linearization Quadratic in unknown, so usually can find solution in just a few iterations
28
Looped System Looped system is extension of branching where one or more pipes rejoin at a different node.
29
Looped System Nodes: Links Inflow = Outflow Energy Unique
Head loss along pipe Head loss in any loop is zero LOOP
30
Examples Branched System Loop System
31
Hydraulic Grade Line Hydraulic grade line is a plot along a conduit profile of the sum of elevation and pressure head at a location. It is where a free surface would exist if there were a piezometer installed in the pipeline
32
Energy Grade Line Hydraulic grade line is a plot along a conduit profile of the sum of elevation, pressure, and velocity head at a location.
33
HGL/EGL
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.