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Pressure Drop in Tubes | |||
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Posted by: NC ® 01/11/2006, 15:55:10 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
Can someone help me verify the following: I'm trying to get some basic numbers on an oil cooler. If tube dimensions, flow, and pressure drop across tube(s) are given, can I assume laminar incompressible flow situation if Reynold number is less than 2300? How do I find a friction factor without using Moody Chart? How is pressure drop related to temperature (we got various pressure data when varying temperatures)? What I'm trying to get is to estimate a friction factor that accounts for the turbulators inside each tube, similar to a big fudge factor. Can it be done non-empirically? If yes, what is the basic starting principle/formula? Or is this a turbulent flow problem? P.S. I'm using h(head loss) = f(L/d)(v^2)/2g |
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Re: Pressure Drop in Tubes | |||
Re: Pressure Drop in Tubes -- NC | Post Reply | Top of thread | Forum |
Posted by: zekeman ® 01/12/2006, 09:13:46 Author Profile eMail author Edit |
If the Reynold's number is less than 2000, then you can use the Hagen-Poiseuille law for fully developed laminer flow in circular pipes,namely
f=64/N. However, you must be sure that it is under 2000.; otherwise you must note that there is a transition period from 2000- 3000 where it is wildly different. Temperature changes affect pressure drop only inthat the viscosity changes with it and it appears in the denominator of the Reynolds equation. |
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