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Showing posts with label hydraulic grade line. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hydraulic grade line. Show all posts

Friday, January 5, 2024

How to make sure the fluid goes in the direction it suppose to go?

 For short, the answer lies in a concept widely used in pipe engineering: hydraulic load or just load. Unfortunately, this concept is not well understood. 

The hydraulic load can be understood as the amount of energy available to drive a fluid through a pipe or conduit. And if you compare the load at two different points along a pipe you could easily check for the direction in which the fluid travels.

The hydraulic load can be, mathematically, written as:

$H_L=\dfrac{p}{\gamma}+z$        Eq. (01)

where:

$H_L$ stands for the  hydraulic pressure at a given point along th pipe,

$p$ for pressure at that point along the pipe,

$\gamma$ for specific weight of the fluid,

$z$ vertical height of that point along the pipe.


As you may  have already noticed: the hydraulic load only makes sense when talking about a given location along a certain pipe.


Fig. 01 Flow direction cases according to the hydraulic load $H_L$ at two different locations.

In case 1 in Fig. 01 the flow travels upward and the only way of making sure this is so is by checking that $H_{L1}$ is greater than $H_{L2}$. Otherwise, the fluid will travel backwards.

 This concept is a mechanical balance coming from the Bernoulli equation. However, estimations on how greater $H_{L1}$ is with respect to $H_{L2}$ depends on some pipe features and equipments taken into account in the general energy balance equation.

Any question? Write in the comments and I shall try to help.

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