Sirius P.Eng.
Chemical
- Mar 26, 2019
- 26
I'm not clear on this issue...share your thoughts to enable me clear up this issue..
My thought is this...from the laws of conservation of mass and energy...when a restriction is created on the flow path of a fluid, pressure reduces, velocity increases and density reduces as well so that both mass and energy are conserved. (i.e for compressible flow a simple relation is m1 = m2 ==> rho1.A1.V1 = rho2.A2.V2. Obviously, for a gas at flowing conditions, the Volume or volumetric flow increases, but mass flow rate is conserved.
How then is it popularly said that restriction orifices (ROs) limit flow.?
Does this use of the term "flow" actually mean volumetric flow rate?
In a relief header how does an RO downstream of a BDV for instance limit the peak blowdown rate in order not the exceed the capacity of the vent handling system?
Please share your thoughts/experiences to help me clear my head.
My thought is this...from the laws of conservation of mass and energy...when a restriction is created on the flow path of a fluid, pressure reduces, velocity increases and density reduces as well so that both mass and energy are conserved. (i.e for compressible flow a simple relation is m1 = m2 ==> rho1.A1.V1 = rho2.A2.V2. Obviously, for a gas at flowing conditions, the Volume or volumetric flow increases, but mass flow rate is conserved.
How then is it popularly said that restriction orifices (ROs) limit flow.?
Does this use of the term "flow" actually mean volumetric flow rate?
In a relief header how does an RO downstream of a BDV for instance limit the peak blowdown rate in order not the exceed the capacity of the vent handling system?
Please share your thoughts/experiences to help me clear my head.