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ISA/IEC sizing question

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gsxra

Industrial
Nov 14, 2005
8
I am looking for the equation for delta P across a control valve. I am looking for non-choked, compressible, turbulent flow with or without fittings attached. I have the equation to solve for C, but I was hoping someone has this equation re-worked for DP.

Thanks
Josh
 
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I'm sure I know what you are asking. For turbulent non-compressible flow it would be Flow squared, times Specific gravity over Cv squared equals delta P.

For compressible flow you first have to determine the delta P to P1 ratio. Then Weight, Mass or Vapor basis and what kind of valve globe, ball or butterfly.
 
I have the equation but I do not know the downstream pressure. I need the equation reworked to solve for delta P. The equation I have is C=W/(N6*Y*{x*p1*rho1)^.5)
Y=1/(3FkxT), x=DP/P1
 
Dusting off my high-school algebra:
If
Cv= _Q_________
1360*P1*Y*Sqrt(X/GTZ)
And X=DP/P1

Substitute for X

Cv= _Q_________
1360*P1*Y*Sqrt(DP/P1GTZ)


Sqrt(DP/P1GTZ)=Q/CV*1360*P1*Y

(DP/P1GTZ)= (Q/CV*1360*P1*Y)^2


DP=Q^2*GTZ/P1^3*Cv^2*1360^2*Y^2

Q is in SCFH
P1 is inlet pressure in PSIA
Y is the expansion factor,(1-(X/3FkXt))
X Pressure drop ratio defined above
G specifig gravity (MW/29)
T=Temp in degrees R
Fk is specific heat ratio (ideal gas: 1.4)
Xt is terminal pressure drop ratio-from Mfr's tables)
Z is compressibility (ideal gas=1)

 
Jim,

But you still need to break Y out (because Y=1-X/(3FkxT)).
When I do that I get a cubic equation for DP.
If you use your equation or the ISA one I listed same result.
I was hoping someone had the equation solved for me.

Thanks

 
gsxra,

If you assume the valve to be choked, start by using a Y of 0.667 and see where that gets you.

If the valve is not choked, use a Y value between 0.667 and 0.93.

If you want Y broken out, assume Fk=1 for air, Xt~0.5 to 0.75 for a globe valve, and the x/Xt factor to be the Xt value or some pressure drop ratio lower than the Xt.

What type of control valve are you using?

Regards,
Fred
 
I am setting up a model in MS Excel that represents pressure loss through components such as pipe, elbows, block valve, control valve. This is used to determine the design conditions for a startup vent for steam service.

As for the type of control valves: I have used Fisher, Masoneilan, Samson, CCI, ValvTechnologies Xactrols, etc.

I know what Fk and xT values I will be using. I was just hoping some would have the equation written to solve for DP.
 

If you have an inlet pressure and the xT value, you can calculate your downstream pressure and then the pressure drop.
 
fwcatr,
Help me out. Knowing the formula is C=W/(N6*Y*[x*p1*rho1]^.5)
Y=1-(x/(3FkxT)), x=DP/P1, N6=63.3
Known:
W, N6, Fk, xT, P1. rho1, C
This leaves DP the only variable I don't have. But I don't remember my algebra that well to solve for DP.
When I solve for DP I get:
DP^3/(3*Fk*xT*P1)^2 - 2DP^2/(3*Fk*xT*P1) + DP = (W/C*N6)^2/rho1
 
What I was trying to say before is that if you have an arbitrary inlet pressure and the xT, then you have xT=(P1-P2)/P1abs (since the xT is just a pressure drop ratio). You should then have your pressure drop where the valve becomes choked.

As far as the equation goes, I wouldn't break up Y at first, use Y as 0.667 to begin with, or leave it as Y. When I went through the equation, I ended up with pressure drop on one side and W^2/(rho*C^2*N6^2*Y^2) on the other side, with the P1 term dropping off because it appears in the numerator and the denominator.

 
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