sciguyjim
Chemical
- Jun 12, 2002
- 155
I was told recently that ribbed tubing can have the effect of decreasing the effective diameter of a tube by as much as 50% due to drag. If I have a ribbed tube 4" in diam with ribs .25" wide and .25" deep, then is it accurate (even a little) to estimate that the eddies causing the drag extend at least 1" from the walls (about 50% of tube has major eddies)?
Could you estimate, how much would the eddies (and drag) be reduced if I reduced the wall ribs to 1/20 the original depth? Assume I have a tube about 4" I.D. and an airflow of about 500 CFM.
I'm trying to form a mental image of the amount of turbulence and laminar flow in the tube, and how much the drag could be reduced by smoothing the ID of the tubing. It's just an interest I've been obsessed with lately. I've done a lot of searching on the web and at my library and can't find what I'm looking for. Thanks.
Could you estimate, how much would the eddies (and drag) be reduced if I reduced the wall ribs to 1/20 the original depth? Assume I have a tube about 4" I.D. and an airflow of about 500 CFM.
I'm trying to form a mental image of the amount of turbulence and laminar flow in the tube, and how much the drag could be reduced by smoothing the ID of the tubing. It's just an interest I've been obsessed with lately. I've done a lot of searching on the web and at my library and can't find what I'm looking for. Thanks.