Flow through a pipe along a reduced diameter

AI Thread Summary
In a pipe with a diameter reduction from 50mm to 40mm, the flow rate remains constant, meaning the same volume of water flows through both sections. However, the velocity of the water will increase in the reduced section, leading to a decrease in pressure. Once the pipe returns to 50mm, the velocity will normalize, but pressure may not fully recover due to potential friction losses in long pipes. Therefore, while flow rate is constant, pressure and velocity dynamics change through the reduction and subsequent return to the original diameter. Understanding these principles is crucial for effective fluid dynamics management in piping systems.
TSN79
Messages
422
Reaction score
0
Imagine a pipe of d=50mm with water flowing through. The pipe's diameter is reduced along a small section to 40, and then returned to 50. If I have a flow of x l/s along the first 50mm piece, will I also get x l/s along and after the reduction? Will the only change be more speed through the reduced section and then back to normal, accompanied by a big pressure loss?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
actually the flow rate will be constant if it is one stream...

the velocity will increase in the 40...pressure will reduced...

then velocity will come back to its normal...

but with very long pipes the pressure will drop due to friction...

so it is not a must that the velocity and the pressure will be same at the

second 50 mm pipe...
 
Thread 'I need a concave mirror with a focal length length of 150 feet'
I need to cut down a 3 year old dead tree from top down so tree causes no damage with small pieces falling. I need a mirror with a focal length of 150 ft. 12" diameter to 36" diameter will work good but I can't think of any easy way to build it. Nothing like this for sale on Ebay. I have a 30" Fresnel lens that I use to burn stumps it works great. Tree service wants $2000.
Hi all, i have some questions about the tesla turbine: is a tesla turbine more efficient than a steam engine or a stirling engine ? about the discs of the tesla turbine warping because of the high speed rotations; does running the engine on a lower speed solve that or will the discs warp anyway after time ? what is the difference in efficiency between the tesla turbine running at high speed and running it at a lower speed ( as fast as possible but low enough to not warp de discs) and: i...

Similar threads

Back
Top