Fluid Speed in Pipe: Is Turbine an Obstacle?

  • Thread starter Thread starter milan.007
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Fluid Pipe Speed
AI Thread Summary
The presence of a turbine in a pipe does not change the speed of the fluid entering and exiting, provided the inlet and outlet sizes are the same and the fluid is incompressible. However, there will be a pressure drop across the turbine, which is necessary for energy extraction. This pressure drop can potentially slow down the fluid velocity in the entire system, depending on the fluid source. Understanding these dynamics is crucial in hydraulics, especially for those with an electrical background. Overall, turbines can influence fluid speed due to the associated pressure changes.
milan.007
Messages
9
Reaction score
0
Just a general question, if there is an obstacle in a pipe, such as a turbine, will the speed of the fluid before the turbine be the same as after it? Or will the turbine cause the speed in the whole pipe to slow down?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
milan.007 said:
Just a general question, if there is an obstacle in a pipe, such as a turbine, will the speed of the fluid before the turbine be the same as after it? Or will the turbine cause the speed in the whole pipe to slow down?

If the turbine isn't leaking - the mass of the fluid entering the turbine equals the mass of the fluid leaving. So if the inlet and outlet are the same size and the fluid is not compressible, the the velocity in and out are the same. There will be a pressure drop across the turbine - has to be or it can not extract any energy.

As for your second question: It could. The turbine will have a pressure drop across it. Depending on the fluid source, the additional pressure drop could easily slow down the velocity.

Two disclaimers:
1. I've told you more than I know.

2. This is hydraulics as explained per an electrical background


ice
 
Thanks alot, that answers my question.
 
Here's a video by “driving 4 answers” who seems to me to be well versed on the details of Internal Combustion engines. The video does cover something that's a bit shrouded in 'conspiracy theory', and he touches on that, but of course for phys.org, I'm only interested in the actual science involved. He analyzes the claim of achieving 100 mpg with a 427 cubic inch V8 1970 Ford Galaxy in 1977. Only the fuel supply system was modified. I was surprised that he feels the claim could have been...
TL;DR Summary: Heard in the news about using sonar to locate the sub Hello : After the sinking of the ship near the Greek shores , carrying of alot of people , there was another accident that include 5 tourists and a submarine visiting the titanic , which went missing Some technical notes captured my attention, that there us few sonar devices are hearing sounds repeated every 30 seconds , but they are not able to locate the source Is it possible that the sound waves are reflecting from...
Back
Top