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Total pressure drop & static pressure drop

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Old   February 7, 2018, 02:03
Post Total pressure drop & static pressure drop
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hello everyone.. i have a doubt about total and static pressure drops.here is my questions.

1.consider a pipe which having small bend, for that if i measured total pressure drop will give idea about how energy get loss by fluid flow. so we can think about modification on bend or something. but measuring static pressure drop at inlet and outlet is for what purpose?

2. if flow is get recirculated at the bend,then what about the overall total & static pressure drop of the pipe? they will increase or decrease?
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Old   April 11, 2018, 02:15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aarthar View Post
hello everyone.. i have a doubt about total and static pressure drops.here is my questions.

1.consider a pipe which having small bend, for that if i measured total pressure drop will give idea about how energy get loss by fluid flow. so we can think about modification on bend or something. but measuring static pressure drop at inlet and outlet is for what purpose?
If the pipe is horizontal (you're comparing across points at the same elevation), then the static pressure drop and the total pressure drop will be the same. Once you change the elevation, then you'll need to measure the difference between the total pressure to get the pressure drop.


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2. if flow is get recirculated at the bend,then what about the overall total & static pressure drop of the pipe? they will increase or decrease?
As you go through more pipe length, you'll have a higher pressure drop. Your compressor/pump will need to overcome the pressure drop in order to maintain the same mass flow rate.
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Old   April 11, 2018, 03:07
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Aarthar View Post
hello everyone.. i have a doubt about total and static pressure drops.here is my questions.

1.consider a pipe which having small bend, for that if i measured total pressure drop will give idea about how energy get loss by fluid flow. so we can think about modification on bend or something. but measuring static pressure drop at inlet and outlet is for what purpose?

2. if flow is get recirculated at the bend,then what about the overall total & static pressure drop of the pipe? they will increase or decrease?
Total pressure can be represented by sum of two terms. Static pressure (which we call pressure head in Bernaulli's eqn) and Velocity head (Kinetic energy).

So For a pipe or bend which have same inlet and outlet diameters, static and total pressure drops should return same value.

I would recommend always go by total pressure drop to compare the energy lost in due to pipe friction or bend or anything else.

Last edited by ashokac7; April 11, 2018 at 04:42.
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Old   April 11, 2018, 03:32
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Any time that dissipative effects take a role, the total pressure diminuishes as it indicates the total kinetic energy that can be obtained. Dissipation degrades the potential level of kinetic energy as internal energy takes more relevance.
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