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Cyclone Design Equations and Formulas Calculator

The document discusses equations for calculating radial velocity in a cyclone design. It lists the inputs needed for the calculation as particle density, air density, radial distance, rotational velocity, particle diameter, and air viscosity. It also lists some of the other variables that can be calculated from these inputs, such as radial velocity, pressure drop, and separation factor. The equations relate these variables using symbols like particle density, air density, radial distance, rotational velocity, particle diameter, and pressure drop.

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ds693
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
6K views

Cyclone Design Equations and Formulas Calculator

The document discusses equations for calculating radial velocity in a cyclone design. It lists the inputs needed for the calculation as particle density, air density, radial distance, rotational velocity, particle diameter, and air viscosity. It also lists some of the other variables that can be calculated from these inputs, such as radial velocity, pressure drop, and separation factor. The equations relate these variables using symbols like particle density, air density, radial distance, rotational velocity, particle diameter, and pressure drop.

Uploaded by

ds693
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Cyclone Design Equations and Formulas Calculator Air Filtration, Quality, Purification and Pollution Control

Solving for radial velocity

Inputs: particle density (pparticle) air density (pair) radial distance (r) rotational velocity (w) particle diameter (d) air viscosity (u)

Conversions: pparticle pair r w d u Solution: radial velocity (vradial) = HAS NOT BEEN CALCULATED Other Units: Change Equation Select an equation to solve for a different unknown cyclone radial velocity radial velocity particle or particulate density air density =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 =0 kilogram/meter^3 kilogram/meter^3 meter radian/second meter kilogram/meter-second

radial distance

rotational velocity

particulate or particle diameter

air viscosity

cyclone pressure drop pressure drop

proportionality factor

gas flow rate

absolute pressure gas density

temperature

cyclone separation factor separation factor radial velocity settling velocity cyclone approximate effective turns

approximate effective turns inlet height cylinder length cone length cyclone cut diameter cut diameter

gas viscosity

inlet width

effective turns

inlet gas velocity

particle density

gas density

vradial vinlet pparticle pair r w d Pdrop

Where = radial velocity = inlet velocity = particle or particulate density = air density = radial distance = rotational velocity = particle particulate or diameter = pressure drop

Q P pgas u ugas K T v S N h Lcylinder Lcone dcut W

= gas flow rate = absolute pressure = gas density = air viscosity = gas viscosity = proportionality factor = temperature = settling velocity = separation factor = approximate effective turns = inlet height = cylinder length = cone length = cut diameter = inlet width

References - Books: 1) P. Aarne Vesilind, J. Jeffrey Peirce and Ruth F. Weiner. 1994. Environmental Engineering. Butterworth Heinemann. 3rd ed.

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