This document contains 10 problems related to fluid mechanics in petroleum engineering. The problems involve calculating things like flow rates, head losses, velocity, and discharge through various pipes, nozzles, venturi meters, orifices, and reservoirs. Key elements involved include pipe diameters, lengths, pressure and height differentials, fluid properties, and friction factors. The goal is to apply principles of fluid mechanics and equations of flow to solve practical problems encountered in petroleum engineering applications.
This document contains 10 problems related to fluid mechanics in petroleum engineering. The problems involve calculating things like flow rates, head losses, velocity, and discharge through various pipes, nozzles, venturi meters, orifices, and reservoirs. Key elements involved include pipe diameters, lengths, pressure and height differentials, fluid properties, and friction factors. The goal is to apply principles of fluid mechanics and equations of flow to solve practical problems encountered in petroleum engineering applications.
UNIVERSITY OF PETROLEUM AND ENERGY STUDIES, DEHRADUN
B. Tech. APE Upstream Fluid Mechanics in Petroleum Engineering (PEAU 2005)
Assignment No. 2 Last date for the Assignment Submission: 28th April 2023 1. An orifice with a 2 in diameter opening is used to measure the mass flow rate of water at 60°F (ρ = 62.36 lbm/ft3 and μ = 7.536 × 10-4 lbm/ft-s) through a horizontal 4 in. diameter pipe. A mercury manometer is used to measure the pressure difference CO3 across the orifice. If the differential height of the manometer is read to be 6 in, determine the volume flow rate of water through the pipe, the average velocity, and the head loss caused by the orifice meter. 2. Air flows through a pipe at a rate of 200 L/s. The pipe consists of two sections of diameters 20 cm and 10 cm with a smooth reducing section that connects them. The pressure difference between the two pipe CO3 sections is measured by a water manometer. Neglecting frictional effects, determine the differential height of water between the two pipe sections. Take the air density to be 1.20 kg/m3. 3. The flow rate of water at 20°C (ρ = 998 kg/m3 and μ = 1.002 × 10-3 kg/m-s) through a 4 cm diameter pipe is measured with a 2 cm diameter nozzle meter equipped with an inverted air–water manometer. If CO3 the manometer indicates a differential water height of 32 cm, determine the volume flow rate of water and the head loss caused by the nozzle meter 4. 215 liters of gasoline of specific gravity 0.82 flow per second upward in an inclined Venturimeter fitted at a 300mm diameter pipe. The Venturimeter is inclined at 600 to the vertical and its 150mm diameter throat is 1.2m from the entrance along its length. Pressure gauges inserted at the entrance and throat show a pressure of 0.141N/mm2 and 0.077 N/mm2, respectively. Calculate the discharge CO3 coefficient of the venturimeter. If instead of pressure gauges at the entrance and throat of the venturimeter are connected to the two limbs of a U-tube mercury manometer, determine the reading in mm of the differential mercury column. 5. A hemispherical cistern of 4m radius is full of water. It is fitted with 60 mm diameter sharp-edged orifice at the bottom. Calculate the time required to lower the level in the cistern by 2 meters. Take CO3 Cd = 0.60. 6. A venturi-meter is used for measurement of discharge of water in horizontal pipeline. If the ratio of upstream pipe diameter to that of throat is 2:1, upstream diameter is 300 mm, the difference in CO3 pressure between the throat and upstream is equal to 3 m head of water and loss of head through meter is one-eighth of the throat velocity head, calculate the discharge in the pipe. 7. Find the discharge through a trapezoidal notch which is 1.2 m wide at the top and 0.50 m at the bottom and is 40 cm in height. The head of water on the notch is 30 cm. Assume Cd for rectangular portion CO3 as 0.62, while that for triangular notch is 0.60. 8. Two reservoirs with a difference in elevation of 15m are connected by the three pipes in series. The pipes are 300m long of 30cm diameter, 150m long of 20 cm diameter and 200m long of 25cm diameter, respectively. The friction factors for the three pipes are 0.018, 0.020 and 0.019, CO4 respectively. The contractions and expansions are sudden. Determine the flow rate in liter/s, if the loss coefficient for the sudden contractions (Kc) from 30cm to 20cm is 0.24. 9. Two sharp ended pipes of diameters 60 mm and 100 mm, respectively, each of length 150m are connected in parallel between two reservoirs which have a difference of level of 15 m. If the coefficient of friction for each pipe is f = 0.08, calculate the rate of flow for each pipe and also the CO4 diameter of a single pipe 150 m long which would give the same discharge, if it were substituted for the original two pipes. 10. A pipe of diameter 25 cm and length 2000 m connects two reservoirs, having difference of water level 25 m. Determine the discharge through the pipe. If an additional pipe of diameter 25 cm and CO4 length 1000 m is attached to the last 1000 m length of the existing pipe, find the increase in discharge. Take f = 0.015 and neglect minor losses.
The Water Supply of the El Paso and Southwestern Railway from Carrizozo to Santa Rosa, N. Mex.
American Society of Civil Engineers: Transactions, No. 1170