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Flowmeters

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Title: Flowmeters


1
Flowmeters
  • Andre Pennington
  • Kat Witherspoon
  • Pam Buzzetta

2
Introduction
  • Flowmeters are process instruments that measure a
    fluids linear or non-linear flow at volumetric
    or mass flow rates
  • A fluid can either be a liquid or a gas

3
Introduction
  • Key features to consider in flow meter selection
  • Fluid properties
  • Liquid or gas
  • Temperature and pressure
  • Density
  • Viscosity
  • Chemical properties
  • Presence of other phases

4
Introduction
  • Key features to consider in flow meter selection
  • Installation considerations
  • Orientation
  • Flow direction
  • Upstream/downstream pipe work
  • Location for servicing
  • Location of valves
  • Effects of local vibration
  • Electrical connections
  • Effects of unsteady flow

5
Introduction
  • Key features to consider in flow meter selection
  • Performance considerations
  • Accuracy
  • Repeatability
  • Linearity
  • Rangeability (turndown)
  • Pressure drop
  • Output signal characteristics
  • Response time

6
Introduction
  • Key features to consider in flow meter selection
  • Economic considerations
  • Cost of ownership (i.e. purchase, installation,
    operation, maintenance, calibration, meter life,
    spares)
  • Pressure loss
  • Environmental considerations
  • Ambient temperature effects
  • Humidity effects
  • Safety factors
  • Electrical interference

7
Positive Displacement Flowmeters
  • Fluid goes through a chamber with a unit that
    repeatedly fills and discharges a fixed volume
  • The total volumetric flow rate can then be
    calculated from the rate of filling and
    discharging the discrete volumes

8
Positive Displacement Flowmeter
  • Accuracy 0.25 to 1
  • Line sizes ¼ to 3
  • Rangeability 21 to 101
  • Common Applications
  • Fluids generally need a degree of lubricity
  • Clean, non-abrasive, medium to high viscosity
    liquids
  • Good for batch operation, low-tech plants
  • Often used in oil and gas refining, chemical,
    pulp and paper

9
Positive Displacement Flowmeter
Nutating Disc
Rotating Valve
10
Positive Displacement Flowmeter
Oscillating Piston
Oval Gear
11
Positive Displacement Flowmeter
  • Advantages
  • Moderately inexpensive
  • No Reynolds number constraints
  • No upstream/downstream requirements
  • High accuracy 0.25 to 1 of rate
  • Can measure very low and very viscous flows

12
Positive Displacement Flowmeter
  • Disadvantages
  • Moving parts
  • Can create large pressure drops
  • Maintenance is necessary must disassemble to
    unplug if using a dirty fluid and subject to
    deterioration
  • Measures discrete fluid flows instead of actual
    flow rate
  • May take up a lot of space

13
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Flow goes through a section with different cross
    section areas that cause pressure and velocity
    variations
  • Employ Bernoulli equation by observing
    relationship between pressure drop and velocity
    to get volumetric flow

14
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Most common method to measure flow
  • Smart transmitters simplify use
  • Accuracy 2 of full scale
  • Line size greater than ½
  • Rangeability 41
  • Common Applications
  • Most gases and low viscosity fluids
  • Used for chemical, oil and gas refining, power,
    and transfer of natural gas

15
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Orifice Plates

Calculate mass flow mactual KAt(2?(p1-p2))0.5
16
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Venturi Tube

Flow Nozzle
17
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Advantages
  • Well known system of measurement
  • Versatile
  • Line size flexibility
  • Inexpensive initially
  • Highly repeatable
  • East to maintain
  • Economical to correct sizing mistake

18
Differential Pressure Flowmeter
  • Disadvantages
  • High installation costs
  • Moderate system accuracy
  • An abrasive or sticky process will erode accuracy
    and increase maintenance cost
  • Moderate rangeability
  • High relative pressure loss

19
Turbine Flow MetersOverview
  • Uses flow to turn a turbine rotor
  • Magnetic sensor transmits a voltage pulse to a
    processor
  • Axial-vane rotor is free turning
  • Rotor continuously moving under pressure of the
    liquid
  • Accuracy in the range of /- 0.25 with 101
    turndowns.

20
Turbine Flow Meters Common Applications
  • Turbine flow meters are widely used for both
    liquid and gas applications
  • Typical applications include
  • Oil and gas, refining, chemical, semiconductor,
    agricultural, pharmaceutical, food beverage
    dispensing, photo development, process control,
    and more

21
Turbine Flow MetersBenefits/Advantages
  • High degree of accuracy at low cost, especially
    when combined with a flow computer
  • Flexibility in connecting to associated
    electronic readout devices for flow control and
    computer interface
  • Wide flow rangeability
  • Construction materials that permit use with many
    process fluids
  • Simple, durable, field-repairable construction
  • Operation over a wide range of temperatures and
    pressures

22
Turbine Flow MetersLimitations/Disadvantages
  • Poor interchangeability from unit to unit
  • Bearings depend on lubricity and cleanliness of
    process fluid
  • Turbine blades are susceptible to wear and must
    be frequently calibrated
  • Liquid applications may be suspect to problems
    involving cavitation, specific gravity, and
    viscosity
  • Intended for clean fluid applications

23
Magnetic Flow MetersOverview
  • Nonmagnetic tube surrounded by coils
  • Must pump conductive liquids
  • Flow rate inferred by sensing linear velocity
  • Principle of operation based on Faradays Law,
    EkBDV
  • 301 rangeability
  • Accuracy 0.5 of volumetric rate
  • Line size of 0.15 to 60

24
Magnetic Flow MetersCommon Applications
  • Turbine flow meters are widely used for
    corrosive, dirty, or slurry-like liquids
  • Typical applications include
  • Wastewater applications or any dirty liquid which
    is conductive or water based (large water flows)
  • Pulp paper industry, acid flows or other highly
    corrosive liquids, abrasive fluids such as mining
    ore slurries and pulp stock
  • Also ideal for applications where low pressure
    drop and low maintenance are required

25
Magnetic Flow MetersBenefits/Advantages
  • Relatively unaffected by changes in liquid
    density or viscosity (compatible with wide range
    of process fluids)
  • Liquid turbulence has a very limited affect
  • Suitable for high viscosity and slurries
  • Low maintenance, high accuracy and rangeability
  • No pressure loss
  • Obstructionless flow
  • Flow profile has minimum effect on measurement
    accuracy (Re constraints and little flow
    conditioning needed)

26
Magnetic Flow MetersLimitations/Disadvantages
  • Measures conductive liquids only
  • High initial cost
  • 4-wire device (requires external power source)
  • Must be lined with non-conductive material (lower
    temperature and pressure limits)
  • Grounding problems
  • Unstable zero with empty meter

27
Ultrasonic Flow MeterOverview
  • Use transmitted sound waves to determine flow
    rate
  • Measures liquids and gases with different designs
  • Accuracy 1-5 for microprocessor-based units
  • Rangeability 20 to 501
  • Can be divided into 2 types
  • Transit Time (pulsed type)
  • Doppler (frequency shift type)

28
Ultrasonic Flow MeterTransit Time (Pulsed Type)
  • Sonic transducers are mounted diagonally on
    opposite sides of a pipe
  • Requires clean liquid and uniform flow profile
  • Rangeability 101
  • Accuracies/- 1 of rate
  • Advantages
  • Bi-directional and non-intrusive

29
Ultrasonic Flow MeterDoppler (Frequency Shift
Type)
  • Established 1843 by Christian Doppler
  • Measures the shift in frequency due to motion of
    particles or bubbles in the process pipe
  • Turndowns 101
  • Accuracy /- 1 of rate
  • Not suitable for clean liquids
  • Requires straight pipe runs for installation
  • Pipe must have good acoustical properties

30
Open Channel (Weirs and Flumes)
  • Oldest method to measure flow, used by Romans to
    measure flow in their aqueducts
  • Any time the fluid flows with a free surface
  • Examples aqueducts, log flumes, channels, etc.
  • Flow measured by inserting a calibrated
    restriction to the channel
  • Two types of restrictions
  • Weirs
  • Flumes

31
Ultrasonic Flow MetersCommon Applications
  • Liquids and some gas applications
  • Doppler flowmeters require entrained gas or
    particles to reflect ultrasonic energy
  • Where non-wetted sensors are applicable
  • Existing installations where pipe modifications
    are difficult or uneconomical
  • Where exotic materials make other flowmeter
    uneconomical
  • Large pipes where in-line meters are uneconomical
  • Temporary installations
  • Typical applications include
  • Water and wastewater, chemical, refining, oil and
    gas

32
Ultrasonic Flow MetersBenefits/Advantages
  • Some designs allow measurement to be made
    external to the pipe (utilize no wetted parts)
  • Low maintenance

33
Ultrasonic Flow MetersLimitations/Disadvantages
  • Fluid changes ( solids, bubbles, etc) affect
    measurement
  • Proper installation is critical
  • Longer upstream/downstream straight piping
    requirements
  • Minimum Reynolds number constraint
  • 4-wire operation (external power source)
  • Low user confidence
  • Only mixed success in industrial flow applications

34
Oscillatory Flowmeters
  • Two types
  • Vortex Shedding
  • Fluidic

Fluidic Flowmeter
Vortex Shedding Flowmeter
35
Vortex Shedding
  • Vortex shedding is caused by fluid flowing around
    an object
  • Blunt object placed in the flowing stream
  • The frequency of the vortices is measured
  • The relationship between flow and frequency is
    V kdf
  • The frequency is directly proportional to the
    flow rate.

36
Measuring the Vortices
  • Different objects manufactured to produce stable
    vortices
  • Vortices are measured by
  • High frequency pressure transducers
  • Measuring variations in heat transfer from a
    heated resistor
  • Ultrasonics

37
Pros Cons
  • Pros
  • Good accuracy (/- 0.5) and rangeability (401)
  • No moving parts, less to break
  • Moderate costs
  • Can handle liquid, gas, and steam
  • Low pressure drop
  • Not affected by fluid density changes
  • Cons
  • Intrusive, obstruct flow
  • If using ultrasonics to measure the vortices,
    straight runs of pipe are needed
  • Re lt 20,000 (high) for linear performance
  • Sensitive to increasing Viscosity
  • Expensive in larger sizes

38
Common Applications
  • Low viscosity fluids
  • Pressurized gases
  • Steam and other utility fluids
  • Pressurized gases with high densities
  • Single-phase fluids (no particulate matter)

39
Fluidic
  • As fluid enters device, flows along one interior
    wall
  • Some fluid diverted back to inlet (feedback flow)
    causing the fluid to be pushed against other wall
  • The flow shifts from side to side creating
    oscillations
  • Oscillations sensed by an electronically heated
    thermistor on one side
  • Alternating flow causes the thermistor to be
    cooled, this signal is directly proportional to
    velocity

40
Pros Cons
  • Pros
  • Accuracy between 0.5 and 1.0 of rate
  • Minimum maintenance
  • Inexpensive
  • Cons
  • Can only be used on clean low-viscosity fluids
  • Re 3,000 (requires turbulent flow)
  • Only used in pipes 4 or less diameter

41
Target Flowmeters
42
Target Flowmeter
  • Use an object that is placed in the fluid flow
  • Object mounted at right angle
  • Force exerted on the target is measured by strain
    gauges
  • Gauges produce electronic output that is
    proportional to the square of flow rate
  • Optimum size of target depends on liquid being
    studied

43
Drawbacks
  • While accuracy is good at low scale, at full
    scale the accuracy can vary as much as 5
  • Straight pipe length requirements
  • 20 x diameter upstream
  • 10 x diameter downstream

44
Mass Flowmeters
  • Thermal
  • Angular Momentum
  • Coriolis
  • Two general categories
  • Inferred mass (uses density to convert volumetric
    to mass flow)
  • Direct Mass (actually measure mass)

45
Thermal Mass
  • Measures heat loss from a heat source
  • Measures temperature rise as flow passes a hot
    tube
  • Mass flow is inferred from known physical
    properties of fluid
  • Usually used for gas applications

46
Coriolis
  • Operates on gyroscopic principle
  • Based on coriolis forces (angular velocity of
    earth imparts force on a moving object)
  • Fluid flows through U- or S-shaped tube which
    vibrates at its natural frequency

47
Coriolis
  • Motion of fluid in the tubes resist this
    vibration (the tubes twist)
  • Velocity of the tube deflection is proportional
    to mass flow

48
Pros Cons
  • Pros
  • Extremely accurate (0.15)
  • Directly measures mass
  • No Re constraints
  • Low maintenance
  • Can measure density, temperature, mass and
    volumetric flow
  • Cons
  • High initial capital costs
  • Small pipe diameters needed cause large pressure
    drop
  • Not recommended for measurements involving gases

49
Angular Momentum
  • Measures the force required to resist the angular
    momentum of flowing fluid
  • This force proportional to mass
  • Device consists of
  • Motor
  • Impeller (imparts the momentum)
  • Turbine to resist the angular momentum torque is
    applied
  • The torque needed to resist rotation of the
    turbine is transmitted to a display

50
Drawbacks
  • Only clean liquids can be used
  • Lots of moving parts that often require
    maintenance
  • Expensive

51
Sources
  • http//www.manufacturing.net/ctl/article/CA185726
  • http//www.efunda.com/designstandards/sensors/flow
    meters/flowmeter_pd.cfm
  • http//www.efunda.com/designstandards/sensors/flow
    meters/flowmeter_dp.cfm
  • www.manufacturing.net/ctl/article/CA325984
  • http//www.jlcinternational.com/gas_liquid_turbine
    _flowmeters.htm
  • http//www.ddc-online.org/inout/inout_chapt02_ana_
    06flow.aspx
  • http//www.omega.com/prodinfo/magmeter.html
  • http//www.envitech.co.uk/Product_Images/FlowMeter
    4210.jpg
  • http//www.seilenterprise.co.kr/English/Technology
    /flowmetertypes.htm
  • http//www.efunda.com/designstandards/sensors/flow
    meters/flowmeter_tar.cfm
  • http//www.omega.com/literature/transactions/volum
    e4/images/10_Fig_01_l.GIF
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