Flow in Pipes: Fundamentals & Losses

Pipe flow describes liquid flow in a closed conduit where the liquid fills the cross-section.

Flow Regimes

The flow regime is determined by the Reynolds Number (ReRe):

Re=ρVDμ=VDνRe = \frac{\rho V D}{\mu} = \frac{V D}{\nu}

  • Laminar Flow: Re<2000Re < 2000. Viscous forces dominate. Fluid moves in parallel layers.
  • Transitional Flow: 2000<Re<40002000 < Re < 4000.
  • Turbulent Flow: Re>4000Re > 4000. Inertial forces dominate. Chaotic mixing.

Friction Losses (Major Losses)

Energy loss due to friction along the pipe length (hfh_f).

Darcy-Weisbach Equation

The most accurate method for calculating head loss.

hf=fLDV22gh_f = f \frac{L}{D} \frac{V^2}{2g}

  • ff = Darcy friction factor (dimensionless)
  • LL = Pipe length
  • DD = Pipe diameter

Finding ff:

  • Laminar: f=64/Ref = 64/Re
  • Turbulent: Use the Moody Chart or Colebrook-White equation. Depends on ReRe and Relative Roughness (ϵ/D\epsilon/D).

Minor Losses

Losses due to components like valves, bends, and entrances.

hm=KV22gh_m = K \frac{V^2}{2g}

  • KK = Loss coefficient (empirical).

Solved Problems

Step-by-Step Solution0 / 1 Problems

Start the practice problems to continue