The Pitot static tube
This is a device for measuring the velocity of a moving
fluid - Figure 1 is a simplified diagram.
The total pressure within the moving fluid can be considered to have
two components:
(a) the static pressure which it would have if the fluid was at rest,
and
(b) the dynamic pressure which is the pressure equivalent of its
velocity.
Therefore the dynamic pressure = total pressure -
static pressure.
Now from Bernoulli's equation:
Total pressure = P +
½ρv
2Therefore: dynamic pressure = ½ρv
2and the velocity v may be found from the
equation:
Fluid velocity (v) = √2/ρ[total pressure – static pressure]
The total
pressure is measured by the pressure head h
2 and the static pressure by pressure
head h
1. Therefore the formula may be written:
Fluid velocity (v) = √2g[h2 – h1]
Torricelli's theorem
This theorem
applies to a fluid flowing from a drum with a horizontal opening near the base (Figure 2). It
states that, if the difference in levels between the hole and the upper liquid surface is h,
then:
v
22 =
[2gh]
1/2taking v
1 = 0 in the Bernoulli equation and equal
pressures at the top and the hole.
This theorem applies to the flow of fluid from a
drum with a horizontal opening near the base. The relation may be deduced from Bernoulli's
equation by taking the velocity v
1 to be zero and assuming equal static pressures at the top
of the fluid and outside the hole.
If the difference in levels between the hole and
the upper liquid surface is h, then the velocity (v) with which fluid emerges from the hole is
given by:
Fluid velocity (v) = √2gh
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