Flow Measurement in Liquid and Gas 👍
💧 Liquid Flow Measurement
% Liquids are incompressibletheir volume doesnt change much with pressure.
% Thats why, even if theres a pressure drop across a valve, the flow rate (in M /hr) remains the same before and after the valve.
% In the image above, we see:
% Inlet Pressure: 18 Kg/cm
% Outlet Pressure: 12 Kg/cm
% Flow Rate: 500 M /hr 500 M /hr
Conclusion: Volumetric flow remains constant for liquids, despite pressure drops.
💨 Gas Flow Measurement
% Gases are compressiblethey expand as pressure drops.
% After passing through a control valve, gas expands, causing the volume to increase.
% In the image:
% Inlet Pressure: 18 Kg/cm
% Outlet Pressure: 12 Kg/cm
% Flow Rate: 500 M /hr 750 M /hr
Important: Even though mass flow might be conserved, volumetric flow increases downstream due to expansion.
📏 Why It Matters
Flow meters must account for compressibility when measuring gas.
Engineers often use mass flow transmitters or corrected flow readings for gases, while volumetric transmitters work well for liquids.









 
            
             
             
		

 
                 
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