Users may wish to measure the flow of steam to help with plant efficiency, energy efficiency, process control or costing purposes. This tutorial considers the characteristics of flowing fluids and the basic requirements for good steam metering practice.
'When you can measure what you are speaking about and express it in numbers, you know something about it; but when you cannot measure it, when you cannot express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meagre and unsatisfactory kind'. William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) 1824 - 1907
Many industrial and commercial businesses have now recognised the value of:
Steam flowmeters cannot be evaluated in the same way as other items of energy saving equipment or energy saving schemes. The steam flowmeter is an essential tool for good steam housekeeping. It provides the knowledge of steam usage and cost which is vital to an efficiently operated plant or building. The main benefits for using steam flowmetering include:
This may lead to changes in production methods to ensure economical steam usage. It can also reduce problems associated with peak loads on the boiler plant. Energy efficiency Steam flowmeters can be used to monitor the results of energy saving schemes and to compare the efficiency of one piece of plant with another. Process control The output signal from a proper steam flowmetering system can be used to control the quantity of steam being supplied to a process, and indicate that it is at the correct temperature and pressure. Also, by monitoring the rate of increase of flow at start-up, a steam flowmeter can be used in conjunction with a control valve to provide a slow warm-up function. Costing and custody Steam flowmeters can measure steam usage (and thus steam cost) either centrally or at individual user points. Steam can be costed as a raw material at various stages of the production process thus allowing the true cost of individual product lines to be calculated. To understand flowmetering, it might be useful to delve into some basic theory on fluid mechanics, the characteristics of the fluid to be metered, and the way in which it travels through pipework systems.
Every fluid has a unique set of characteristics, including:
The density of both saturated water and saturated steam vary with temperature. This is illustrated in Figure 4.1.1.
Dynamic viscosity
****This is the internal property that a fluid possesses which resists flow. If a fluid has a high viscosity (e.g. heavy oil) it strongly resists flow. Also, a highly viscous fluid will require more energy to push it through a pipe than a fluid with a low viscosity.
There are a number of ways of measuring viscosity, including attaching a torque wrench to a paddle and twisting it in the fluid, or measuring how quickly a fluid pours through an orifice.
A simple school laboratory experiment clearly demonstrates viscosity and the units used:
A sphere is allowed to fall through a fluid under the influence of gravity. The measurement of the distance (d) through which the sphere falls, and the time (t) taken to fall, are used to determine the velocity (u).
The following equation is then used to determine the dynamic viscosity:
There are three important notes to make:
Kinematic viscosity
This expresses the relationship between absolute (or dynamic) viscosity and the density of the fluid (see Equation 4.1.2).
Example 4.1.2
In Example 4.1.1, the density of the oil is given to be 920 kg/m3 - Now determine the kinematic viscosity:
Reynolds number (Re)
The factors introduced above all have an effect on fluid flow in pipes. They are all drawn together in one dimensionless quantity to express the characteristics of flow, i.e. the Reynolds number (Re).
