Fundamentals of Flow Meter
Fundamentals of Flow Meter
Fundamentals of Flow Meter
1.0 Overview
Flow measurement is essential in many industries such as the oil, power, chemical, food, water, and
waste treatment industries. These industries require the determination of the quantity of a fluid, either
gas, liquid, or steam, that passes through a check point, either a closed conduit or an open channel, in
their daily processing or operating. The quantity to be determined may be volume flow rate, mass flow
rate, flow velocity, or other quantities related to the previous three.
The instrument to conduct flow measurement is called flowmeter. The development of a flowmeter
involves a wide variety of disciplines including the flow sensors, the sensor and fluid interactions through
the use of computation techniques, the transducers and their associated signal processing units, and
the assessment of the overall system under ideal, disturbed, harsh, or potentially explosive conditions in
both the laboratory and the field.
1.1 Categorization
Flowmeter By Technology Employed
1.2 Installation
Flowmeters need to be integrated into existing/planning piping system to be useful. There are two types
of flowmeter installation methods: inline and insertion. The inline models include connectors to the
upstream and downstream pipes while the insertion models insert the sensor probe into the pipes.
Most flowmeters need to be installed at a point where the pipes on both sides remain straight for a
certain distance. For inline models, the inner diameter of the pipes have to be the same as the
flowmeter's line size. Between the flowmeter and the pipes, there are two types of mostly used
connecting methods: flanged and wafer.
Among different types of connection methods, insertion design is more flexible and more economical in
larger line sizes while inline design is more confined and usually easier to calibrate. The wafer
connection is usually less expansive than flanged connection. However, it may require extra parts to
allow the threading with pipes at both ends.
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2.0 Coriolis flowmeters
Coriolis flowmeters are relatively new compared to other flowmeters. They were not seen in industrial
applications until 1980's. Coriolis meters are available in a number of different designs. A popular
configuration consists of one or two U-shaped, horseshoe-shaped, or tennis-racket-shaped (generalized
U-shaped) flow tube with inlet on one side and outlet on the other enclosed in a sensor housing
connected to an electronics unit.
The flow is guided into the U-shaped tube. When an osillating excitation force is applied to the tube
causing it to vibrate, the fluid flowing through the tube will induce a rotation or twist to the tube because
of the Coriolis acceleration acting in opposite directions on either side of the applied force. For example,
when the tube is moving upward during the first half of a cycle, the fluid flowing into the meter resists
being forced up by pushing down on the tube. On the opposite side, the liquid flowing out of the meter
resists having its vertical motion decreased by pushing up on the tube. This action causes the tube to
twist. When the tube is moving downward during the second half of the vibration cycle, it twists in the
opposite direction. This twist results in a phase difference (time lag) between the inlet side and the outlet
side and this phase difference is directly affected by the mass passing through the tube.
A more rescent single straight tube design is available to measure some dirty and/or abrasive liquids
that may clog the older U-shaped design.
An advantage of Coriolis flowmeters is that it measures the mass flow rate directly which eliminates the
need to compensate for changing temperature, viscosity, and pressure conditions. Please also note that
the vibration of Coriolis flowmeters has very samll amplitude, usually less than 2.5 mm (0.1 in), and the
frequency is near the natural frequency of the device, usually around 80 Hz. Finally, the vibration is
commonly introduced by electric coils and measured by megnetic sensors.
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- Can be used in a wide range of liquid flow conditions
- Capable of measuring hot (e.g., molten sulphur, liquid toffee) and cold (e.g., cryogenic helium,
liquid nitrogen) fluid flow
- Low pressure drop
- Suitable for bi-directional flow
• Cons:
- High initial set up cost
- Clogging may occur and difficult to clean
- Larger in over-all size compared to other flowmeters
- Limited line size availability
• Orifice Plate: A flat plate with an opening is inserted into the pipe and placed perpendicular to
the flow stream. As the flowing fluid passes through the orifice plate, the restricted cross
section area causes an increase in velocity and decrease in pressure. The pressure difference
before and after the oriffice plate is used to calculate the flow velocity. A calculator for the
orifice plate flowmeters can be found in the fluid mechanics section.
• Venturi Tube: A section of tube forms a relatively long passage with smooth entry and exit. A
Venturi tube is connected to the existing pipe, first narrowing down in diameter then openning
up back to the original pipe diameter. The changes in cross section area cause changes in
velocity and pressure of the flow. A calculator for the venturi tube flowmeters can be found in
the fluid mechanics section.
• Nozzle: A nozzle with a smooth guided entry and a sharp exit is placed in the pipe to change
the flow field and create a pressure drop that is used to calculate the flow velocity.
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• Segmental Wedge: A wedge-shaped segment is inserted perpendicularly into one side of the
pipe while the other side remains unrestricted. The change in cross section area of the flow
path creates pressure drops used to calculate flow velocities.
• V-Cone: A cone shaped obstructing element that serves as the cross section modifier is placed
at the center of the pipe for calculating flow velocities by measuring the pressure differential.
• Pitot Tube: A probe with an open tip (Pitot tube) is inserted into the flow field. The tip is the
stationary (zero velocity) point of the flow. Its pressure, compared to the static pressure, is
used to calculate the flow velocity. Pitot tubes can measure flow velocity at the point of
measurement. See Pitot Tube Flowmeters and Pitot Static Tubes for more details.
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• Averaging Pitot Tube: Similar to Pitot tubes but with multiple openings, averaging Pitot tubes
take the flow profile into consideration to provide better over all accuracy in pipe flows.
• Elbow: When a liquid flows through an elbow, the centrifugal forces cause a pressure
difference between the outer and inner sides of the elbow. This difference in pressure is used
to calcuate the flow velocity. The pressure difference generated by an elbow flowmeter is
smaller than that by other pressure differential flowmeters, but the upside is an elbow
flowmeter has less obstruction to the flow.
• Dall Tube: A combination of Venturi tube and orifice plate, it features the same tapering intake
portion of a venturi tube but has a 'shoulder' similar to the orifice plate's exit part to create a
sharp pressure drop. It is usually used in applications with larger flow rates.
Differential pressure flowmeters, although simple in construction and widely used in industry, have a
common drawback: They always create a certain amount of pressure drop, which may or may not be
tolerated in a particular application.
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Pros and Cons
• Pros:
- Low to medium initial set up cost
- Can be used in wide ranges of fluid phases and flow conditions
- Simple and sturdy structures
• Cons:
- Medium to high pressure drop
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• Cons:
- Requires electrical conductivity of fluid higher than 3 µS/cm in most cases
- Zero drifting at no/low flow (may be avoided by low flow cut-off; new designs improve on this
issue)
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• Roots (Rotating Lobe): • Birotor:
• Rotating Impeller:
The accuracy of positive displacement flowmeters relies on the integrity of the capillary seal that
separates incoming fluid into discrete parcels. To achieve the designed accuracy and ensure that the
positiive displacement flowmeter functions properly, a filtration system is required to remove particles
larger the 100 µm as well as gas (bubbles) from the liquid flow.
Positive displacement flowmeters, although simple in principle of operation and widely used in the
industry, all cause a considerable pressure drop which has to be considered for any potential application.
Pros and Cons
• Pros:
- Low to medium initial set up cost
- Can be used in viscous liquid flow
• Cons:
- Higher maintenance cost than other non-obstructive flowmeters
- High pressure drop due to its total obstruction on the flow path
- Not suitable for low flow rate
- Very low tolerance to suspension in flow (particles larger than 100 µm need to be filtered before
the liquid enters the flowmeter)
- Gas (bubbles) in liquid could significantly decrease the accuracy
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6.0 Target flowmeters
Target flowmeters, also known as drag force flowmeters, insert a target (drag element), usually a flat
disc or a sphere with an extension rod, into the flow field. They then measure the drag force on the
inserted target and convert it to the flow velocity.
One major advantage of the target flowmeter over other flowmeters is, with a sphere drag element, a
proper strain gage layout, and well thought-out mathematical formulas, a target flowmeter is capable of
measuring sporadic and multi-directional flows.
Pros and Cons
• Pros:
- Low initial set up cost
- Can be used in abrasive, contaminated, or corrosive fluid flow
- Can be made to measure flow velocity that is sporadic or multidirectional with sphere drag
element designs
• Cons:
- Pressure drop is inevitable due to the rod and the drag element
- Less popular than it was before
7.0 Thermal flowmeters
Thermal flowmeters measure the heat carried away from the
sensor by the passing flow to determine the mass flow rate.
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8.0 Turbine flowmeters
Turbine flowmeters, like windmills, utilize their angular velocity (rotation speed) to indicate the flow
velocity. A good turbine flowmeter requires well designed and placed aerodynamic/hydrodynamic blades
that are suitable for the fluid and flow condition and bearings that are both smooth and durable to
survive the sustained high-speed rotation of the turbine.
Transit-Time Flowmeters. Transit-time meters, as the name implies, measure the difference in travel
time between pulses transmitted in the direction of, and against, the flow. This type of meter is also
called time of flight and time of travel.
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Figure 3. Transit-time flowmeters measure the difference
in travel time between pulses transmitted in a single path
along and against the flow. Two transducers are used, one
upstream of the other. Each acts as both a transmitter and
receiver for the ultrasonic beam.
• Weir, Flume:
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Variable area flowmeters are robust, low cost, simple, however less accurate, compared to other more
complicated flowmeters.
Pros and Cons
• Pros:
- Very low initial set up cost
- Simple, robust
- Low, nearly constant, pressure drop
• Cons:
- Moderate accuracy at best
- Not suitable for low flow rate
- Some variable area flowmeters can not be used in non/low gravity environments
- Rotameters must be mounted vertically
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