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CALCULATOR MODULE : Line Pipe Fluid Mass And Volume ±
Calculate pipeline fluid mass and volume for gas, liquid, two phase gas liquid, and three phase oil, water and gas (black oil). The gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles to liquid volume. Water cut is the volume fraction of water in the liquid (combined oil and water). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : ASME B31.3 Process Piping Line Pipe Schedule ±
Calculate ASME B31.3 process piping schedule for metal and plastic piping. The piping minimum wall thickness and hoop stress wall thickness schedule can be calculated from the nominal wall thickness, fabrication tolerance and corrosion allowance. `tm = tn - fa ` `tm = (1 - fx) tn ` `t = tm - c ` where : tn = nominal wall thickness tm = minimum wall thickness t = hoop stress wall thickness c = corrosion thickness allowance fa = negative fabrication thickness allowance fx = negative fabrication fraction The minimum wall thickness equals the nominal wall thickness minus the fabrication allowance. The pressure containment wall thickness equals the nominal wall thickness minus the fabrication tolerance, and minus the corrosion allowance. Fabrication tolerance can be defined by either a fabrication allowance, or a fabrication fraction. The pipe diameter can be defined by either the outside diameter or the inside diameter. Use the Result Table option to display a table of pipe dimensions versus wall thickness, wall tolerance, or piping diameter for metal pipes, or pipe dimension versus wall thickness for plastic pipes. Calculate metal piping maximum and minimum diameter schedule. Use the Result Table option to display a table of pipe dimensions versus wall thickness, wall tolerance, or piping diameter. Calculate piping unit mass and joint mass schedule for metal and plastic piping. Use the Result Table option to display a table of pipe dimensions and mass versus wall thickness. Calculate piping tensile stress, yield stress and allowable schedule for metal piping. Use the Result Table option to display a table of stress versus material type. Plastic pipe wall thickness can be defined by wall thickness or diameter ratio (DR or IDR). Select standard diameter ratios from the plastic pipe schedule (SDR or SIDR), or use user defined diameter ratios (DR or IDR). Reference : ANSI/ASME B31.3 : Process Piping (2018) Change Module :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : ASME B31.3 Process Piping Mass And Weight ±
Calculate ASME B31.3 process piping unit mass (mass per length), unit weight (weight per length), and total mass for metal and plastic pipe. The mass per joint can be calculated from the joint length. Construction quantities can be calculated from the total pipe length. Pipe mass and pipe unit weight (weight per length) can be calculated for multi layer pipelines (dry empty, dry full, wet empty and wet full piping). For multi layer pipelines, the first internal layer is the line pipe. Change the number of layers on the setup page. The pipe diameter and thickness are calculated from the pipe schedule. Plastic pipe wall thickness can be defined by wall thickness or diameter ratio (DR or IDR). Select standard diameter ratios from the plastic pipe schedule (SDR or SIDR), or use user defined diameter ratios (DR or IDR). Use the Result Table option to display a table of pipe mass versus schedule wall thickness for the selected diameter. Reference : ANSI/ASME B31.3 : Process Piping (2018) Change Module :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : ASME B31.3 Process Piping Fluid Volume And Mass ±
Calculate ASME B31.3 process piping fluid density, fluid volume and fluid mass for two phase gas liquid piping, and three phase black oil piping (gas water and oil). The two phase fluid calculator can be used for single phase gas, single phase liquid, or two phase gas and liquid. The three phase black oil calculator can be used for single phase oil, single phase water, two phase oil and water, and three phase oil, water and gas. Water cut is the volume fraction of water in the liquid phase (ignoring the gas phase). Gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles to liquid volume (ignoring the water phase). Gas moles are commonly measured as gas volume at standard conditions, eg SCM (Standard Conditions Meter) or SCF (Standard Conditions Feet). Reference : ANSI/ASME B31.3 : Process Piping (2018) Change Module :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : ASME B31.3 Process Piping Fluid Velocity And Flow Rate ±
Calculate ASME B31.3 process piping fluid velocity and flow rate for two phase gas liquid piping, and three phase black oil piping (gas water and oil). The two phase fluid calculator can be used for single phase gas, single phase liquid, or two phase gas and liquid. The three phase black oil calculator can be used for single phase oil, single phase water, two phase oil and water, and three phase oil, water and gas. Water cut is the volume fraction of water in the liquid phase (ignoring the gas phase). Gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles to liquid volume (ignoring the water phase). Gas moles are commonly measured as gas volume at standard conditions, eg SCM (Standard Conditions Meter) or SCF (Standard Conditions Feet). Reference : ANSI/ASME B31.3 : Process Piping (2018) Change Module :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : AS 2885.1 Gas And Liquid Pipeline Schedule ±
Calculate AS 2885.1 pipeline schedules for diameter, wall thickness, mass, weight, and stress. For AS 2885.1, the fabrication tolerance is included in the design factor. The fabrication tolerance is not required provided that the tolerance is within the relevant specification. Use the Result Table option to display schedule tables. Refer to the links below for other options. Reference : Australian Standard AS 2885.1 : Pipelines - Gas And Liquid Petroleum Part 1 : Design And Construction (2015) Change Module :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Piping Fitting Minor Loss Factor ±
Calculate pipe fitting minor loss factors. Minor loss factors can be defined as: - Av (SI) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per second fluid density 1 kilogram per cubic meter which gives a pressure drop of 1 Pa
- Cv-uk (UK) flow coefficient - the flow in UK gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-us (US) flow coefficient - the flow in US gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-met (Metric) flow coefficient - the flow in liters per minute of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Kv (EU) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per hour of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Cv* the dimensionless US flow factor = Cv-us / din^2 (din is the inside diameter in inches)
- K factor - the ratio of pressure loss over the dynamic pressure
- Cd or discharge coefficient - the ratio of the actual flow rate of the fluid through the fitting over the frictionless flow rate.
The K factor and discharge coefficient are dimensionless and can be used with any consistent set of units. The dimensionless flow coefficient has inconsistent units, and is unit specific. The flow coefficient Av, Cv-us, Cv-uk, Cv-met and Kv have dimensions length squared, and can not be used interchangeably between different systems of units. Note : The friction factor K, discharge coefficient Cd, dimensionless flow coefficient Cv*, and flow coefficients Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met and Kv are used in different situations. The discharge coefficient is usually used for discharge through an orifice, but can also be used in other situations (for example pressure relief valves). The flow coefficients Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met and Kv, and the dimensionless flow coefficient Cv* are usually used for valves, but can also be used for other fittings. Engineering judgement is required to determine the correct minor loss factor to use. Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Piping Fitting Pressure Loss ±
Calculate outlet pressure and pressure loss through piping and fittings. The pressure loss is calculated from the Moody diagram using the Darcy-Weisbach friction factor. The Darcy friction factor can be calculated using either the Hagen-Poiseuille laminar flow equation, the original Colebrook White turbulent flow equation, or the modified Colebrook White equation. Changes in elevation are ignored. For liquid piping with fittings the outlet pressure is calculated by: `Po = P - 8 (fL/D+ΣK) ρ (Q^2) / (pi^2D^4) ` `ΔP = P - Po ` where : ΔP = pressure loss P =inlet pressure Po = outlet pressure Po = outlet pressure ρ = fluid density Q= fluid volume flowrate f = Darcy friction factor L = pipe length D = pipe inside diameter Σ K = total fitting K factor For gas piping with fittings the outlet pressure is calculated by: `Po = √(P^2 - 16m^2(fd.L / D + ΣK) (mma.SG.ZRoT)/(pi^2D^4) ) ` where : m = gas mole flowrate mma = air molar mass SG = gas specific gravity Z = gas compressibility factor Ro = universal gas constant T = gas temperature For liquid fittings the outlet pressure is calculated by: `Po = P - 8 K ρ (Q^2) / (pi^2D^4) ` where : K = fitting K factor For gas fittings the outlet pressure is calculated by: `Po = √(P^2 - m^2K (16mma.SG.ZRoT)/(pi^2D^4) ) ` Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Piping Check Valve Minor Loss Factor ±
Calculate typical gas and liquid pipe check valve minimum velocity and minor loss factors (K, Cd, Cv*, Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met and Kv). The minimum flowrate is the flowrate required to keep the check valve fully open. For full port valves the valve port cross section area equals the nominal internal cross section area. For reduced port valves the valve port cross section area is less than the nominal internal cross section area. For circular valve ports the diameter ratio is equal to the valve port diameter over the nominal inside diameter. For non circular valve ports, use the square root of the internal area ratio (the square root of the valve port area over the nominal internal area). Minor loss factors are calculated for: - Av (SI) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per second fluid density 1 kilogram per cubic meter which gives a pressure drop of 1 Pa
- Cv-uk (UK) flow coefficient - the flow in UK gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-us (US) flow coefficient - the flow in US gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-met (Metric) flow coefficient - the flow in liters per minute of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Kv (EU) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per hour of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Cv* the dimensionless US flow factor = Cv-us / din^2 (din is the inside diameter in inches)
- K factor - the ratio of pressure loss over the dynamic pressure
- Cd or discharge coefficient - the ratio of the actual flow rate of the fluid through the fitting over the frictionless flow rate.
The calculated values are typical. Manufacturers data should be used if it is available. Reference : Crane Technical Paper 410M Metric Version : Flow Of Fluids Through Valves, Fittings And Pipe Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Piping Control Valve Sizing ±
Calculate typical gas and liquid pipe control valve sizing and minor loss factors (K, Cd, Cv*, Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met and Kv). The control valve sizing is calculated in two steps using the ISA-75.01.01 iteration method for Kv flow coefficient. The other flow factors (Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met, Cv*, K, and Cd) are calculated from Kv. Step 1 : Calculate the required valve flow coefficient (Av, Cv-uk, Cv-us, Cv-met and Kv) assuming that the valve ID is equal to the pipe ID. Use the required flow coefficient to select a suitable valve. Step 2 : Select a suitable valve size, type and flow coefficient based on manufacturers data. If a full bore valve is too large, a smaller valve should be selected, with assumed concentric reducers. Calculate the required flow coefficient for the selected valve. The required flow coefficient should be less than or equal to the valve flow coefficient. A trial and error process may be required to determine the appropriate valve. It is recommended that the valve diameter is not less than half the pipe diameter. The calculation is not valid if the valve diameter is greater than the pipe diameter. The calculation might not converge if the valve size is too small. For viscous fluids or very low flow velocity flow, with low Reynolds number (Rev < 10,000) use the Reynolds number factor option. For most flow cases the Reynolds number can be ignored (Fr = 1). Check for choked conditions. If the outlet pressure for step 1 or step 2 is greater than the minimum (choked) outlet pressure, set the outlet pressure equal to the choked outlet pressure. The maximum (choked) flowrate, maximum (choked) delta pressure and minimum (choked) outlet pressure are calculated from the fluid vapour pressure, and the fluid critical point pressure. Specially designed valves are required to operate at choked conditions. The K factors should include fittings located with 2D upstream and 6D downstream. The fluid velocity is calculated from the valve ID. The piping is assumed to be constant diameter upstream and downstream of the valve. The liquid pressure recovery factor Fl, and the valve design factor Fd depend on the valve type and geometry. Typical values are included in the data tables. Manufacturers data should be used if it is available. Check that the convergence is close to or equal to one. Convergence problems can indicate that the selected valve size is too small. The dimensionless flow coefficient Cv* equals Cv-us / IDin^2, where IDin is the valve inside diameter in inches. For control valves, a maximum Cv* value of 30 is recommended, equivalent to a minimum K factor of 1. Minor loss factors are calculated for: - Av (SI) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per second fluid density 1 kilogram per cubic meter which gives a pressure drop of 1 Pa
- Cv-uk (UK) flow coefficient - the flow in UK gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-us (US) flow coefficient - the flow in US gallons per minute of water at 60 degrees F which gives a pressure drop of 1 psi
- Cv-met (Metric) flow coefficient - the flow in liters per minute of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Kv (EU) flow coefficient - the flow in cubic meters per hour of water at 16 degrees C which gives a pressure drop of 1 bar
- Cv* the dimensionless US flow factor = Cv-us / din^2 (din is the inside diameter in inches)
- K factor - the ratio of pressure loss over the dynamic pressure
- Cd or discharge coefficient - the ratio of the actual flow rate of the fluid through the fitting over the frictionless flow rate.
Reference : ISA-75.01.01 Industrial Process Control Valves Part 2-1 Flow Capacity Sizing Equations For Fluid Flow Under Installed Conditions Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Bernoulli's Equation ±
Calculate gas and liquid pressure using the Bernoulli equation. The Bernoulli equation describes the conservation of energy in a static or moving fluid. For a frictionless fluid flow where no work is done by or to the system and the temperature is constant, energy is conserved. The Bernoulli equation can be expressed as conservation of energy, conservation of pressure or conservation of fluid head. The total pressure is referred to as the Bernoulli pressure (Pb) or the Energy Grade Line (EGL). `Pb = Ps + Pd + Pz ` `Pg = Ps + Pd ` `Ph = Ps + Pz ` where : Pb = Bernoulli pressure or total pressure or energy grade line (EGL) (= constant for frictionless flow) Ps = static pressure Pz = potential or pressure Pd = dynamic pressure Pg = stagnation pressure Ph = hydraulic or piezometric pressure or hydraulic grade line (HGL) Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Bernoulli's Equation Hydraulic Grade Line ±
Calculate gas and liquid pipeline hydraulic pressure or hydraulic grade line (HGL) from data points using the Bernoulli equation. The hydraulic or piezometric pressure is calculated by `Ph = Ps + Pz ` where : Ps = static pressure Pz = potential or pressure Ph = hydraulic or piezometric pressure (HGL) For constant diameter pipelines, the friction pressure loss can be calculated from the difference in hydraulic pressure (changes in dynamic pressure are ignored). For gas pipelines, the changes in dynamic pressure are usually small compared to the other terms. Note : The pressure terms are calculated at the selected data point. The data point option is set to pipe inlet when the page loads. Click calculate to update the data point options to include all of the data points before you select the data point. Click calculate each time you change the position data (X) values, and before you select the data point. Data points can be entered as comma separated values (Xi, Zi, Pi) with each set on a new line, or copy and paste from a spreadsheet. Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Bernoulli's Equation Stationary Pressure From Elevation ±
Calculate static pressure from elevation for gases and liquids using the Bernoulli equation. For stationary fluid, the hydraulic or piezometric pressure is constant. The static pressure at any point can be calculated from a known pressure and relative elevation. For liquids, the fluid density is assumed to be constant. For gases, the fluid density varies with pressure. Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : API RP 14E Maximum Erosional Velocity ±
Calculate API RP 14E maximum allowable erosional velocity for platform piping systems. The fluid density can be calculated for single phase gas, single phase liquid, two phase gas liquid, or three phase black oil (gas oil and water). The erosional velocity is calculated from the fluid density and the C Factor. Equation 2.14 in API RP 14E uses FPS units. The API RP 14E calculators have been factored to use SI units. For fluids with no entrained solids a maximum C value of 100 for continuous service, or 125 for intermittent service can be used. For fluids treated with corrosion inhibitor, or for corrosion resistant materials a maximum C value of 150 to 200 may be used for continuous service, and upto 250 for intermittent service. For fluids with solids, the C value should be significantly reduced. Gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles over oil volume. Gas moles are commonly measured as gas volume at standard conditions (eg SCF or SCM). Water cut is the volume ratio of water in liquid (oil and water). Reference : API 14E Recommended Practice For Design and Installation of Offshore Production Platform Piping Systems Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Pipeline Flow Rate ±
Calculate fluid flow rate for single phase liquids, single phase gases, and two phase fluids. Fluid flow rate can be measured by volume flow rate, mass flow rate, mole flow rate, and velocity. Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Compressible Flow Speed Of Sound ±
Calculate gas and liquid speed of sound and Mach number. The Mach number is the ratio of the flow velocity to the speed of sound. It applies to either a moving fluid or to a moving object passing through stationary fluid. For a Mach number greater than one, the flow is supersonic. For a Mach number less than one, the flow is subsonic. For an ideal gas, the speed of sound or sonic velocity can be calculated from the gas temperature, gas specific heat ratio and the gas specific gravity. For liquids the speed of sound can be calculated from the liquid bulk modulus and the liquid density. Reference : Fluid Mechanics, Frank M White, McGraw Hill Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : API 520 Darcy Friction Factor ±
Calculate API 520 Darcy friction factor and pressure loss factor for single phase liquid and single phase gas. The Darcy friction factor can be caclulated from either the Moody diagram or the Von Karman rough pipe equation (API 520 Annex E). At high Reynolds numbers the Moody diagram friction factor is fully turbulent and is dependent on the pipe roughness only. The pressure loss factor (fLe/ID) includes minor losses. Minor losses can be entered as either a K factor, an equivalent added length, or an equivalent added length over diameter ratio. Reference : API 520 Sizing, Selection And Installation Of Pressure Relieving Devices (2014) Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : API 520 Pressure Relief Vent ±
Calculate API 520 flow rate through a constant diameter pressure relief vent. The vent entry is assumed to be a pressure vessel or piping at stagnation pressure (valid when the pipe or vessel diameter is much greater than the vent diameter). The calculated vent exit pressure is flowing pressure (stagnation pressure minus dynamic pressure). Vent pressure losses are calculated from the vent pressure loss factor (fld = fL/D + K). Minor losses should include the vent entry, valves and bends etc. The vent exit should not be included. The discharge coefficient can be used to factor the flow rate, depending on the design requirements. For rupture disks, the flow resistance factor of the rupture Kr should be included in the minor losses (the resistance factor should be factored for the vent diameter). A discharge coefficient of 0.9 or less should be used for rupture disks. Alternatively, the PRV calculators can be used for rupture disk calculations. Note : The ideal gas calculators use the ideal gas compressible flow equations. The API 520 gas and steam calculations use an approximation of the ideal gas compressible flow equations. Use the ideal gas calculators for a comparison with the API 520 calculators. Reference : API 520 Sizing, Selection And Installation Of Pressure Relieving Devices (2014) Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : API 520 Back Pressure ±
Calculate API 520 back pressure from mass flow rate through a constant diameter vent. The calculated vent entry and exit pressures are flowing pressure (stagnation pressure minus dynamic pressure). Minor losses should include bends and valves etc. The vent entry and exit should not be included in the minor losses. The discharge coefficient can be used to factor the mass flow rate, depending on design requirements. Where multiple pressure relieving devices share a common vent, the back pressure should be calculated for the total mass flow rate. For relief vents with sections of increasing diameter, the back pressure should be calculated for each constant diameter section, going backwards from exit. The (flowing) exit pressure for each section equals the (flowing) inlet pressure for the previous section. For pressure relief valves or rupture disks, the (flowing) inlet pressure for the vent is used as the (flowing) back pressure for the pressure relief device. This is valid provided that the vent diameter is greater than the diamter of the PRV nozzle or rupture disk. Note : The ideal gas calculators use the ideal gas compressible flow equations. The API 520 gas and steam calculations use an approximation of the ideal gas compressible flow equations. Use the ideal gas calculators for a comparison with the API 520 calculators. Reference : API 520 Sizing, Selection And Installation Of Pressure Relieving Devices (2014) Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Gas Phase To Liquid Phase Ratio ±
Calculate gas phase to liquid phase ratios. Gas to liquid ratios include the gas volume fraction, gas mass fraction, gas moles to liquid volume ratio (GOR), and gas mass to liquid volume ratio. Gas moles can be measured as gas volume at standard conditions (eg SCF or SCM). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Two Phase Gas Liquid Viscosity ±
Calculate dynamic and kinematic viscosity for two phase gas liquids (gas and oil or gas and liquid). Kinematic viscosity is equal to the dynamic viscosity divided by the density of the fluid. The viscosity of two phase fluids and mixtures can be calculated from the dynamic viscosity and the volume fraction. The gas oil ratio is the ratio of gas moles to oil volume. It is often measured as gas standard volume (scf or scm) per oil volume (barrels, gallons, cubic feet or cubic meters). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Fluid Density And Volume ±
Calculate fluid density for single phase fluid (oil, water, or gas), two phase fluid (oil and gas, or oil and water), and three phase black oil (oil, water and gas). The gas oil ratio is the ratio of gas moles to oil volume. Gas oil ratio is often measured as gas standard volume (scf or scm) per oil volume (barrels, gallons, cubic feet or cubic meters). The gas mass fraction is the ratio of gas mass to total fluid mass. The gas volume fraction is the ratio of gas volume to total fluid volume. Water cut is the ratio of water volume over total liquid volume (equals the water volume fraction in the liquid). Gas volume is dependent on fluid temperature and pressure. Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Two Phase Gas Liquid Density ±
Calculate fluid density for two phase fluid (oil and gas, or gas and water). The gas oil ratio is the ratio of gas moles to oil volume. The gas mass fraction is the ratio of gas mass to total fluid mass. The gas volume fraction is the ratio of gas volume to total fluid volume. Gas volume is dependent on fluid temperature and pressure. Gas oil ratio is often measured as gas standard volume (scf or scm) per oil volume (barrels, gallons, cubic feet or cubic meters). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Fluid Dosing Rate And Density ±
Calculate fluid dose rate (volume rate or mass rate) and dosed fluid density. The fluid density, volume fraction and mass fraction includes the dosing fluid (combined undosed fluid and dose chemical). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Two Phase Gas Liquid Heat Capacity ±
Calculate two phase gas liquid heat capacity. Fluid heat capacity can be calculated for single phase phase liqui. single phase gas, or combined liquid and gas. Gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles over liquid volume. Gas moles are commonly measured by standard cubic feet (scf), and stand cubic meters (scm). Gas oil ratio is often measured as gas standard volume (scf or scm) per oil volume (barrels, gallons, cubic feet or cubic meters). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Three Phase Gas Oil Water (Black Oil) Heat Capacity ±
Calculate three phase gas oil water (black oil) heat capacity. Black oil is a three phase mixture of oil, water and gas. Water cut is measured relative to the total liquid volume (gas volume is ignored). Gas oil ratio (GOR) is measured relative to the oil volume at standard conditions (water volume is ignored). Gas oil ratio (GOR) is the ratio of gas moles over liquid volume. Gas moles are commonly measured by standard cubic feet (scf), and stand cubic meters (scm). Gas oil ratio is often measured as gas standard volume (scf or scm) per oil volume (barrels, gallons, cubic feet or cubic meters). Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Fluid Mixture From Kay's Rule ±
Calculate pseudo-critical properties (temperature, pressure, accentric factor, molar mass) of a fluid mixture using the simple form of Kay's rule with no interaction parameters. The mole fraction of component one is automatically adjusted so that the sum of the mole fractions equals one. The mixture properties are approximate. Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Spherical Tank Or Pressure Vessel Volume ±
Calculate the fluid volume and mass for a full or part full spherical tanks and pressure vessels. Fluid volume and mass can be calculated for liquid tanks (the gas volume is ignored), gas tanks (full tank only), and mixed gas and liquid tanks. For part full tanks the fluid level is measured from the inside base of the tank. Change Module : Related Modules :
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CALCULATOR MODULE : Cylindrical Tank Or Pressure Vessel Volume ±
Calculate the fluid volume and mass for a full or part full cylindrical tanks and pressure vessels. Fluid volume and mass can be calculated for liquid tanks (the gas volume is ignored), gas tanks (full tank only), and mixed gas and liquid tanks. For part full tanks the fluid level is measured from the inside base of the tank. Cylindrical tanks can be either horizontla or certical. Tank ends can be either flat, or spherical. Pressure vessels normally have spherical ends. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Pipeline Surface Roughness ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Pipeline surface roughness and efficiency data. Typical pipe surface roughness values, API 14E Panhandle equation efficiency factors for pipeline pressure drop, and Hazen Williams and Manning coefficients for pipeline pressure loss. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Line Pipe Diameter And Wall Thickness ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Linepipe dimension data for outside diameter and wall thickness. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : ASME B31 Pipe And Flange Dimension ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
ASME B31.8 gas pipe and flange data values: pipe dimensions, flange dimensions, cover requirements, cold bends, burn through and location class. Reference : ANSI/ASME B31.8 : Gas Transmission And Distribution Piping Systems Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Pipe Fitting And Valve ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid flow friction factors for pressure loss calculations. Friction factors include K factors, flow coefficients Cv, and discharge coefficients Cd. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Density And Specific Gravity ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid density and specific gravity data. For gases, the specific gravity is generally measured relative to air. For liquids, the specific gravity is generally measured relative to water. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Dynamic And Kinematic Viscosity ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid dynamic and kinematic viscosity data. The kinematic viscosity is equal to the dynamic viscosity divided by the fluid density. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Critical Point And Molar Mass ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid critical point and molar mass data. The critical point is the temperature and pressure where there is no longer a phase difference between liquid and gas. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Specific Heat Capacity ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid specific heat capacity data. Heat capacity per mass, and per mole. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Thermal Expansion Coefficient ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid thermal expansion coefficient data. Thermal expansion is commonly measured as either volumetric expansion (relative change of volume dV/(V.dT)), or as linear expansion (relative change of length (dL/(L.dT)). The volumetric expansion is approximately three times the linear expansion. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Fluid Surface Tension ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Fluid surface tension data. Surface tension is the attrative force between the molecules on the surface of a liquid. Surface tension causes the miniscus to form on the boundary between a liquid and a solid. Surface tension has units force per length. Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Methane Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Methane gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Ethane Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Ethane gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Ethene Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Ethene gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Propane Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Propane gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Propene Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Propene gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Butane Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Butane gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Iso-Butane Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Isobutane gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Ammonia Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Ammonia gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Water And Steam ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Water gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Nitrogen Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Nitrogen gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Air Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Air gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : Carbon Dioxide Gas And Liquid ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
Carbon dioxide gas and liquid density, compressibility Z factor, critical point, viscosity and heat capacity. Change Module : Related Modules :
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DATA MODULE : ASME ANSI API Design Factor ( Open In Popup Workbook ) ±
ASME, ANSI and API design factors for use with the ASME, ANSI and API codes. Related Modules :
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