Cavitation in Centrifugal pump, NPSH available, NPSH required, Calculation of NPSH, NPSH3
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- Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
- This video deals with basics concept behind Net positive suction head available & required like Vapour pressure, Bernoulli's principle, Cavitation, NPSH3 concept, NPSHr concept, NPSH available calculation.
#GATE #GATE2023 #CHEMICALENGINEERING #PROCESSENGINEERING #NPSH #JOBINTERVIEWQUESTIONS
Quite elaborative and neatly explained Sir. These are some of the most important concepts which are asked in Process Engineering Job Interviews and you made them look so easy!
Thanks Yash !!
Good to hear from you 👍🏻👍🏻
This is best till date.
Thanks
The way you were described it was just awesome.
Glad you think so!
Amazing video sir there is no any comparison with other sir in this RUclips market 🎉🎉
watched many videos but this one is one of the clearly explained and easy to understand
Very Understandable & Informative
Hello sir in two cases why you added friction losses when pump above water levels and you subtracted friction losses pump below the water level reason behind this
Excellent lecture bro...
Pls keep it up
Great lecture sir 🎉
Keep watching
One of the best teaching skills you have sir🫡
Sir NPSH required kaise leta hai manufacturer samjh nhi aya baaki puri video maine baar baar dekha yaad ho gya pura concept 👍
Thanks !!
NPSH r (Calculated by pump manufacturer)
They continuously reducing the pressure of the resource tank and calculate NPSH, Once total dynamic head (H = hd -hs) reduces to 3%, That value to be considered as NPSH r
Really connected with concept 🎉
Thanks Sir
Awesome
Thank you sir it helps me
Most welcome
Je baat....
Great video sir. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Great Video. 👍🏻👍🏻
Thanks for the visit
Bro the direction of impeller vanes are wrong ...in this case water will churn inside the casing ... centrifugal force act nahi karega...baki explanation were to the point 🙌👌
NICE ATTEMPT
You are confused between when to prssure increase or decrease w.r.t Area. As per bernaulli principles as area increase pressure will increase and vice versa
kindly recheck 2.48
Have you checked at 2.48 ???
Thanks ❤
You're welcome 😊
Do you have full English script? It woud be very beneficial
not yet
Very good explanation Sir. But i have a question, if put a pressure gauge on the suction side of the pump ( near the pump). Is it correct to say NPSHA is equal to pressure reading of the gauge minus vapor pressure of the liquid?
Thank you again
Yes that is NPSH, Exactly.
@@chintanconcept thank you very much
Full english please
👍
sir, pressure balance mai velocity head ka term kyu nhi aaya
I really appreciate your question
Velocity = flowrate/area
Usually in static pressure head calculation & NPSH calculation we ignore the velocity head term which indirectly affects total energy(also constant flowrate) is there.
Actually NPSH = (Ps-Pv)/p*g - V2/2g
but doesn’t affect on total values.(hardly in 0.0…)
Hope it is clear
Sir pressure=force/area then how will be pressure decreasing along with area.
Hi
It’s important to clarify that P= F/A represents how pressure is calculated, not how it changes within a fluid system.
Here's how increasing pipe size can impact pressure within a fluid system:
1. Velocity: When you increase the size of a pipe while keeping the flow rate constant, the fluid velocity decreases. According to Bernoulli's principle, as the fluid velocity decreases, the pressure increases. So, in a larger pipe, the fluid exerts a higher pressure due to this reduction in velocity.
2. Volume: A larger pipe can hold more fluid volume, which might affect pressure if there are changes in flow rate or demand. However, the pressure exerted by the fluid itself is not directly related to the pipe size but rather to factors like fluid density, velocity, and external forces acting on the fluid.
That is stagnation pressure
Nicee✨
Thanks 🔥
Thanks sir.👍
Most welcome
👍👍👍
👏👏
1:19
what ??
Kya baat 😂