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PAPER NO: CATEGORY: TP18-23 TESTING COOLING TECHNOLOGY INSTITUTE COMPARATIVE EVALUATION OF PITOT TUBE DESIGNS FOR WATER FLOW MEASUREMENT DEVICES KENNETH W. HENNON, P.E. DAVID E. WHEELER, P.E. CLEANAIR ENGINEERING The studies and conclusions reported in this paper are the results of the author s own work. CTI has not investigated, and CTI expressly disclaims any duty to investigate, any product, service process, procedure, design, or the like that may be described herein. The appearance of any technical data, editorial material, or advertisement in this publication does not constitute endorsement, warranty, or guarantee by CTI of any product, service process, procedure, design, or the like. CTI does not warranty that the information in this publication is free of errors, and CTI does not necessarily agree with any statement or opinion in this publication. The user assumes the entire risk of the use of any information in this publication. Copyright 2018. All rights reserved. Presented at the 2018 Cooling Technology Institute Annual Conference Houston, Texas February 4-8, 2018

Comparative Evaluation of Pitot Tube Designs for Water Flow Rate Measurements By Ken Hennon, P.E. and David Wheeler, P.E. Clean Air Engineering SUMMARY The Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) has long supported accurate performance tests for evaporative cooling systems. Accurate water flow rate determination is critical to the performance characterization of any cooling system. Historically this measurement has been made via the industry standard Simplex pitot tube. Because Simplex pitot tubes are difficult to obtain and have known accuracy problems in challenging settings, CTI contracted CleanAir Engineering to investigate alternative pitot designs. Two candidate designs, an elliptical pitot and a modified Fechheimer pitot, were evaluated in controlled hydraulic laboratories and contrasted to the Simplex pitot tube. All three pitot tubes were initially calibrated at the TVA hydraulic laboratory in Norris, TN. Following the calibrations, the pitots were used to calculate flow rates when the measurements were made in pipe locations designed to have a disturbed flow profile. Comparison of the pitot based flow calculations versus the calibration flow standard was used to provide an estimate of the accuracy of each of the pitots in these challenging measurement locations. All three pitot designs were found to provide accurate flow predictions when the measurement location was placed where the flow profile was well developed. The flow rate determined with the Simplex pitot tube has very high positive errors in the most disturbed flow situations, and the amount of error increases with the severity of the disturbance. Based on the results of this study, it is recommended that the elliptical pitot design be adopted as the new standard measurement device for water flow measurements. The justifications for this recommendation are: The flow measurements made with the elliptical pitot tube are much less sensitive to flow disturbances than the Simplex pitot tube. The sensitivity to flow disturbance is similar to that of the Fechheimer pitot tube. The tip design of the elliptical pitot tube permits measurements closer to the pipe wall than the Fechheimer pitot tube. The pitot coefficient for the elliptical pitot tube showed a very low dependence on Reynolds number. This is a very desirable characteristic because it reduces the number of calibration points required to accurately determine the Reynolds number dependent pitot coefficient. The coefficient determined at each Reynolds number had the least deviation from the Reynolds number dependent calibration curve for the elliptical pitot tube as compared to the other pitot tubes.

1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Overview The Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) has long supported accurate performance tests for evaporative cooling systems. A critical parameter for performance characterization of any evaporative system is the accurate determination of water flow rate. Historically, this measurement has been made by traversing the pipe via the industry standard Simplex pitot tube. To determine the flow rate, the calibrated Simplex tube is traversed across the cross-sectional area of the pipe in order to determine the average water velocity within the pipe. The flow is then calculated from the product of the average velocity and the pipe cross sectional area. Because Simplex pitot tubes are difficult to obtain and have known accuracy problems in challenging settings, CTI contracted CleanAir to investigate alternative pitot designs. This report documents the research that CleanAir performed in order to evaluate two candidate designs that were promoted by consensus of the CTI Performance and Technology Committee and are considered promising replacements for the Simplex tube in field and laboratory settings. During the course of the study, the response of the two candidate tubes were contrasted to a Simplex pitot tube in controlled experiments. The two candidate designs, designated as the elliptical and Fechheimer designs, were fabricated and attached to circular extension tubes. CleanAir designed and fabricated packing glands to accommodate the circular extension tubes. The initial calibration of each pitot tube was conducted at the TVA Norris calibration facility with a NIST traceable meter as a reference standard. Calibration runs were performed for each pitot tube at five velocities ranging from 3 to 20 ft/sec in a 14-inch pipe. In order to study the performance of the pitot tube tip designs in less than ideal flow measurement locations, a specially prepared flow section was installed at the TVA Norris calibration facility. The flow section had three sets of 3 pitot taps installed sixty degrees apart in order to determine the flow at three cross-sectional areas downstream of a 90 degree elbow and a butterfly valve. Pitot traverses were performed for each tap at nominal flow rates of 5 and 10 ft/sec with the valve 100% open and 60% open. 2 PITOT TIP DESIGNS 2.1 Simplex Pitot Tube The Simplex pitot tube is the industry standard design which has been used for cooling system measurements for decades. The design of the Simplex tip is illustrated in Figure 1.

Figure 1 Simplex Pitot Tip 2.2 Elliptical and Modified Fechheimer Tube Designs Two candidate tip designs, the elliptical and the modified Fechheimer designs, were manufactured for this project. All three pitot tube designs; Simplex, elliptical, and Fechheimer; are equipped with a total pressure (impact port) and two static pressure ports. The elliptical design is illustrated in Figure 2. The modified Fechheimer design is illustrated in Figure 3.

Figure 2 Elliptical Pitot Tube

Figure 3 Modified Fechheimer Pitot Tube

For the elliptical tip design, the total and static ports are located 0.125 inches from the pitot tip. This is identical to the Simplex design. The two static ports on the sides of the elliptical tube are connected to tubes which run the length inside the hollow circular extension tube. The differential pressure between these static ports can be used to rotate the elliptical probe to align with the flow vector at each sampling station. In the direction perpendicular to the flow, the width of the elliptical tip is 0.313 inches. This is the length dimension used to calculate Reynolds number for the elliptical tip. The modified Fechheimer tip (called the Fechheimer tip in this report) is the standard Fechheimer design with the exception of the distance of the ports from the end of the tip. In the standard Fechheimer design, the ports are located two tip diameters from the end of the tube. The modified Fechheimer design used in this project has ports 0.375 inches (3/5 the tip diameter) from the end of the tip. This dimension limits access to measurement points on the far wall of the pipe, which limits the number of equal area points which can be used for small pipes. The static ports of the Fechheimer tip are located 40 degrees from the total pressure port. The two static ports are connected to tubes which run the length of the hollow circular extension tube. The differential pressure between these ports can be used to rotate the Fechheimer tube to align the tube when the flow vector at each sampling station. The diameter of the Fechheimer tip is 0.625 inches, which is the length dimension used to calculate the Reynolds number. To facilitate attachment to the extension tube, the elliptical and Fechheimer tip designs included a 1.125-inch cylindrical section beginning 2 inches from the end of the pitot. The transition between the tip and cylindrical section is a 0.125-inch conical section. Brass was used to fabricate both tips. 2.3 Other Features The elliptical and Fechheimer tips were attached to a 1-inch stainless steel tube (extension tube). The impact and static pressure ports were connected to 1/8-inch stainless steel tubes which pass through the extension tube to a tail piece which provides a connection point for the pressure lines. A packing gland to accommodate the 1-inch extension and a protractor plate (for determining the angle of rotation) were also fabricated. 3 INITIAL CALIBRATION 3.1 Calibration Methodology The initial calibration of each of the pitot tube was conducted at the TVA Norris calibration facility, which has an NIST traceable meter as a reference standard. Calibration runs were performed for each pitot tube at five velocities ranging from 3 to 20 ft/sec in a 14-inch pipe. Two twenty-point traverses with the Simplex and the elliptical pitot tubes were conducted though perpendicular taps installed at the traverse location. Ten point traverses were conducted with the Fechheimer pitot tube because the distance from the end of the tube to the sensing ports restricts access to the far wall of the pipe. The traverse location for the calibration study was 24 feet downstream of the nearest flow disturbance. The measured internal diameter of the pipe at the traverse point was 13.19 inches.

Unheated water circulates through the TVA flow facility but, the temperature rises slightly during calibration runs due to heat added by the pumps. All calibration runs were done with water temperatures between 68 and 73ºF. The static ports of the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes were connected to a Tee upstream of the pressure transmitters. The differential pressure between the total and static ports was read by two Rosemount 3051D pressure transmitters calibrated immediately before the measurements to a tolerance of 0.1-inch over a 150 inwg range. The differential pressure was periodically read with an air-over-water manometer installed in parallel with the pressure transmitters to ensure transmitter accuracy. The analog output of the pressure transmitters was scanned a 2 second intervals for approximately 20 seconds at each measurement point. 3.2 Blockage There is currently no consensus in the industry about the use of a correction for area blockage in the computation of pitot coefficients and field measurements. CTI STD 146 reflects this lack of consensus by allowing but not requiring corrections for blockage. For both of the new tip designs, the attachment rod is a 1-inch circular tube. For these tubes, area blocked by the pitot tube is much greater than that of the traditional Simplex design with the oval attachment tube. For instance, in the 14-inch pipe used for the pitot calibrations, the average blockage for the elliptical pitot tube was 4.1 percent of the total area of the pipe. For the 6-inch pipe used in the pipe diameter study, the average blockage area was 7.3 percent of the total area at the measurement location. The large blockage area for these tubes has the potential to significantly affect the flow profile and, therefore, the value of the pitot coefficient. The effect of blockage on the apparent flow profile is illustrated in Figure 4

Figure 4 Flow Profile Elliptical Pitot Tube: 14-inch Pipe 12 ft/s Elliptical Pitot No Blockage Correction 14 inch pipe 12 ft/s 8.0 7.5 7.0 Sqrt(dp) 6.5 6.0 5.5 5.0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 Relative Radial Position Radius 1 Radius 2 Radius 3 Radius 4 In Figure 4, the square root of the measured differential pressure (proportional to velocity) is plotted against the relative radial position, which is the distance from the center of the pipe to the measurement location. The radii are numbered clockwise from the upper left. The differential pressure readings from radii 3 and 4 (those farthest from the tap) are considerably higher than those from radii 1 and 2. Since the velocity profile would be expected to be uniform at the calibration location, it seems likely that the pitot blockage is affecting the measured differential pressure readings. The differential pressure readings corrected for blockage are presented in Figure 5.

8.0 Figure 5 Flow Profile with Blockage Correction Applied Elliptical Pitot Blockage Corrected 14 inch pipe 12 ft/s 7.5 7.0 Sqrt(dp) 6.5 6.0 5.5 5.0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 Relative Radial Position Radius 1 Radius 2 Radius 3 Radius 4 Log-Linear Fit The blockage corrected square root of differential pressure at each measurement point was calculated by: 1 1 2 2 = PP AA tt AA bb,ii ii where PP bbbb,ii 1 2 PP ii = the square root of differential pressure at measurement point i AA tt = the pipe area at the traverse location AA bb,ii = the area blocked by the pitot tube at measurement point i Blockage area was calculated based on the total cross sectional area of the tube at the measurement point. The log-linear fit is the expected profile for a pipe in well-developed turbulent flow. The corrected data fit the expected profile well except at the two points nearest wall. Data for other velocities for the elliptical pitot tube and the Fechheimer pitot tube showed similar results. Based the on this evidence, CleanAir decided to use the blockage adjusted coefficients when analyzing the data for the rest of the study. AA tt

3.3 Simplex Pitot Tube Calibration Calibration data for the simplex pitot tube is presented in Table 1. Table 1 Simplex Tube Calibration Data Pipe Diameter 13.1875 inches Gross Area 0.9485 ft 2 Blockage Corrected Area 0.9306 ft 2 Flow Avg ΔP 1/2 Velocity Reynolds Pitot Coefficient Point gpm inwg 1/2 ft/sec Number Calculated Regression Error 1 1448 1.78 3.40 1.67E+04 0.8426 0.8489 0.74% 2 3828 4.80 8.99 4.44E+04 0.8238 0.8217-0.25% 3 5221 6.65 12.26 6.10E+04 0.8113 0.8054-0.73% 4 6620 8.59 15.55 7.72E+04 0.7965 0.7894-0.89% 5 8530 11.65 20.04 1.01E+05 0.7572 0.7661 1.18% Slope -9.810E-07 Intercept 0.8652 The calculated pitot coefficient was determined from the flow measured by the standard reference meter, the corrected area and the square root of the average measured differential pressure. A linear least squares fit was used to calculate the slope and intercept based on the calculated pitot coefficient and the Reynolds number. The regression pitot coefficient was calculated using the slope and intercept at the indicated Reynolds number. The percentage error was determined from the difference between the regression and the calculated pitot coefficient divided by the calculated coefficient. The root mean square error (due to lack of fit) was 1.1 percent. The calibration point at 3 ft/sec presents significant challenges which affect the accuracy of the results. The average differential pressure at this velocity was 3 inwg. However, some of the differential pressure measurements at nearest the pitot tap were less than 1 inwg. For differential pressure in this range, the uncertainty of the pressure transmitters (0.1 inwg) represents a significant fraction of the reading.

The Reynolds number dependence of the Simplex pitot tube is illustrated in Figure 6. 0.86 Figure 6 Simplex Calibration Data 14-inch Pipe Simplex Calibration Blockage Correction Applied 0.84 Pitot Coefficient 0.82 0.80 0.78 0.76 0.74 0.00E+00 2.00E+04 4.00E+04 6.00E+04 8.00E+04 1.00E+05 1.20E+05 Reynolds Number The pitot coefficient for the Simplex tube is highly dependent on the Reynolds number varying from 0.84 at a Reynolds number of 18,000 to 0.76 at a Reynolds number of 100,000. 3.4 Elliptical Pitot Tube Calibration Calibration data for the elliptical pitot tube is summarized in Table 2 Table 2 Calibration Data for Elliptical Tube Pipe Diameter 13.1875 inches Gross Area 0.9485 ft 2 Blockage Corrected Area 0.9098 ft 2 Flow Avg ΔP 1/2 Velocity Reynolds Pitot Coefficient Point gpm inwg 1/2 ft/sec Number Calculated Regression Error 1 1447 1.89 3.40 8.41E+03 0.8117 0.8122 0.06% 2 3834 4.97 9.01 2.25E+04 0.8157 0.8112-0.56% 3 5200 6.81 12.21 3.05E+04 0.8073 0.8106 0.41% 4 6619 8.68 15.55 3.91E+04 0.8062 0.8100 0.48% 5 8524 11.10 20.02 5.12E+04 0.8124 0.8093-0.38% Slope -6.301E-08 Intercept 0.8126

In the same manner as the Simplex pitot, the calculated elliptical pitot coefficient was determined from the flow measured by the standard reference meter, the corrected area and the square root of the average measured differential pressure. A linear least squares fit was used to calculate the slope and intercept based on the calculated pitot coefficient and the Reynolds number. The regression pitot coefficient was calculated using the slope and intercept at the indicated Reynolds number. The percentage error was determined from the difference between the regression and the calculated pitot coefficient divided by the calculated coefficient. The root mean square error due to lack of fit for the elliptical pitot tube was 0.5 percent. The dependence of the pitot coefficient on Reynolds number for the elliptical pitot tube is illustrated in Figure 7. 0.86 Figure 7 Elliptical Tube Calibration Data:14-inch Pipe Elliptical Pitot with Blockage Correction 0.85 0.84 0.83 Pitot Coefficient 0.82 0.81 0.80 0.79 0.78 0.77 0.76 0.00E+00 1.00E+04 2.00E+04 3.00E+04 4.00E+04 5.00E+04 6.00E+04 Reynolds Number Compared to the Simplex tube, the elliptical pitot tube coefficient shows very low dependence on Reynolds number; the pitot coefficient for elliptical pitot tube is practically constant over the range of calibration. The pipe flow conditions, velocity and temperature, were very close to those for the Simplex tube. The Reynolds number is calculated based on the diameter of the pitot tube perpendicular to flow. The minor diameter of the elliptical tube is 0.315 inches compared to a diameter of 0.625 inches for Simplex and Fechheimer pitot tubes.

3.5 Fechheimer Pitot Tube Calibration Calibration data for the Fechheimer pitot tube is summarized in Table 3. Table 3 Fechheimer Pitot Calibration Data Pipe Diameter 13.1875 inches Gross Area 0.9485 ft 2 Blockage Corrected Area 0.9098 ft 2 Flow Avg ΔP 1/2 Velocity Reynolds Pitot Coefficient Point gpm inwg 1/2 ft/sec Number Calculated Regression Error 1 1447 1.54 3.40 1.67E+04 1.0030 1.0120 0.90% 2 3837 3.94 9.01 4.47E+04 1.0349 1.0217-1.27% 3 5198 5.37 12.21 6.05E+04 1.0296 1.0275-0.20% 4 6620 6.83 15.55 7.78E+04 1.0304 1.0334 0.29% 5 8587 8.80 20.17 1.03E+05 1.0380 1.0413 0.32% Slope 3.406E-07 Intercept 1.0066 In the same manner as the Simplex and elliptical pitot, the calculated pitot coefficient for the Fechheimer probe was determined from the flow measured by the standard reference meter, the corrected area and the square root of the average measured differential pressure. A linear least squares fit was used to calculate the slope and intercept based on the calculated pitot coefficient and the Reynolds number. The regression pitot coefficient was calculated using the slope and intercept at the indicated Reynolds number. The percentage error was determined from the difference between the regression and the calculated pitot coefficient divided by the calculated coefficient. The root mean square error (due to lack of fit) was 0.9 percent. The Reynolds number dependence of the coefficient of the Fechheimer pitot tube is illustrated in Figure 8.

1.08 Figure 8 Fechheimer Pitot Tube Calibration: 14-inch Pipe Fechheimer Pitot with Blockage Correction 1.06 Pitot Coefficient 1.04 1.02 1.00 0.98 0.00E+00 2.00E+04 4.00E+04 6.00E+04 8.00E+04 1.00E+05 1.20E+05 Reynolds Number The Reynolds number dependence for the Fechheimer pitot tube is greater than that of the elliptical pitot tube but approximately half that of the Simplex pitot tube.

4 Disturbed Flow Study 4.1 Disturbed Flow Study Description All measurements performed under this task were made at TVA s hydraulic laboratory in Norris, TN. As previously specified, this facility has the capacity to measure volumetric flow rate with a traceable standard with an uncertainty of less than 1 percent. Flow rate measurements were made by pitot tube traverse in a controlled setting designed to mimic locations typical of those found in field measurements. CleanAir collected data in three flow profiles that vary from ideal to significantly disturbed. Flow profiles were altered by changing the position of the pitot traverse relative to flow disturbances consisting of a 90 degree elbow and butterfly valve as well as butterfly valve manipulations. These configurations are detailed in Table 4. Table 4 Pipe Configurations for Disturbed Flow Profile Pipe Configuration Butterfly Valve Position No. Pipe Diameters Between Elbow and Pitot Taps Distance Between Elbow and Pitot Taps (inches) A Wide open 3 54 B 40% Closed 3 54 C Wide open 7 126 D 40% Closed 7 126 E Wide open 10 180 F 40% Closed 10 180 Configurations C, D, E, and F are meant to represent flow profiles frequently encountered in cooling tower field measurements and meet the minimum requirements established in CTI Standard 146. Configurations A and B are worst case scenarios representing piping configuration which do not meet the requirements of CTI Standard 146. The flow profile represented by configuration E is typical of flow traverses conducted in a main line while the profiles associated with configurations C and D are more typical of riser flow measurements. Flow measurements were made at three locations 60 degrees apart (i.e. top dead center, negative 60 degrees and positive 60 degrees) in a cross-sectional sampling plane. The axis of the butterfly valve is 45 degrees from vertical and at least 15 degrees away from all sampling planes. Figure 9 depicts the cross-section diagram of this setup.

Figure 9 Cross Section of Disturbed Flow Profile Setup Three sets of flow rate measurements (i.e. two traverses at three different measurement planes) were conducted to evaluate the transferability of the calibration from the lab to less-than-ideal applications in the field. Measurements were conducted with both of the alternate designs as well as the Simplex tube. Flow rate measurements were conducted at two Reynolds numbers for each pipe configuration. Target Reynolds numbers were associated with circulating water flow at approximately 5 ft/s and 10 ft/s as depicted in Table 5.2. Differential pressure data points were recorded at each sampling point as follows: The first flow measurements were conducted with the impact port of each pitot tube oriented perpendicular to the pipe. For the Fechheimer and Elliptical pitot tubes, an additional flow measurement was conducted with the impact port of the tube rotated into the flow such that the pitot tube static ports are balanced (i.e. zero differential pressure between the static ports) and the differential pressure between the impact and one of the static ports was recorded with the pressure transmitters. It was assumed that the differential pressure between the impact port and each static port are virtually the same. The angle of rotation was measured with a device with a maximum 2 degree uncertainty at each sample point.

Table 5 Approximate Reynolds Numbers for Disturbed Profile Velocity (ft/s) Elliptical Round Tips 5 10,793 21,552 10 21,586 43,103 Flow measurements were conducted in each of the pipe configurations outlined in Figure 9. A schematic of the measurement locations for the disturbed flow profile is provided in Figure 10. Figure 10 Pipe Configurations for Disturbed Flow Profile The flow associated with each set of traverses was calculated based on the pitot coefficients determined in the calibration study, the measured pipe area at the traverse location, and the average value of the differential pressure. This value was compared to the value read by the reference standard to determine the error of the flow measurement. 4.2 Disturbed Flow Study Error Analysis A summary of the error statistics for each pitot tube at three measurement locations is found in Tables 6 and 7.

Simplex Elliptical Fechheimer Table 6 Error Summary for Pitot Tubes Valve 100% Open Elliptical Rotated Fechheimer Rotated Tap Set Simplex Elliptical Fechheimer Elliptical Rotated Fechheimer Rotated Tap Location Individual Error 1A 9.1 5.7 0.5 4.0 4.8 1B 6.7 4.0 0.2 4.8 4.0 1C 4.7 1.0 3.8 1.7 0.6 2A 1.2 0.6 1.5 1.1 7.6 2B 2.9 1.6 0.2 3.3 4.3 2C 1.8 0.8 2.7 2.2 3.1 3A 3.5 2.8 1.5 1.9 4.2 3B 1.8 0.6 1.0 3.8 1.2 3C 2.0 0.4 1.0 2.2 0.0 Tap Location Individual Error 1A 11.3 4.6 4.8 4.9 5.6 1B 13.7 4.0 3.3 4.7 7.3 1C 7.9 1.5 2.0 0.0 0.0 2A 2.7 3.0 1.4 1.8 1.0 2B 3.6 3.4 2.5 2.5 2.7 2C 3.5 2.1 1.8 2.2 0.0 3A 1.8 3.0 2.4 3.1 2.5 3B 1.0 0.4 1.6 2.7 2.3 3C 1.0 1.8 1.3 2.4 3.4 Average Error (Valve 100% Open, 5 ft/s) 3D 6.8 3.5 1.1 3.5 2.7 7D 2.0 1.0 1.3 2.2 5.0 10D 2.4 0.6 1.1 2.6 1.8 Average Error (Valve 100 % Open, 10 ft/s) 3D 11.0 2.4 2.0 3.2 4.3 7D 3.2 2.8 1.9 2.2 1.3 10D 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.7 2.8

Simplex Elliptical Fechheimer Table 7 Error Summary for Pitot Tubes Valve 40% Closed Elliptical Rotated Fechheimer Rotated Tap Set Simplex Elliptical Fechheimer Elliptical Rotated Fechheimer Rotated Tap Location Individual Error 1A 19.5 6.0 5.2 7.2 7.7 1B 8.0 1.7 0.6 0.3 0.4 1C 17.0 7.3 7.1 4.2 9.1 2A 3.9 0.9 0.8 1.7 0.4 2B 3.3 0.1 1.4 0.3 2.0 2C 3.0 0.2 1.4 0.7 3.5 3A 2.0 2.6 0.4 1.9 2.4 3B 1.5 3.8 0.0 2.3 1.4 3C 1.9 2.4 0.2 2.1 3.0 Tap Location Individual Error 1A 17.6 6.6 11.9 6.6 13.7 1B 12.3 0.5 2.9 0.4 5.4 1C 17.5 5.5 7.9 8.1 13.5 2A 7.3 0.6 0.2 0.4 3.9 2B 8.2 0.1 3.2 0.2 3.6 2C 6.4 0.4 0.7 1.5 1.4 3A 2.7 2.5 2.4 3.1 3.0 3B 2.1 3.4 3.0 3.1 2.8 3C 0.3 2.5 2.3 2.3 2.6 Average Error (Valve 40% Closed, 5 ft/s) 3D 14.8 5.0 3.9 3.7 5.4 7D 3.4 0.3 1.2 0.2 2.0 10D 1.8 2.9 0.1 2.1 0.2 Average Error (Valve 40 % Closed, 10 ft/s) 3D 15.8 4.2 7.6 5.0 10.9 7D 7.3 0.1 1.2 0.4 3.0 10D 1.5 2.8 2.6 2.8 2.8

Twenty point traverses were performed using the Simplex and elliptical pitot tubes, while twelve point traverses were used for the Fechheimer pitot tube. The columns labeled individual error present the error when calculating the flow rate based on one of the three traverses conducted at each tap set. For the average error columns, the flow was based on all three traverses at each location. The rotated columns indicate the error when the differential pressure between the static ports of the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes was minimal, indicating the pitot was aligned with the primary flow vector. Negative error values are printed in red; positive errors are printed in black. Observations from the error analysis of the disturbed flow study are: The flow rate reported by the Simplex pitot tube has very high positive errors in the most disturbed flow situations, and the amount of error increases with the severity of the disturbance. Both the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes gave more accurate results than the Simplex tube in disturbed flow locations. For both the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes, positive errors predominated in disturbed flow. All pitot tubes yielded accurate measurements in locations with undisturbed flow. Both the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes gave accurate flow results at tap location 2 (7 diameters downstream of the butterfly) even when the valve is partially closed. This remarkable result should result in a revision of STD 146 guidelines for acceptable location of pitot taps, if the elliptical or Fechheimer pitot tube is adopted as the standard. Measurements made with the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes showed significant errors for measurements that were made at tap location 1 (3 diameters downstream of the valve). However, these errors were surprisingly small, given the severity of the disturbance. At tap location 1, the error increases with increasing flow velocity. Rotating the elliptical and Fechheimer pitot tubes to equalize the pressure between the static ports did not typically increase the accuracy of the results. The time required to complete a traverse when rotating the pitot tubes was approximately double that required when aligning the tube perpendicular to the pipe. For tap location 1, the error in the flow rate for individual taps was significantly different between the three taps at this location. For this location, it seems that flow measurement based on three taps significantly improves the accuracy of the result. Flow measurement was not significantly increased through the use of three taps at tap locations 2 and 3. 5 Analysis 5.1 Pitot Tube Selection Based on the results of this study, it is recommended that the elliptical pitot design be adopted as the new standard measurement device for water flow measurements. The justifications for this recommendation are:

The flow measurements made with the elliptical pitot tube are much less sensitive to flow disturbances than the Simplex pitot tube. The sensitivity to flow disturbance is similar to that of the Fechheimer pitot tube. The tip design of the elliptical pitot tube permits measurements closer to the pipe wall than the Fechheimer pitot tube. The pitot coefficient for the elliptical pitot tube showed a very low dependence on Reynolds number. This is a very desirable characteristic because it reduces the number of calibration points required to accurately determine the Reynolds number dependent pitot coefficient. The coefficient determined at each Reynolds number had the least deviation from the Reynolds number dependent calibration curve for the elliptical pitot tube as compared to the other pitot tubes. For the elliptical pitot tube used in this study, each of the static pressure ports was connected to separate tubes. Separate tubes for the static ports are only necessary when the tube is rotated to equalize the pressure between the static ports. Since the disturbed flow study showed no improvement in the accuracy of the measurements when the pitot tube is rotated, it is not recommended that the probe be rotated into the flow when conducting measurements. Separate lines for the static ports are not a necessary part of the design. Tying the static ports together at the tip would greatly simplify the design and fabrication of the elliptical tube, allowing for larger ¼ inch internal plumbing and is, therefore, recommended. 5.2 Pitot Tube Calibration The recommended Reynolds number calibration range for the elliptical pitot tube is 10,000 to 50,000. These values correspond to velocities between 4 and 20 ft/sec if the water temperature for calibration is 70ºF. The Reynolds number for almost all field based flow measurements will be within this Reynolds number range. Because the coefficient of the elliptical tube is not highly dependent on Reynolds number, the regression line for the pitot coefficient may be extrapolated without substantial error on those rare occasions where this is necessary. Measurements at flow velocities below 4 ft/sec should be avoided because of the measurement errors associated with low differential pressure. It is recommended that blockage corrected coefficients be used for the elliptical pitot tube. The blockage area of the elliptical pitot tube is much greater than for an unreinforced simplex pitot, and the potential for blockage effects is, therefore, greater. The effect of blockage is seen by the difference in differential pressure between the near and far wall of the pipe when measurements are made in a location where radial symmetry would be expected. The application of a blockage correction largely removes this discrepancy. The blockage correction may be applied by correcting the square root of the differential pressure at each measurement point by the ratio AA gggggggggg AA bbbbbbbbbb,ii AA gggggggggg. If this approach is used, the flow is calculated based on the gross area. Alternatively, the average blockage for all measurement points can be calculated and subtracted from the gross area when calculating the flow.

5.3 Disturbed Flow In the disturbed flow study, flow measurements conducted with the elliptical pitot tube were found to be substantially erroneous only when measurements were conducted within 3 pipe diameters of a flow disturbance. Elliptical pitot based flow measurements made 7 pipe diameters downstream of a butterfly valve produced acceptable results even when the valve was 40 percent closed. If the elliptical pitot is design is adopted, the guidance offered in STD 146 for the acceptable placement of pitot taps should be altered to reflect the reduced sensitivity to flow disturbances. When flow measurements must be made at locations where the flow is highly disturbed, it is recommended three pitot taps be installed to enable measurements to be made on three diameters. Measurements conducted in highly disturbed locations had a predominately positive bias. That is, when measurements were made close to upstream flow disturbances, the measured flow was higher than the actual flow.