Roughness Of Copper Pipe

Roughness of pvc pipe

Pipe and Duct Systems Table A.1 Average roughness of commercial pipes. Table A.6 Data for copper pipes Weight per Linear Foot of Gallons of Pipe and Water per Water (lb) Linear Foot Diameter (in.) Material Nominal Inner Outer Copper Type L 1/4 0.315 0.375 0.16 0.004. Relative roughness - the ratio between absolute roughness an pipe or duct diameter - is important when calculating pressure loss in ducts or pipes with the Colebrook Equation. Relative roughness can be expressed as r = k / dh (1).

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Please note that because of the variation in roughness in these materials depending on the source, the roughness values reported here have uncertainties ranging from ± 20 % for new wrought Iron to ± 70 % for riveted steel. A typical uncertainty in the roughness values can be assumed to be in the range ± − 30 -50 %.

This table lists the roughness Coefficients of Specific roughness, Hazen-Williams Coefficient and Manning Factor.

Specific Roughness
Factor, • , mm (ft)

5 x 10-2 (1.6 x 10-4)
4.6 x 10-2 (1.5 x 10-4)
3.0 (1 x 10-2)
2.0 (7 x 10-3)
2 x 10-3 (7 x 10-6)
Iron, Cast new
Iron, Wrough, new
Iron, Galvanized, new
Iron, Asphalted, cast
Brass, new
Concrete, smoothed
Concrete, Rough
Rubber, Smoothed
Wood, Stave
Sources:
Hydraulic Institute, Engineering Data Book.
Various vendor data compiled by SAIC, 1998
F.M. White, Fluid Mechanics, 7th edition

Surface Roughness for Various New Polyethylene Pipes (PE Pipes)

Values for New Pipe
and Recommended
Design Values Reported
by Reference (2)
Riveted steel
Concrete
Wood stave
Cast Iron – Uncoated
Cast Iron – Coated
Galvanized Iron
Cast Iron – Asphalt Dipped
Commercial Steel or Wrought Iron
Drawn Tubing
Uncoated Steel
Coated Steel
Uncoated Asbestos – Cement
Cement Mortar
Relined Pipes (Tate Process)
Smooth Pipes
PE and
other thermoplastics,
Brass, Glass and Lead)

Note: Pipes that have absolute roughness equal to or less than 0.000005 feet are considered to exhibit “smooth pipe” characteristics.

Relative roughness and friction factors for new, clean pipes for flow of 60°F (15.6°C) water (Hydraulic Institute Engineering Data Book, Reference 5) (1 meter 39.37 in = 3.28 ft).

Where:

f = friction factor
D = Diameter (inches)
∈/ D = Relative Roughness
∈= MEasure of pipe wall roughness in feet (meters)

References:

1. Swierzawski, Tadeusz J. (2000). Flow of Fluids, Chapter B8, Piping Handbook, 7th edition, Mohinder L. Nayyar, McGraw-Hill, New York, NY.
2. Lamont, Peter A. (1981, May). Common Pipe Flow Formulas Compared with the Theory of Roughness, Journal of the American Water Works Association, Denver, CO.

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Commercial pipes comes in many different materials and many different sizes. The internal roughness of a pipe is an important factor when considering the friction losses of a fluid moving through the pipe.
For each pipe material either a single pipe roughness value or a range of roughness values is normally provided by the manufacturer. The roughness value, usually denoted as ePipe roughness chart, is used in the calculating the relative roughness of a pipe against the size of its diameter.

Absolute Roughness

The roughness of a pipe is normally specified in either mm or inches and common values range from 0.0015 mm for PVC pipes through to 3.0 mm for rough concrete pipes.

Relative Roughness

The relative roughness of a pipe is its roughness divided by its internal diameter or e/D, and this value is used in the calculation of the pipe friction factor, which is then used in the Darcy-Weisbach equation to calculate the friction loss in a pipe for a flowing fluid.

Pipe Materials and Common Pipe Roughness Values

Materiale (mm)e (inches)
Concrete0.3 - 3.00.012 - 0.12
Cast Iron0.260.010
Galvanized Iron0.150.006
Asphalted Cast Iron0.120.0048
Commercial or Welded Steel0.0450.0018
PVC, Glass, Other Drawn Tubing0.00150.00006

Surface Roughness Of Copper Pipe

Pipe Materials and Pipe Diameter Database

Our Pipe Flow Expert software comes with its own database of pipe materials and pipe diameters, which includes the pipe roughness values and standard material schedules of many types of pipe. Users can also add their own pipe data for any material and any pipe size if required.

Pipe materials in the Pipe Flow Expert pipe database include Cast Iron (Class A,B and C), Copper Tube (Type X,Y,K,L,M), HDPE (SDR 7.3 to SDR 26), PVC (Schedule 40, 80, and CL100 to CL315), Stainless Steel (Schedule 5s, 10s, 40s), Steel (Schedule 40,80,160) and more.

Pipe Roughness Coefficient Table


Roughness Of Pvc Pipe

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