Book contents
- Front Matter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Nomenclature
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Fluid Mechanics Essentials
- Chapter 3 Specification, Selection, and Audit
- Chapter 4 Calibration
- Chapter 5 Orifice Plate Meters
- Chapter 6 Venturi Meter and Standard Nozzles
- Chapter 7 Critical Flow Venturi Nozzle
- Chapter 8 Other Momentum-Sensing Meters
- Chapter 9 Positive Displacement Flowmeters
- Chapter 10 Turbine and Related Flowmeters
- Chapter 11 Vortex-Shedding, Swirl, and Fluidic Flowmeters
- Chapter 12 Electromagnetic Flowmeters
- Chapter 13 Ultrasonic Flowmeters
- Chapter 14 Mass Flow Measurement Using Multiple Sensors for Single- and Multiphase Flows
- Chapter 15 Thermal Flowmeters
- Chapter 16 Angular Momentum Devices
- Chapter 17 Coriolis Flowmeters
- Chapter 18 Probes for Local Velocity Measurement in Liquids and Gases
- Chapter 19 Modern Control Systems
- Chapter 20 Some Reflections on Flowmeter Manufacture, Production, and Markets
- Chapter 21 Future Developments
- Bibliography
- A Selection of International Standards
- Conferences
- References
- Index
Chapter 3 - Specification, Selection, and Audit
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Front Matter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Nomenclature
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Fluid Mechanics Essentials
- Chapter 3 Specification, Selection, and Audit
- Chapter 4 Calibration
- Chapter 5 Orifice Plate Meters
- Chapter 6 Venturi Meter and Standard Nozzles
- Chapter 7 Critical Flow Venturi Nozzle
- Chapter 8 Other Momentum-Sensing Meters
- Chapter 9 Positive Displacement Flowmeters
- Chapter 10 Turbine and Related Flowmeters
- Chapter 11 Vortex-Shedding, Swirl, and Fluidic Flowmeters
- Chapter 12 Electromagnetic Flowmeters
- Chapter 13 Ultrasonic Flowmeters
- Chapter 14 Mass Flow Measurement Using Multiple Sensors for Single- and Multiphase Flows
- Chapter 15 Thermal Flowmeters
- Chapter 16 Angular Momentum Devices
- Chapter 17 Coriolis Flowmeters
- Chapter 18 Probes for Local Velocity Measurement in Liquids and Gases
- Chapter 19 Modern Control Systems
- Chapter 20 Some Reflections on Flowmeter Manufacture, Production, and Markets
- Chapter 21 Future Developments
- Bibliography
- A Selection of International Standards
- Conferences
- References
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The object of this chapter is to assist the reader in specifying a proposed flowmeter's operational requirements as fully as possible and hence to enable the reader to select the right flowmeter. The reason for wishing to select a flowmeter may be obvious: a flow rate to be measured. However, the reason in some cases may be less obvious. If you are a flowmeter manufacturer, or prospective manufacturer, you may wish to identify a type and design that would meet a particular market niche. If you are a member of an R&D team, you may be exploring measurement areas that are inadequately covered at present.
In preparing this chapter, I have developed earlier ideas (Baker 1988/9, Baker and Smith 1990), but I have also benefited from the ideas of others such as Endress et al. (1989). Baker (1988/9) was the best distillation I could offer in the late 1980s. There is much there that I would still endorse. In Baker and Smith (1990), we took a different line. We provided the means to specify the user's needs in as much detail as possible. We then provided a form for communication with the manufacturer.
Many people have attempted to provide a means of selecting a flowmeter. A glance at only a few of the many books on flow measurement in the bibliography will indicate this. I used to feel that the way forward was to write an expert system to do the job.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Flow Measurement HandbookIndustrial Designs, Operating Principles, Performance, and Applications, pp. 42 - 60Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000