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Pipe Network Calculator. Compute pressure and hydraulic head at each node and flow in each pipe.

each node and flow in each pipe. Enter node flows,


Darcy Weisbach or Hazen Williams elevations, pressure. Select Darcy Weisbach (Moody diagram) or Hazen Williams friction losses.
friction losses Include minor losses by equivalent length of pipe. Don't have to use all the pipes or nodes.
To: Darcy-Weisbach single pipe Hazen-Williams single pipe Bypass Loop
LMNO Engineering home page (more calculations) Unit Conversions Page Trouble viewing or printing?

Enter positive values for inflows at nodes (negative values for outflows). Enter pipe diameter of 0.0 to make a pipe non-existent.
Register to fully enable "Calculate" button
Demonstration mode for: Fluid: mercury. Pipe material: wood. Losses: Darcy-Weisbach. Head loss units: m of fluid. Flow units: m3/s. Diameter units:
meters. Length units: meters. Elevation units: meters. Pressure units: m of fluid. Z+P/S (hydraulic head) units: m of fluid. To enable other fluids,
materials, units and Hazen-Williams losses, please register. Click shift-Reload on your browser to reload the default values.
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Topics on this page: Introduction Equations and Methodology (Hardy Cross method, friction losses (Darcy Weisbach and Hazen Williams), pressure
computation, minor losses and calculator) Applications Built-in fluid and material properties Units Variables Error Messages References

Introduction
Pipe Network simulates steady flow of liquids or gases under pressure. It can simulate city water systems, car exhaust manifolds, long pipelines with different
diameter pipes in series, parallel pipes, groundwater flow into a slotted well screen, soil vapor extraction well design, and more. Enter flows at nodes as positive
for inflows and negative for outflows. Inflows plus outflows must sum to 0. Enter one pressure in the system and all other pressures are computed. All fields
must have a number, but the number can be 0. You do not need to use all the pipes or nodes. Enter a diameter of 0.0 if a pipe does not exist. If a node is
surrounded on all sides by non-existent pipes, the node's flow must be entered as 0.0. The program allows a wide variety of units. After clicking Calculate, the
arrows "<--, -->, v, ^" indicate the direction of flow through each pipe (to the left, right, down, or up).
Losses can be computed by either the Darcy-Weisbach or Hazen-Williams (HW) method, selectable by clicking on the "Roughness, e" drop-down menu. If
HW is used, then the fluid must be selected as "Water, 20C (68F)".
The H,V,Re output field is scrollable using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard. Velocity is in m/s if metric units are selected for flowrate Q, and ft/s if
English units are selected for Q.

Equations and Methodology Back to Calculation


The pipe network calculation uses the steady state energy equation, Darcy Weisbach or Hazen Williams friction losses, and the Hardy Cross method to
determine the flowrate in each pipe, loss in each pipe, and node pressures. Minor losses (due to valves, pipe bends, etc.) can be accounted for by using the
equivalent length of pipe method.
Hardy Cross Method (Cross, 1936; Viessman and Hammer, 1993)
The Hardy Cross method is also known as the single path adjustment method and is a relaxation method. The flowrate in each pipe is adjusted iteratively until all
equations are satisfied. The method is based on two primary physical laws:
1. The sum of pipe flows into and out of a node equals the flow entering or leaving the system through the node.
2. Hydraulic head (i.e. elevation head + pressure head, Z+P/S) is single-valued. This means that the hydraulic head at a node is the same whether it is computed
from upstream or downstream directions.
Pipe flows are adjusted iteratively using the following equation,

until the change in flow in each pipe is less than the convergence criteria.
n=2.0 for Darcy Weisbach losses or 1.85 for Hazen Williams losses.
Friction Losses, H
Our calculation gives you a choice of computing friction losses H using the Darcy-Weisbach (DW) or the Hazen-Williams (HW) method. The DW method can
be used for any liquid or gas while the HW method can only be used for water at temperatures typical of municipal water supply systems. HW losses can be

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selected with the menu that says "Roughness, e (m):". The following equations are used:
Hazen Williams equation (Mays, 1999; Streeter et al., 1998; Viessman and Hammer, 1993) where k=0.85 for meter and seconds units or 1.318 for
feet and seconds units:

Darcy Weisbach equation (Mays, 1999; Munson et al., 1998; Streeter et al., 1998):

where "log" is base 10 logarithm and "ln" is natural logarithm. Variable definitions.
Pressure computation
After computing flowrate Q in each pipe and loss H in each pipe and using the input node elevations Z and known pressure at one node, pressure P at each node
is computed around the network:

Pj = S(Zi - Zj - Hpipe) + Pi where node j is down-gradient from node i. S = fluid weight density [F/L3].

Minor Losses
Minor losses such as pipe elbows, bends, and valves may be included by using the equivalent length of pipe method (Mays, 1999). Equivalent length (Leq) may
be computed using the following calculator which uses the formula Leq=KD/f. f is the Darcy-Weisbach friction factor for the pipe containing the fitting, and
cannot be known with certainty until after the pipe network program is run. However, since you need to know f ahead of time, a reasonable value to use is
f=0.02, which is the default value. We also recommend using f=0.02 even if you select Hazen-Williams losses in the pipe network calculation. K values are from
Mays (1999).
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For example, there is a 100-m long 10-cm diameter (inside diameter) pipe with one fully open gate valve and three regular 90o elbows. Using the minor loss
calculator, Leq is 1.0 m and 1.25 m for the fully open gate valve and each elbow, respectively. The pipe length you should enter into the pipe network calculator
is 100 + 1.0 + 3(1.25) = 104.75 m. The calculator allows a variety of units such as m, cm, inch, and ft for diameter; and m, km, ft, and miles for equivalent
length. If a fitting is not listed, select "User enters K" and enter the K value for the fitting.

Applications
The pipe network calculation has many applications. Two examples will be provided.
1. Municipal water supply system. A water tower is located at node D. The other nodes could represent industries or homes. Enter the water withdrawals at
all the nodes as negative numbers, then enter the inflow to the network from the water tower at node D as a positive number equal to the sum of the withdrawals
from the other nodes. Usually, cities require a certain minimum pressure everywhere in the system, often 40 psi. Use the drop-down menu to select the node
that you expect will have the lowest pressure - possibly the node furthest from D or the one at the highest elevation; we'll use node I. Enter the pressure at node I
as 40 psi. Enter all the pipe lengths, diameters and node elevations. Then click "Calculate". You can use your right and left arrow keys to scroll to the left and
right to see the velocity in each pipe. Typically, you want pipe velocities to be around 2 ft/s. If you are designing a system (as opposed to analyzing a system that
is already in place), vary the pipe diameters until the pipe velocities are reasonable and pressure at node D is as low as possible to minimize the height of the
water tower. There will be a trade-off between pressure at D and pipe diameters. Smaller diameter pipes will save money on pipes but will require a taller
water tower. The water tower height is proportional to the pressure at D according to h=P/S, where P is the pressure at D. S is the weight density of the water,
and h is the water tower height required. A more detailed example.
2. Manifold. A manifold has multiple inflows at various positions along the same pipeline, and one outflow. Let node I be the outflow and use all other nodes A-
H as inflow locations; so flow is from node A through pipes 1, 2, 5, 7, 6, 8, 11, and 12 and out node I. Enter the diameters and lengths of these pipes and the
desired inflows at nodes A-H. Enter the outflow at node I as a positive number equal to the sum of the inflows at nodes A-H. Enter the diameters of pipes 3, 4,
9, and 10 as 0.0 since they are non-existent pipes. Enter the elevations of all nodes. For a horizontal pipe, set all the elevations to the same value or just to 0.0
to keep it simple. From the drop-down menu, select the node where you know the pressure and enter its pressure. Clicking "Calculate" will give the flowrate in
all pipes and the pressure at all the nodes.

Built-in fluid and material properties


The user may manually enter fluid density and viscosity or select one of the common liquids or gases from the drop-down menu. Density and viscosity for the
built-in fluids were obtained from Munson et al. (1998). Likewise, the user may manually enter material roughness or Hazen-Williams C, or select one of the

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common pipe materials listed in the other drop-down menu. Surface roughnesses for the built-in materials were compiled from Munson et al. (1998), Streeter et
al. (1998) and Mays (1999).

Units
bbls/day=barrels/day, cfm=ft3/min, cfs=ft3/s, cm=centimeter, cP=centipoise, cSt=centistoke, in=inch, in H2O=inch water at 60F, in Hg=inch mercury at 60F,
ft=foot, g=gram, gpd=gallon (US)/day, gph=gallon (US)/hr, gpm=gallon (US)/min, hr=hour, kg=kilogram, km=kilometer, lb=pound, lb(f)=pound (force),
m=meter, mbar=millibar, mm=millimeter, mm H2O=mm water at 4C, min=minute, N=Newton, psi=lb(f)/in2, s=second

Variables [] indicates units: F=force, L=length, P=pressure, T=time Back to Calculation


Fluid density and viscosity may be entered in a wide choice of units. Some of the density units are mass density (g/cm3, kg/m3, slug/ft3, lb(mass)/ft3) and some
are weight density (N/m3, lb(force)/ft3). There is no distinction between lb(mass)/ft3 and lb(force)/ft3 in the density since they have numerically equivalent values
and all densities are internally converted to N/m3. Likewise, fluid viscosity may be entered in a wide variety of units. Some of the units are dynamic viscosity
(cP, poise, N-s/m2 (same as kg/m-s), lb(force)-s/ft2 (same as slug/ft-s) and some are kinematic viscosity (cSt, stoke (same as cm2/s), ft2/s, m2/s). All viscosities
are internally converted to kinematic viscosity in SI units (m2/s). If necessary, the equation Kinematic viscosity = Dynamic viscosity/Mass density is used
internally.

A = Pipe area [L2].


C = Hazen Williams coefficient. Selectable as last item in drop-down menu saying "Roughness, e".
D = Pipe diameter [L].
e = Pipe roughness [L]. All pipes must have the same roughness.
f = Moody friction factor, used in Darcy Weisbach friction loss equation.
g = Acceleration due to gravity = 32.174 ft/s2 = 9.8066 m/s2.
H = Head losses in pipe [L]. Can also be expressed in pressure units [P].
k = Constant in Hazen Williams equation for computing H.
K = Minor loss coefficient.
L = Pipe length [L].
Leq = Equivalent length of pipe for minor losses [L].
n = Constant used in Hardy Cross equation.
P = Node pressure [P]. Can also be expressed in length units [L].
Q = Flowrate through pipe, or into or out of node [L3/T]. Also known as discharge or capacity.
Re = Reynolds number.
S = Specific Weight of Fluid (i.e. weight density; weight per unit volume) [F/L3]. Typical units are N/m3 or lb(force)/ft3. Note that S=(mass density)(g)
V = Velocity in pipe [L/T].
Z = Elevation of node [L].
Z+P/S = Hydraulic head [L]. Also known as piezometric head. Can also be expressed in pressure units [P].
v = Kinematic viscosity of fluid [L2/T]. Greek letter "nu". Note that kinematic viscosity is equivalent to dynamic (or absolute) viscosity divided by mass density.
Mass density=S/g.

Error Messages in Pipe Network calculation Back to Calculation


"Node Q's must sum to 0". Check the node flowrates that you entered. Total flow into pipe network must equal total flow out of pipe network.
"Total inflow must be >0". Check that you have positive flow into the system. You have entered all node flows as 0.0 or negative.
"Node i must have Q=0". Node i is completely surrounded by pipes having diameters less than 0.001 m, which is the criteria the program uses for treating
pipes as being non-existent. You cannot have flow in or out of a node that is surrounded by non-existent pipes.
"|Q| must be < 1e9 m3/s". Node flows cannot exceed 109 m3/s. | | is absolute value.
"P at isolated node." Be sure that the "P known at node x" drop-down menu indicates a node that is surrounded by at least one existing pipe (i.e. a pipe having
a diameter greater than 0.001 m). If you don't know the pressure anywhere in your system, just enter 0.0 for the pressure. All the other node pressures will be
computed relative to the pressure you enter.
"Density must be > 0", "Density too high", "Viscosity must be > 0", "Viscosity too high.". These messages can only occur if "Another fluid" is selected
from the fluid drop-down menu. Be sure the density and viscosity you enter are greater than zero but less than 1010 kg/m3 and 1010 m2/s, respectively.
"D must be < 1e6 m". Individual pipe diameters cannot exceed 106 m.
"L must be < 1e7 m". Individual pipe lengths cannot exceed 107 m.
"|Z| must be < 1e20", " |P| must be < 1e20 m". The absolute value of each node elevation and pressure that are input cannot exceed 1020 m.
"Need Water (20C) if H-W". If "Hazen-Williams C" is selected from the Roughness drop-down menu, you must also select "Water, 20C (68F)" from the fluid
drop-down menu. The Hazen-Williams method for head losses is only valid for water at typical city water supply temperatures, such as 20C.
"C out of range", "e out of range". These messages can only occur if you selected "Another material" from the pipe material drop-down menu. Valid ranges
are 0<C<1000 and 0 <= e < 10.0 m. Normally, C will not exceed 150 and e will not exceed 0.001 m, but we allow high ranges for those who like to
experiment.
"Pipe i e/D out of range". See the equations above for Friction loss computation using Darcy-Weisbach. e/D cannot exceed 0.05 unless Reynolds number is
less than 4000. Also, e/D cannot be 0.0 (i.e. e cannot be 0.0) if Reynolds number is greater than 108.
"Unusual input." If you experiment with the calculation long enough, you may enter some very unusual input combinations. Some situations are physically not
possible, but the calculation will continue iterating to compute the pipe flows and losses. After 5000 iterations (a few seconds of real time), the program will stop
running and give you this error message, so you can check your input and enter more realistic numbers. The program has been designed so that it will not "lock
up".
Other things. If the calculation doesn't seem to run when you click "Calculate", check your inputs. If you accidentally entered two decimal points or a letter in
an input field, then it won't run and won't give an error message.

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References Back to Calculation
Cross, Hardy. Analysis of flow in networks of conduits or conductors. University of Illinois Bulletin No. 286. November 1936.
Mays, L. W. editor. 1999. Hydraulic design handbook. McGraw-Hill Book Co.
Munson, B.R., D. F. Young, and T. H. Okiishi. 1998. Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics. John Wiley and Sons, Inc. 3ed.
Streeter, V. L., E. B. Wylie, and K. W. Bedford. 1998. Fluid Mechanics. WCB/McGraw-Hill. 9ed.
Viessman, W. and M. J. Hammer. 1993. Water Supply and Pollution Control. HarperCollins College Publishers. 5ed.
© 2001 LMNO Engineering, Research, and Software, Ltd. (All Rights Reserved)
LMNO Engineering, Research, and Software, Ltd.
7860 Angel Ridge Rd. Athens, Ohio USA (740) 592-1890
LMNO@LMNOeng.com http://www.LMNOeng.com

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