Static Pressure Drop Calculator

Calculate the static pressure drop in a pipe or duct using the Darcy-Weisbach equation. Supports both laminar and turbulent flow with the Colebrook-White friction factor.

Sum of all fitting/valve K values (elbows, valves, etc.)
Results will appear here.

Formulas Used

Reynolds Number:
Re = ρ·V·D / μ

Darcy Friction Factor:
Laminar (Re < 2300): f = 64 / Re  (Hagen-Poiseuille)
Turbulent (Re ≥ 2300): Colebrook-White equation (iterative):
1/√f = −2 log₁₀( ε/(3.7·D) + 2.51/(Re·√f) )

Dynamic Pressure:
q = ½·ρ·V²

Major Pressure Drop (Darcy-Weisbach):
ΔP_major = f · (L/D) · q

Minor Pressure Drop:
ΔP_minor = K_total · q

Total Pressure Drop:
ΔP_total = ΔP_major + ΔP_minor

Assumptions & References

  • Steady, incompressible, fully-developed internal flow assumed.
  • Pipe is assumed to be straight and circular in cross-section.
  • Laminar flow friction factor uses the exact Hagen-Poiseuille solution (f = 64/Re).
  • Turbulent friction factor solved iteratively via the Colebrook-White equation (100 iterations, converges to <10⁻¹² tolerance).
  • Transitional flow (2300 ≤ Re < 4000) uses the Colebrook-White equation as an approximation; results should be treated with caution in this regime.
  • Minor losses are approximated as ΔP = K·q; K values must be summed externally (e.g., elbow K≈0.9, gate valve K≈0.2).
  • Typical roughness values: commercial steel ε = 0.000046 m, drawn tubing ε = 0.0000015 m, cast iron ε = 0.00026 m, smooth pipe ε = 0.
  • Typical air properties (20°C, 1 atm): ρ = 1.204 kg/m³, μ = 1.81×10⁻⁵ Pa·s.
  • Typical water properties (20°C): ρ = 998 kg/m³, μ = 1.002×10⁻³ Pa·s.
  • References: Moody (1944); White, F.M. Fluid Mechanics, 8th ed.; Colebrook & White (1937), Proc. R. Soc. London.

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