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  2. Venturi effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venturi_effect

    Video of a Venturi meter used in a lab experiment Idealized flow in a Venturi tube. The Venturi effect is the reduction in fluid pressure that results when a moving fluid speeds up as it flows from one section of a pipe to a smaller section. The Venturi effect is named after its discoverer, the 18th-century Italian physicist Giovanni Battista ...

  3. Vacuum ejector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_Ejector

    A vacuum ejector, or simply ejector, or aspirator, is a type of vacuum pump, which produces vacuum by means of the Venturi effect. In an ejector, a working fluid (liquid or gaseous) flows through a jet nozzle into a tube that first narrows and then expands in cross-sectional area.

  4. File:Venturi Tube en.webm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Venturi_Tube_en.webm

    When the air flows through the tube, there is a lower pressure in narrower tube section and this value is independent from the end from which the air is introduced. In the area where the pipe diameter is smaller, the air flow in fact has greater speed, which results in a lower pressure in accordance with Bernoulli's equation.

  5. Venturi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venturi

    Venturi tube; Ejector venturi scrubber, a wet scrubber; Venturi effect, a fluid or air flow effect; Venturi mask, a medical device; Venturi meter, a device for measuring the flow rate of fluids in a pipe; Venturi pump, a pump using the venturi effect; Venturi scrubber, gas stream scrubber; Venturi Transport Protocol, transport layer protocol

  6. Giovanni Battista Venturi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Battista_Venturi

    Giovanni Battista Venturi (11 September 1746 – 10 September 1822) was an Italian physicist, savant, man of letters, diplomat and historian of science.He was the discoverer of the Venturi effect, which was described in 1797 in his Recherches Experimentales sur le Principe de la Communication Laterale du Mouvement dans les Fluides appliqué a l'Explication de Differens Phenomènes Hydrauliques ...

  7. Choked flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choked_flow

    de Laval nozzles are venturi tubes that produce supersonic gas velocities as the tube and the gas are first constricted and then the tube and gas are expanded beyond the choke plane. Rocket engine nozzles discusses how to calculate the exit velocity from nozzles used in rocket engines. Hydraulic jump; High pressure jet

  8. de Laval nozzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Laval_nozzle

    A de Laval nozzle (or convergent-divergent nozzle, CD nozzle or con-di nozzle) is a tube which is pinched in the middle, with a rapid convergence and gradual divergence. It is used to accelerate a compressible fluid to supersonic speeds in the axial (thrust) direction, by converting the thermal energy of the flow into kinetic energy .

  9. Venturi scrubber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venturi_scrubber

    Venturi devices have also been used for over 100 years to measure fluid flow (Venturi tubes derived their name from Giovanni Battista Venturi, an Italian physicist). In the late 1940s, H.F. Johnstone [ 1 ] , William Jones, [ 2 ] and other researchers found that they could effectively use the venturi configuration to remove particles from gas ...