To avoid interruption of flow in a siphon due to air accumulation at the highest point, where should the small air vessel (air release/vent) be provided?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: At the summit (crown) of the siphon

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
A siphon conveys liquid over a rise by maintaining a continuous column under sub-atmospheric pressure at the summit. Air can exsolve from water or be drawn in through small leaks, collecting at the top and breaking the siphon if not vented.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Closed conduit with a summit (highest point) above both reservoirs.
  • Risk of air pocket formation at the crown due to low pressure.
  • Objective: maintain continuity of the water column.


Concept / Approach:
Air pockets naturally migrate to and collect at the highest point. Providing an air vessel or automatic air-release/air-admittance device at the summit purges trapped air (or admits air for controlled shutdown), preventing vapor lock and loss of prime.


Step-by-Step Solution:
Identify the point of minimum absolute pressure: the summit.Install a small air vessel/vent at this crown location.Periodically or automatically discharge accumulated air to keep the conduit liquid-full.


Verification / Alternative check:
Field practice and siphon design guidelines consistently show air-release valves at summits; CFD and model tests confirm air entrapment zones align with the geometric high point.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Inlet/outlet: not the locus of trapped air accumulation.Arbitrary point: ineffective unless it coincides with the crown.


Common Pitfalls:

  • Omitting air release on long siphons with multiple local high points.
  • Failing to provide vacuum-break for safe shutdown, leading to column separation.


Final Answer:
At the summit (crown) of the siphon

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