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Title: Mass Flowmeters For Liquids
Author: Frank Grunert
Source: 2012 International School of Hydrocarbon Measurement
Year Published: 2012
Abstract: The 1980s was the decade where many companies entered the Coriolis market. Some survived, others were absorbed into bigger corporations and some brands disappeared. This was the time when Coriolis was restricted to small sizes, typically to 2 (DN15 to DN50). There was a flurry of activity and development for smaller sizes, typically 1mm to 6 mm in later years, which is still ongoing as new markets are constantly developed and evolving. In the last few years, there has been a new focus on large diameter meters. The typical requirement for sizes of 4 to 12 up to even 16 has been driven by the needs and growing acceptance of this technology in the Oil and Gas industry, particularly for bulk transfer of refined products. With the introduction of the Coriolis meters to almost all markets today this flow technology gained more and more momentum. With growth rates usually above 10% per year the Coriolis technology according to IMS Research will overtake differential pressure flowmeters transmitters as the largest flowmeter market by 2014, having replaced magnetic flowmeters as the second largest market in 2012. What is the Coriolis effect? The Coriolis effect was first discovered by Gaspar Gustav de Coriolis, a French Mathematician, who defined the Coriolis effect as the apparent deflection of a moving object in a rotating system, this is sometimes called the Coriolis force




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