1 ) Cumulative flow:
The unit of time is fixed, and the volume of fluid flowing through each unit of time. For example, if 50 liters of wastewater is discharged per minute, the instantaneous flow is 50 L/min. Another is, if the wastewater is discharged at an instantaneous flow rate of 50 L/min, assuming that the flow rate does not change at all, and the discharge time is stable for eight hours a day, the cumulative waste water discharge can be 24,000 liters per day.
2 ) Instantaneous flow:
LPM is an abbreviation of liters per minute, measured at a certain point in time (such as microseconds or milliseconds). However, this data is only applicable if the instantaneous flow rate is maintained for one minute and also under the condition of constant pipe diameter. In fact, the instantaneous flow rate can be high or low within a period of time, and after a period of time, the measured cumulative flow rate will not be consistent with the instantaneous flow rate. Therefore, the number of instantaneous flow rates does not actually affect the cumulative flow rate in the end. For example: In a period of flow monitoring within ten minutes, the instantaneous flow measured in one millisecond is 60 LPM, and the instantaneous flow in another millisecond is 40 LPM, but after ten minutes, the cumulative flow is 50 LPM.
3 ) Flow rate:
The velocity of the fluid flowing through a section per unit time is called the flow rate, which is usually used to monitor the physical quantity of liquid or gas flow changes.