A siphon (also spelled syphon) is a continuous tube that allows liquid to drain from a reservoir through an
intermediate point that is higher than the reservoir, the up-slope flow being driven only by hydrostatic pressure without any need for pumping. It is necessary that the
final end of the tube be lower than the liquid surface in the reservoir.
History
It is probable that Ctesibius was the discoverer of the principle of the siphon.[1] His student, Hero of Alexandria, wrote extensively about siphons in the treatise, Pneumatica.[2] Even earlier
Egyptian reliefs from 1500 BC depict siphons used to extract liquids from large storage
jars.[3].
The siphon was first used as a weapon by the Byzantine Navy, and the most common method of deployment was to emit
Greek fire, a formula of burning oil, through a large bronze tube onto enemy ships. Usually
the mixture would be stored in heated, pressurized barrels and projected through the tube by some sort of pump while the
operators were sheltered behind large iron shields. It is not clear whether these were actual siphons or merely pumps that used
air pressure to project the Greek fire. "Some apparatus called a 'siphon' (σιφων) was used". "The siphons were, apparently,
flame-projectors, either hand-pumps or reservoirs worked by mechanical force-pumps".[4]
Naturally occurring siphons
In the wild, natural siphons can form in higher elevation whitewater
rivers. Often caused by the fast flowing water, underwater caves or rockfalls create conditions
where water can pass under and over the obstruction.
This can be a considerable hazard to river users such as kayakers, canoeists and rafters. It is easy to get sucked into a siphon, and not be let
free until river levels drop considerably. Often the exit hole of the siphon is smaller then the entry hole, thus causing the
lethal hazard.
Operation
Theory
Among some physicists there is some dispute as to what causes the siphon to lift liquid from the upper reservoir to the crest
of the siphon[5]. They
argue that theoretically, internal molecular cohesion is sufficient to pull the
liquid up the intake leg of the siphon to the crest. Furthermore, some (notably Encyclopedia Britannica[6]) argue that theoretically, "a
siphon will work in a vacuum". In practice, atmospheric pressure is required, to maintain the cohesion of the liquid in the
siphon. Liquids in vacuum are not in equilibrium and typically boil.
Once started, a siphon requires no additional energy to keep the liquid flowing up and out of
the reservoir. The siphon works because the ultimate drain point is lower than the reservoir and the flow of liquid out the drain
point creates a partial vacuum in the tube such that liquid is drawn up out of the reservoir.
The maximum height of the intermediate point (the crest) is limited by
atmospheric pressure and the density of the
liquid. At the high point of the siphon, gravity tends to draw the liquid
down in both directions, creating a partial vacuum. Atmospheric pressure on the top
surface of the higher reservoir is transmitted through the liquid in the reservoir and up the siphon tube and prevents a vacuum
from forming. When the pressure exerted by the weight of the height of the column of liquid equals that of atmospheric pressure,
a partial vacuum will form at the high point and the siphon effect is ended. For water at standard pressure, the maximum height is approximately 10 m (33 feet); for mercury
it is 76 cm (30 inches).
An analogy
An analogy to understand siphons is to imagine a long, frictionless train extending from a
plain, up a hill and then down the hill into a valley below the plain. So long as part of the train extends into the valley below
the plain, it is "intuitively obvious" that the portion of the train sliding into the valley can pull the rest of the train up
the hill and into the valley. What is not obvious is what holds the train together when the train is a liquid in a tube. In this
analogy, atmospheric pressure holds the train together. Once the force of gravity on the couplings between the cars of the train
going up the hill exceeds that of atmospheric pressure, the coupling breaks and the train falls apart. The train analogy is
demonstrated in a "siphon-chain model" [7] where a long chain on a pulley flows between two beakers.
Practical requirements
A plain tube can be used as a siphon. An external pump has to be applied to start the liquid
flowing and prime the siphon. This can be a human mouth and lungs. This is sometimes done with any leak-free hose to
siphon gasoline from a motor vehicle's gasoline tank to an external tank. (Siphoning gasoline
often results in the accidental swallowing of gasoline, which is quite poisonous.) If the tube is flooded with liquid before part
of the tube is raised over the intermediate high point and care is taken to keep the tube flooded while it is being raised, no
pump is required. Devices sold as siphons come with a siphon pump to start the siphon
process. When applying a siphon to any application it is important that the piping be as closely sized to the requirement as
possible. Using piping of too great a diameter and then throttling the flow using valves or constrictive piping appears to
increase the effect of previously cited concerns over gases or vapor collecting in the crest which serve to break the vacuum.
Once the vacuum is reduced the siphon effect is lost.
Reducing the size of pipe used closer to requirements appears to reduce this effect and creates a more functional siphon that
does not require constant re-priming and restarting. In this respect, where the requirement is to match a flow into a container
with a flow out of said container (to maintain a constant level in a pond fed by a stream, for example) it would be preferable to
utilize two or three smaller separate parallel pipes that can be started as required rather than attempting to use a single large
pipe and attempting to throttle it.
Applications
Floodings: [8] Self-constructed siphons, made of pipes or tubes, can be used to evacuate water from cellars after
floodings. Between the flooded cellar and a deeper place outside a connection is built, using a tube or some pipes. They are
filled with water from the through an intake valve (at the highest end of the construction). When the ends are opened, the water
flows through the pipe into the sewer or the river.
Large siphons may be used in municipal waterworks and industry. Their size
requires control via valves at the intake, outlet and crest of the siphon. The siphon may be primed by closing the intake and
outlets and filling the siphon at the crest. If intakes and outlets are submerged, a vacuum
pump may be applied at the crest to prime the siphon. Alternatively the siphon may be primed by a pump at either the
intake or outlet.
Gas in the liquid is a concern in large siphons[9]. The gas tends to accumulate at the crest and if enough accumulates to break the
flow of liquid, the siphon stops working. The siphon itself will exacerbate the problem because as the liquid is raised through
the siphon, the pressure drops, causing dissolved gases within the liquid to come out of solution. Higher temperature accelerates
the release of gas from liquids so maintaining a constant, low temperature helps. The longer the liquid is in the siphon, the
more gas is released, so a shorter siphon overall helps. Local high points will trap gas so the intake and outlet legs should
have continuous slopes without intermediate high points. The flow of the liquid moves bubbles thus the intake leg can have a
shallow slope as the flow will push the gas bubbles to the crest. Conversely, the outlet leg needs to have a steep slope to allow
the bubbles to move against the liquid flow. At the crest the gas can be trapped in a chamber above the crest. The chamber needs
to be occasionally primed again with liquid to remove the gas.
Siphon terminology
- Bowl siphon
- Bowl siphons are part of flush toilets. Siphon action in the bowl siphon siphons out the contents of the toilet bowl and creates the characteristic toilet "sucking"
sound.
- Some toilets also use the siphon principle to obtain the actual flush from the cistern. The
flush is triggered by a lever or handle that operates a simple diaphragm-like piston pump that lifts enough water to the crest of
the siphon to start the flow of water which then completely empties the contents of the cistern into the toilet bowl. The
advantage of this system was that no water would leak from the cistern excepting when flushed.
- Early urinals incorporated a siphon in the cistern which would flush automatically on a
regular cycle because there was a constant trickle of clean water being fed to the cistern by a slightly open valve.
Trap under a sink which functions as an inverted siphon.
- Inverted siphon
- An inverted siphon is not a siphon but a term applied to pipes that must dip below an obstruction to form a "U" shaped
flow path. At no point does the siphon effect come into play; an inverted siphon will work fine in the absence of atmospheric
pressure. Liquid flowing in one end simply forces liquid up and out the other end. Engineers must ensure that the flow rate in
such a channel is fast enough to keep suspended solids from settling. Otherwise, the inverted siphon tends to act as a debris
trap. This is especially important in sewage systems or culverts
which must be routed under rivers or other deep obstructions where the better term is "depressed sewer".
- Back siphonage
- Back siphonage is a plumbing term applied to clean water pipes that connect directly into a reservoir without an air
gap. As water is delivered to other areas of the plumbing system at a lower level, the siphon effect will tend to siphon water
back out of the reservoir. This may result in contamination of the water in the pipes. Back siphonage is not to be confused with
backflow. Back siphonage is a result of liquids at a lower level drawing water from a higher level. Backflow is driven entirely
by pressure in the reservoir itself. Backflow cannot occur through an intermediate high-point. Back siphonage can flow through in
intermediate high-point and is thus much more difficult to guard against.
- Anti-siphon valve
- Anti-siphon valves[10] are required in such designs. Building codes often contain specific
sections on back siphonage and especially for external faucets. (See sample building code
below.) The reason is that external faucets may be attached to hoses which may be immersed in an external body of water, such as
a garden pond, swimming pool, aquarium or washing machine. Should the pressure within the water
supply system fall, the external water may be siphoned back into the drinking water system through the faucet. Another possible
contamination point is the water intake in the toilet tank. An anti-siphon valve is also required here to prevent pressure drops
in the water supply line from siphoning water out of the toilet tank (which may contain additives such as "toilet blue") and
contaminating the water system. Anti-siphon valves practically is a one-direction flow valve.
- Anti-siphon valves are also used medically. Hydrocephalus, or excess fluid in the
brain, maybe treated with a shunt which drains cerebrospinal fluid from the brain. All shunts have a valve to relieve excess pressure in the brain.
The shunt may lead into the abdominal cavity such that the shunt outlet is significantly lower than the shunt intake when the
patient is standing. Thus a siphon effect may take place and instead of simply relieving excess pressure, the shunt may act as a
siphon, completely draining cerebrospinal fluid from the brain. The valve in the shunt may be designed to prevent this siphon
action so that negative pressure on the drain of the shunt does not result in excess drainage. Only excess positive pressure from
within the brain should result in drainage[11][12][13].
- Note that the anti-siphon valve in medical shunts is preventing excess forward flow of liquid. In plumbing systems, the
anti-siphon valve is preventing backflow.
- Other anti-siphoning devices
- Along with anti-siphon valves, anti-siphoning devices also exist. The two are unrelated in application. Siphoning can
be used to remove fuel from tanks. With the cost of fuel increasing, it has been linked in several countries globally to the rise
in fuel theft. Trucks, with their large fuel tanks, are most vulnerable. The anti-siphon device prevents thieves from inserting a
tube into the fuel tank.
- Siphon barometer
- A siphon barometer is the term sometimes applied to the simplest of mercury barometers. A continuous U-shaped tube of the same diameter throughout is sealed on one end and filled with
mercury. When placed into the upright position, mercury will flow away from the sealed end, forming a partial vacuum, until
balanced by atmospheric pressure on the other end. The term "siphon" is used because the same principle of atmospheric pressure
acting on a fluid is applied. The difference in height of the fluid between the two arms of the U-shaped tube is the same as the
maximum intermediate height of a siphon. When used to measure pressures other than atmospheric pressure, a siphon barometer is
sometimes called a siphon gauge and not to be confused with a siphon rain gauge. Siphon pressure gauges are rarely used
today.
- Siphon bottle
- A siphon bottle (archaically called a siphoid [14]) is a pressurized bottle with a vent and a valve. Pressure within the bottle drives the liquid up and out a
tube. It is a siphon in the sense that pressure drives the liquid through a tube. A special form was the gasogene.
- Siphon cup
- A siphon cup is the (hanging) reservoir of paint attached to a spray gun. This is to distinguish it from gravity-fed
reservoirs. An archaic use of the term is a cup of oil in which the oil is siphoned out of the cup via a cotton wick or tube to a
surface to be lubricated.
- Siphon rain gauge
- A siphon rain gauge is a rain gauge that can record rainfall over an extended
period. A siphon is used to automatically empty the gauge. It is often simply called a "siphon gauge" and is not to be confused
with a siphon pressure gauge.
- Heron's siphon
- Heron's siphon is a siphon that works on positive air pressure and at first glance appears to be a perpetual motion machine. In a slightly differently configuration, it is also known as Heron's fountain[15].
Sample building code regulations regarding back siphonage
From Ontario's building code: [16]
- 7.6.2.3.Back Siphonage
- Every potable water system that supplies a fixture or tank that is not subject to pressures above atmospheric shall be
protected against back-siphonage by a backflow preventer.
- Where a potable water supply is connected to a boiler, tank, cooling jacket, lawn sprinkler system or other device where a
non-potable fluid may be under pressure that is above atmospheric or the water outlet may be submerged in the non-potable fluid,
the water supply shall be protected against backflow by a backflow preventer.
- Where a hose bibb is installed outside a building, inside a garage, or where there is an identifiable risk of contamination,
the potable water system shall be protected against backflow by a backflow preventer.
Self-siphons
The term self-siphon is used in a number of ways. Liquids that are composed of long polymers can "self-siphon"[17][18] and these liquids do
not depend on atmospheric pressure. Self-siphoning polymer liquids work the same as the siphon-chain model where the lower part
of the chain pulls the rest of the chain up and over the crest. This phenomenon is also called a tubeless siphon[19].
"Self-siphon" is also often used in sales literature by siphon manufacturers to describe portable siphons that contain a pump.
With the pump, no external suction (e.g. from a person's mouth/lungs) is required to start the siphon and thus the product is
inaccurately described as a "self-siphon".
If the upper reservoir is such that the liquid there can rise above the height of the siphon crest, the rising liquid in the
reservoir can "self-prime" the siphon and the whole apparatus be described as a "self-siphon"[20]. Once primed, such
a siphon will continue to operate until the level of the upper reservoir falls below the intake of the siphon. Such self-priming
siphons are useful in some rain gauges and dams.
Biological siphons
The term "siphon" is used for a number of structures in human and animal anatomy, either because flowing liquids are involved
or because the structure is shaped like a siphon, but in which no actual siphon effect is occurring: see Siphon (biology).
Biologists debate whether the siphon mechanism plays a role in blood circulation [21]. It is theorized that veins form a continuous loop
with arteries such that blood flowing down veins help siphon blood up the arteries, especially in
giraffes and snakes[22]. Some have concluded that the siphon mechanism aids blood circulation in giraffes [23]. Many others
dispute this[24][25] and experiments show no siphon effects in human circulation[26]. Some cite
negative pressure in the brain as supporting the role of the siphon effect in the brain[27].
Explanation using Bernoulli's equation
Bernoulli's equation may be applied to a siphon to derive the flow rate and
maximum height of the siphon.
Example of a siphon with annotations to describe Bernoulli's equation
- Let the surface of the upper reservoir be the reference elevation.
- Let point A be the start point of siphon, immersed within the higher reservoir and at a depth −d below the surface of
the upper reservoir.
- Let point B be the intermediate high point on the siphon tube at height +hB above the
surface of the upper reservoir.
- Let point C be the drain point of the siphon at height −hC below the surface of the upper
reservoir.
Bernoulli's equation:

= fluid velocity along the streamline
= gravitational acceleration downwards
= elevation in gravity field
= pressure along the streamline
= fluid
density
Apply Bernoulli's equation to the surface of the upper reservoir. The surface is technically falling as the upper reservoir is
being drained. However, for this example we will assume the reservoir to be infinite and the
velocity of the surface may be set to zero. Furthermore, the pressure at the surface is atmospheric pressure. Thus:
(Equation 1.)
Apply Bernoulli's equation to point A at the start of the siphon tube in the upper reservoir where P =
PA, v = vA and y = −d
(Equation 2.)
Apply Bernoulli's equation to point B at the intermediate high point of the siphon tube where P =
PB, v = vB and y =
hB
(Equation 3.)
Apply Bernoulli's equation to point C where the siphon empties. Where v = vC and
y = −hC. Furthermore, the pressure at the exit point is atmospheric pressure. Thus:
(Equation 4.)
Velocity
As the siphon is a single system, the constant in all four equations are the same. Setting equations 1 and 4 equal to each
other gives:

Solving for vC:
- Velocity of siphon:

The velocity of the siphon is thus driven solely by the height difference between the surface of the upper reservoir and the
drain point. The height of the intermediate high point, hB, does not affect the velocity of the
siphon. However, as the siphon is a single system, vB = vC and
the intermediate high point does limit the maximum velocity. The drain point cannot be lowered indefinitely to increase the
velocity. Equation 3 will limit the velocity to a positive pressure at the intermediate high point to prevent cavitation. The maximum velocity may be calculated by combining equations 1 and 3:

Setting PB = 0 and solving for vmax:
- Maximum velocity of siphon:

The depth, −d, of the initial entry point of the siphon in the upper reservoir, does not affect the velocity of the
siphon. No limit to the depth of the siphon start point is implied by Equation 2 as pressure PA
increases with depth d. Both these facts imply the operator of the siphon may bottom skim or top skim the upper reservoir
without impacting the siphon's performance.
Note that this equation for the velocity is the same as that of any object falling height hC.
Note also that this equation assumes PC is atmospheric pressure. If the end of the siphon is
below the surface, the height to the end of the siphon cannot be used; rather the height difference between the reservoirs should
be used.
Maximum height
Setting equations 1 and 3 equal to each other gives:

Maximum height of the intermediate high point occurs when it is so high that the pressure at the intermediate high point is
zero. Setting PB = 0:

Solving for hB:
- General height of siphon:

This means that the height of the intermediate high point is limited by velocity of the siphon. Faster siphons result in lower
heights. Height is maximized when the siphon is very slow and vB = 0:
- Maximum height of siphon:

This is the maximum height that a siphon will work. It is simply when the weight of the column of liquid to the intermediate
high point equates to atmospheric pressure. Substituting values for water will give 10 metres for water and 0.76 metres for
mercury.
See also
- Sewer for details of an accident involving a siphon.
External links
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