Valve


A valve is a device or natural object that regulates, directs or controls the flow of a fluid (gases, liquids, fluidized solids, or slurries) by opening, closing, or partially obstructing various passageways. Valves are technically fittings, but are usually discussed as a separate category. In an open valve, fluid flows in a direction from higher pressure to lower pressure. The word is derived from the Latin valva, the moving part of a door, in turn from volvere, to turn, roll.

The simplest, and very ancient, valve is simply a freely hinged flap which swings down to obstruct fluid (gas or liquid) flow in one direction, but is pushed up by the flow itself when the flow is moving in the opposite direction. This is called a check valve, as it prevents or "checks" the flow in one direction. Modern control valves may regulate pressure or flow downstream and operate on sophisticated automation systems.

Valves have many uses, including controlling water for irrigation, industrial uses for controlling processes, residential uses such as on/off and pressure control to dish and clothes washers and taps in the home. Even aerosol spray cans have a tiny valve built in. Valves are also used in the military and transport sectors. In HVAC ductwork and other near-atmospheric air flows, valves are instead called dampers. In compressed air systems, however, valves are used with the most common type being ball valves.

Valves are found in virtually every industrial process, including water and sewage processing, mining, power generation, processing of oil, gas and petroleum, food manufacturing, chemical and plastic manufacturing and many other fields.

People in developed nations use valves in their daily lives, including plumbing valves, such as taps for tap water, gas control valves on cookers, small valves fitted to washing machines and dishwashers, safety devices fitted to hot water systems, and poppet valves in car engines.

In nature there are valves, for example one-way valves in veins controlling the blood circulation, and heart valves controlling the flow of blood in the chambers of the heart and maintaining the correct pumping action.


These water valves are operated by rotary handles.
Cross-sectional diagram of an open globe valve.
  1. body
  2. ports
  3. seat
  4. stem
  5. disc when valve is open
  6. handle or handwheel when valve is open
  7. bonnet
  8. packing
  9. gland nut
  10. fluid flow when valve is open
  11. position of disc if valve were shut
  12. position of handle or handwheel if valve were shut
Valve disc
The shut off butterfly valve for a Francis turbine at Gordon Power Station, Tasmania
A seacock for cooling seawater, on a marine diesel engine. Seacocks are usually ball valves, but may be other types as well.
Schematic 3 way ball valve: L-shaped ball right, T-shaped left
A sailor aboard a ship operates the wheel controlling a fuel valve.