Pressure drop of two-phase liquid-liquid slug flow in square microchannels

2018 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 398-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnieszka Ładosz ◽  
Philipp Rudolf von Rohr
Author(s):  
M. R. Myers ◽  
H. M. Cave ◽  
S. P. Krumdieck

Two-phase intermittent gas and liquid slug flow in small diameter glass and plastic tubes was studied. Two distinct flow regimes and the transition phenomena were identified. A modified Hagen-Poiseuille relation was derived to describe the extremely high pressure drop due to the surface tension effects of pinned slug flow.


Author(s):  
Qunwe He ◽  
Nobuhide Kasagi

In the present study, numerical simulation of adiabatic air-water slug flow in a micro tube is carried out. The focus is laid upon the pressure drop characteristics and its modeling. The Phase-Field method is employed to capture the interface between the phases, while the surface tension force is represented by the chemical potential formulation. The numerical results agree fairly well with available experimental results in terms of bubble shape and flow pattern. Simulation is repeated under different conditions of pressure gradient, void fraction and bubble frequency. It is found that the total pressure drop of a slug flow can be decomposed into two parts, i.e., the frictional pressure drop associated with a liquid slug sandwiched by bubbles, and the pressure drop over a bubble itself. For the former, when the liquid slug is longer than one tube diameter, the cross-sectional velocity distribution resembles a Poiseuille flow profile, so that the corresponding pressure drop can be predicted by the theoretical solution of single-phase liquid flow, i.e., fReTP = 64. For the latter, if it is assumed that the surface tension force is strong enough to sustain a thin liquid film between the interface and the tube wall, the pressure drop in this region is negligible. The pressure drop over a bubble is solely dependent on the two-phase superficial Reynolds number ReTP, which can be correlated as: Δpbubb′ = 0.07 + 42.4 / ReTP. This correlation predicts well the two-phase pressure drop in the form of the two-phase multiplier correlation as a function of the Lockhart-Martinelli parameter.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 111-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lambert Otten ◽  
Abdelrahman S. Fayed

Author(s):  
Dong Rip Kim ◽  
Jae-Mo Koo ◽  
Chen Fang ◽  
Julie E. Steinbrenner ◽  
Eon Soo Lee ◽  
...  

This paper presents a theoretical investigation of the movement of liquid droplets and slugs in hydrophobic microchannels and develops a compact model for this type of two-phase flow. This model is used in the prediction of pressure drop and liquid water coverage ratio, key parameters in the operation of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cells (PEMFC), the primary motivation for this work. A semi-empirical, periodic-steady two-phase separated flow compact model is formulated to characterize the slug flow behavior. The momentum equation includes the effects of acceleration, friction and surface tension on the pressure drop. The model considers spatial changes in slug velocity through the use of a force balance formulation. The model uses a departure scheme that computes slug size and shape at entrainment. The steady state slug flow compact model is capable of predicting liquid water coverage ratio and pressure drop using liquid and gas flow rates and advancing/receding triple point contact angles as its only inputs. The results indicate that the pressure drop increases as the droplet formation frequency increases.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zurwa Khan ◽  
Reza Tafreshi ◽  
Matthew Franchek ◽  
Karolos Grigoriadis

Abstract Pressure drop estimation across orifices for two-phase liquid-gas flow is essential to size valves and pipelines and decrease the probability of unsafe consequences or high costs in petroleum, chemical, and nuclear industries. While numerically modeling flow across orifices is a complex task, it can assess the effect of numerous orifice designs and operation parameters. In this paper, two-phase flow across orifices has been numerically modeled to investigate the effect of different fluid combinations and orifice geometries on pressure drop. The orifice is assumed to be located in a pipe with fully-developed upstream and downstream flow. Two liquid-gas fluid combinations, namely water-air, and gasoil liquid-gas mixture were investigated for different orifice to pipe area ratios ranging from 0.01 to 1 for the superficial velocity of 10 m/s. Volume of Fluid multiphase flow model along with k-epsilon turbulence model were used to estimate the pressure distribution of liquid-gas mixture along the pipe. The numerical model was validated for water-air with mean relative error less than 10.5%. As expected, a decrease in orifice to pipe area ratio resulted in larger pressure drops due to an increase in the contraction coefficients of the orifice assembly. It was also found that water-air had larger pressure drops relative to gasoil mixture due to larger vortex formation downstream of orifices. In parallel, a mechanistic model to directly estimate the local two-phase pressure drop across orifices was developed. The gas void fraction was predicted using a correlation by Woldesemayat and Ghajar, and applied to separated two-phase flow undergoing contraction and expansion due to an orifice. The model results were validated for different orifices and velocities, with the overall relative error of less than 40%, which is acceptable due to the uncertainties associated with measuring experimental pressure drop. Comparison of the developed numerical and mechanistic model showed that the numerical model is able to achieve a higher accuracy, while the mechanistic model requires minimal computation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10-12 ◽  
pp. 100019
Author(s):  
Wen Liu ◽  
Xiaofei Lv ◽  
Zhongchuang Zhao
Keyword(s):  

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