scholarly journals Experimental study of the local structure of a bubble flow in a flat channel with sudden expansion

2021 ◽  
Vol 2057 (1) ◽  
pp. 012040
Author(s):  
A V Chinak ◽  
I A Evdokimenko ◽  
D V Kulikov ◽  
P D Lobanov

Abstract The hydrodynamic structure of the flow in a flat channel with sudden expansion was studied at constant flow rates of liquid and gas in the vertical flow at Re = 6600 and gas content β = 0.03. The measurements were carried out using the PLIF method; and with this view, fluorescent particles for PIV studies and the dye Rhodamine G were added to distilled water. An optical threshold filter was installed on the lens of the video camera. When processing images to obtain data on the local gas content, only bubbles falling into the plane of the laser beam were considered (the boundary glows, casting a shadow).

2012 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 674-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Lomb ◽  
Jan Steinbrener ◽  
Sadia Bari ◽  
Daniel Beisel ◽  
Daniel Berndt ◽  
...  

Serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) using X-ray free-electron laser (FEL) sources has the potential to determine the structures of macromolecules beyond the limitation of radiation damage and without the need for crystals of sufficient size for conventional crystallography. In SFX, a liquid microjet is used to inject randomly oriented crystals suspended in their storage solution into the FEL beam. Settling of crystals in the reservoir prior to the injection has been found to complicate the data collection. This article details the development of an anti-settling sample delivery instrument based on a rotating syringe pump, capable of producing flow rates and liquid pressures necessary for the operation of the injector. The device has been used successfully with crystals of different proteins, with crystal sizes smaller than 20 µm. Even after hours of continuous operation, no significant impairment of the experiments due to sample settling was observed. This article describes the working principle of the instrument and sets it in context with regard to the experimental conditions used for SFX. Hit rates for longer measuring periods are compared with and without the instrument operating. Two versions of the instrument have been developed, which both deliver sample at a constant flow rate but which differ in their minimum liquid flow rates and maximum pressures.


Author(s):  
A. Tristan Trupka ◽  
Mohammad H. Hosni ◽  
Byron W. Jones

An experimental study is performed in a mockup Boeing 767 cabin section consisting of eleven rows with seven seats per row. Carbon Dioxide (CO2) tracer gas is injected at a constant flow rate at a location of interest until concentrations in the cabin reach steady state. Ventilation equipment and flow rates representative of an actual aircraft are used for all experiments. Seats in the mockup are occupied by thermal manikins to simulate passenger heat load. A motorized beverage cart traverses the length of the cabin aisle passing by the injection location. The concentrations of tracer gas displaced by the cart are measured at locations throughout the cabin. Comparing these measurements to baseline readings taken with no cart movement, a map of the degree to which contaminant transport is affected by the beverage cart is calculated. The cabin mockup is supplied by 100% outdoor air through actual Boeing supply ductwork and linear diffusers along the cabin length above the aisles. The CO2 level is measured in the inlet air, measurement locations in the cabin, and exhaust air using nondispersive infrared (NDIR) sensors. Measured results are reported for all (54) seat locations downstream of the cart traverse/injection location for an injection location near the rear of the cabin. Analogous measurements are also conducted examining the effect of variation in cart speed and modified injection location.


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-699
Author(s):  
Noriyasu Mori ◽  
Hiroaki Takehara ◽  
Yoshiro Konishi ◽  
Kiyoji Nakamura

Author(s):  
C.В. Алексеенко ◽  
С.И. Шторк ◽  
Р.Р. Юсупов

AbstractThe effect of the method of gas-phase injection into a swirled fluid flow on parameters of a precessing vortex core is studied experimentally. Conditions of the appearance of the vortex-core precession effect were modeled in a hydrodynamic sudden expansion vortex chamber. The dependences of the vortexcore precession frequency, flow-pulsation level, and full pressure differential in the vortex chamber on the consumption gas content in the flow have been obtained. The results of measurements permit one to determine optimum conditions for the most effective control of vortex-core precession.


Author(s):  
Shinji Honami ◽  
Takaaki Shizawa ◽  
Atsushi Sato ◽  
Hideki Ogata

The paper presents the flow behavior with an oscillating motion of an impinging jet upon a flame dome head and its reattachment to the casing wall, when a distorted flow is provided at the inlet of the dump diffuser combustor. Laser Doppler Velocimeter was used for the measurements of the time-averaged flow within a sudden expansion region. Surface pressure fluctuation survey on the flame dome head and flow visualization by a smoke wire technique with a high-speed video camera were conducted from the view point of the unsteady flow feature of the impinging jet. There exists the high vorticity region at the jet boundary resulting in the production of the turbulence kinetic energy. In particular, higher vorticity is observed in the higher velocity side of the jet. The jet near the dome head has the favorable characteristics about the flow rate distribution into the branched channel. Reynolds shear stress and turbulence energy are remarkably produced near the reattachment region. The jet has an oscillating motion near the dome head with asymmetric vortex formation at the jet boundary.


Author(s):  
Artem I. Varavva ◽  
Vladimir E. Vershinin ◽  
Dmitry V. Trapeznikov

Centrifugal separators&nbsp;— hydrocyclones&nbsp;— are widely used in many areas of the national economy to separate mixtures of substances of different densities. Hydrocyclones can be used for phase separation in oil, water and gas flow measurement units. The flow from the well is initially a three-phase mixture. The hydrocyclone separates the gas and liquid phases at the inlet of the measuring unit, which are then transferred to separate gas and liquid measurement units. Maintaining the accuracy of the phase flow measurement when using hydrocyclones in the measuring units requires high quality separation over a wide range of flow rates and phase contents. One of the directions of forecasting the characteristics of the separation process is based on the numerical solution of the equations of hydrodynamics of multiphase flows. Modern software of computational hydrodynamics allows to solve problems of such class in three-dimensional statement and thus to estimate efficiency of work of the device and its metrological characteristics.<br> This paper studies the processes of separation of gas-liquid mixture in hydrocyclone at different volume gas content and phase flow rates. The authors present a mathematical model with indication of the main assumptions and formulate the boundary conditions of the problem. Calculations were carried out on the open platform OpenFOAM with the use of interFoam solver. The results of numerical modeling have determined the basic structures of currents in the hydrocyclone. The influence of the initial gas content on the separation efficiency at different flow rates is investigated. The main reasons for the decrease in separation efficiency at low gas content values are revealed. In addition, the influence of the guiding elements on the separation process is considered.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence Camilleri ◽  
Jorge Luis Villalobos ◽  
Pedro Luis Escalona ◽  
Alvaro Correal ◽  
Carlos Reyes ◽  
...  

Abstract The Shaya wells have vertical depths of 11,000 ft and are heavily depleted. They, therefore, require 10,000 ft of lift to achieve the target drawdown. Electrical submersible pumps (ESPs) were deployed, but because of the low flow rates (80 B/D), produced solids, and high free gas content, initial run lives were uneconomical. This 47-well case study demonstrates how a holistic design and operating procedure achieved both the target drawdown and an economical mean time between failure (MTBF). "Learning from history" was the key method as there was sufficient ESP data to determine the root cause of ESP failures based on a combination of dismantle inspection and failure analysis (DIFA) and operating conditions. Moreover, production testing combined with real-time downhole gauge data enabled inflow characterization with both nodal and pressure transient analysis, thereby establishing the well potential and ensuring that the new proposed design was not only reliable but also achieved the targeted drawdown. An additional requirement was to handle both the current low rates and higher rates associated with future waterflooding. A historical review of 9 wells was conducted, followed by a new ESP design that was proposed and installed in 47 wells, which achieved an MTBF of over 940 days, whereas previous designs in the same wells had an MTBF of only 650 days. This substantial improvement was achieved without compromising drawdown as the wells were produced with a flowing intake pressure of approximately 250 psia at setting depths of 9,500 ft. This result is particularly noteworthy when one considers the harshness of the well conditions and, in particular, bottom-hole temperatures of 240°F, fines migration, deviated wells with doglegs above 2.5°/100ft, intake pressures below bubble point and low productivity indices (PIs) of 0.2 B/D/psi. The high depletion combined with low PIs, which resulted in very low flow rates of as low as 50 B/D, was the most challenging factor of this application. Outflow modeling and wellbore hydraulics were also important considerations to limit solid fallback due to insufficient velocity in the production tubing as well minimize heat rise caused by startup transients, which can be long in low-PI wells. ESPs are traditionally best suited to wells with liquid rates providing sufficient cooling for both the motor and the pump as well as short unloading transients during startup. This success story, therefore, provides an important reference for future ESP applications in very low flow rates in deep wells, which are beyond the recommended application envelope of alternative low flow rate artificial lift solutions such as progressive cavity pumps and sucker rod pumps.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (09) ◽  
pp. 37-38
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 201520, “Advances in Understanding Relative Permeability Shifts by Imbibition of Surfactant Solutions Into Tight Plugs,” by Mohammad Yousefi, Lin Yuan, and Hassan Dehghanpour, SPE, University of Alberta, prepared for the 2020 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, originally scheduled to be held in Denver, Colorado, 5–7 October. The paper has not been peer reviewed. Various chemical additives have been proposed recently to enhance imbibition oil recovery from tight formations during shut-in periods after hydraulic fracturing operations. In the complete paper, the authors develop and apply a laboratory protocol mimicking leakoff, shut-in, and flowback processes to evaluate the effects of fracturing-fluid additives on oil regained permeability. A conventional coreflooding apparatus is modified to measure oil effective permeability (koeff) before and after the surfactant-imbibition experiments. Methodology Proposed Technique for Measuring Oil Effective Permeability. Despite the simplicity of the steady-state method, measuring permeability of tight rocks with this technique is challenging because of its time-consuming nature and the fact that accurate measurement is necessary of extremely low flow rates corresponding to low injectivity of tight rocks. The authors use a pair of plugs from a well drilled in the Montney formation that is a stratigraphic unit of the Lower Triassic age in the western Canadian sedimentary basin located in British Columbia and Alberta. It is mainly a low-permeability siltstone reservoir. In the modified coreflooding apparatus, the authors reduce the effect of compressibility in order to reduce the duration of the transient period by approximately one order of magnitude. Because monitoring changes in pressure is much easier and more accurate than monitoring flow-rate changes, a constant flow-rate mode is used and pressure is recorded with time. Oil is injected at different constant flow rates (qo), and the inlet pressure is monitored. The stable pressure difference across the plug is recorded for each flow rate. After steady-state conditions are reached based on the pressure profile, the qo is increased. This process is repeated until four stable pressure differences corresponding to four different qo are obtained. After the highest qo is reached, it is decreased in similar steps to check the repeatability of each data point. The permeability is calculated with the Darcy equation and slope of the qo vs. stable pressure difference across the plug.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document