Two-Phase Pressure Drop Prediction in Wet Gas Flow Through V-Cone Meter

Author(s):  
Denghui He ◽  
Bofeng Bai

The pressure drop is considerably significant for the differential pressure meter to measure the flow rate of the two-phase flow. Little is known about the pressure drop characteristics of the V-Cone meter when it is used to measure the wet gas flow. The objective of this paper is to investigate the two-phase pressure drop of the V-Cone meter and develop a correlation for predicting its pressure drop. A V-Cone meter with the equivalent diameter ratio of 0.55 was investigated experimentally. The experimental fluid was air and water. The test pressure ranged from 0.1 MPa to 0.4 MPa, and the gas and liquid mass flow rate ranged from 100 Nm3/h to 500 Nm3/h and from 0.05 m3/h to 2.2 m3/h, respectively. The experimental results showed that the existing correlations, which are developed for the orifice plate meter and the Venturi meter, are not applicable for the V-Cone meter to predict the pressure drop. The two-phase mass flow coefficient, K, was used to develop the two-phase pressure drop correlation. The influences of the Lockhart-Martinelli parameter, the gas densiometric Froude number and the operating pressure on K were investigated. The new pressure drop correlation can accurately predict the pressure drop of the V-Cone meter for the wet gas. The relative error of the pressure drop is less than ± 9.0% at the 95.1% confidence level and the average relative error is 3.88%. The pressure drop prediction correlation provides a reference for developing the correlation of the wet gas measurement.

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
M. M. Toledo-Melchor ◽  
C. del C. Gutiérrez-Torres ◽  
J. A. Jiménez-Bernal ◽  
J. G. Barbosa-Saldaña ◽  
S. A. Martínez-Delgadillo ◽  
...  

The present work details the three-dimensional numerical simulation of single-phase and two-phase flow (air-water) in a venturi scrubber with an inlet and throat diameters of 250 and 122.5 mm, respectively. The dimensions and operating parameters correspond to industrial applications. The mass flow rate conditions were 0.483 kg/s, 0.736 kg/s, 0.861 kg/s, and 0.987 kg/s for the gas only simulation; the mass flow rate for the liquid was 0.013 kg/s and 0.038 kg/s. The gas flow was simulated in five geometries with different converging and diverging angles while the two-phase flow was only simulated for one geometry. The results obtained were validated with experimental data obtained by other researchers. The results show that the pressure drop depends significantly on the gas flow rate and that water flow rate does not have significant effects neither on the pressure drop nor on the fluid maximum velocity within the scrubber.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sung Chan Cho ◽  
Yun Wang

In this paper, two-phase flow dynamics in a micro channel with various wall conditions are both experimentally and theoretically investigated. Annulus, wavy and slug flow patterns are observed and location of liquid phase on different wall condition is visualized. The impact of flow structure on two-phase pressure drop is explained. Two-phase pressure drop is compared to a two-fluid model with relative permeability correlation. Optimization of correlation is conducted for each experimental case and theoretical solution for the flows in a circular channel is developed for annulus flow pattern showing a good match with experimental data in homogeneous channel case.


Author(s):  
Nan Liang ◽  
Changqing Tian ◽  
Shuangquan Shao

As one kind of fluid machinery related to the two-phase flow, the refrigeration system encounters more problems of instability. It is essential to ensure the stability of the refrigeration systems for the operation and efficiency. This paper presents the experimental investigation on the static and dynamic instability in an evaporator of refrigeration system. The static instability experiments showed that the oscillatory period and swing of the mixture-vapor transition point by observation with a camera through the transparent quartz glass tube at the outlet of the evaporator. The pressure drop versus mass flow rate curves of refrigerant two phase flow in the evaporator were obtained with a negative slope region in addition to two positive slope regions, thus making the flow rate a multi-valued function of the pressure drop. For dynamic instabilities in the evaporation process, three types of oscillations (density wave type, pressure drop type and thermal type) were observed at different mass flow rates and heat fluxes, which can be represented in the pressure drop versus mass flow rate curves. For the dynamic instabilities, density wave oscillations happen when the heat flux is high with the constant mass flow rate. Thermal oscillations happen when the heat flux is correspondingly low with constant mass flow rate. Though the refrigeration system do not have special tank, the accumulator and receiver provide enough compressible volume to induce the pressure drop oscillations. The representation and characteristic of each oscillation type were also analyzed in the paper.


2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 4922-4927
Author(s):  
Peng Xia Xu ◽  
Yan Feng Geng

Wet gas flow is a typical two-phase flow with low liquid fractions. As differential pressure signal contains rich information of flow parameters in two-phase flow metering, a new method is proposed for wet gas flow metering based on differential pressure (DP) and blind source separation (BSS) techniques. DP signals are from a couple of slotted orifices and the BSS method is based on time-frequency analysis. A good relationship between the liquid flow rate and the characteristic quantity of the separated signal is established, and a differential pressure correlation for slotted orifice is applied to calculate the gas flow rate. The calculation results are good with 90% relative errors less than ±10%. The results also show that BSS is an effective method to extract liquid flow rate from DP signals of wet gas flow, and to analysis different interactions among the total DP readings.


Author(s):  
Siqi Zhang ◽  
Puzhen Gao

In spite of most previous studies since 1970, the theory of pulsating pipe flows supported by experimental investigations has not yet completed in comparison with the well-defined theory of steady pipe flows. Therefore, it seems that there is much to be done about experimental research in this field. In order to determine the resistance characteristics of two-phase flow under pulsatile conditions, an experimental investigation on two-phase flow with periodically fluctuating flow rates in a narrow rectangular channel is carried out. A frequency inverter is used to obtain experimental conditions with different fluctuating frequencies, amplitudes and mean values of water mass flow rate. After obtaining experimental results, comparisons between experimental frictional pressure drop values and theoretical calculations have been done. Two-phase flow on pulsating conditions is far more complicated than that on steady conditions because pulsating flow is composed of two parts: a steady component and a superimposed periodical time varying component called oscillation. In this paper, the influence of different fluctuating frequencies, amplitudes and mean values of liquid and gas mass flow rate on two-phase flow pressure drop characteristics is also discussed. The results show that the total pressure drop and water mass flow rate change with the same fluctuating period except for a phase difference. The phase lag also changes with the fluctuating frequencies and amplitude. The accelerating pressure drop changes dramatically in a fluctuating period, especially at the end of acceleration. Also, the time when the acceleration pressure drop has its maximum value lags the time when the acceleration reaches its peak, mainly because of the inertial of the fluid.


Author(s):  
Enrico Munari ◽  
Michele Pinelli

Nowadays, wet gas flow rate measurement is still a challenge for experimental investigators and it is becoming an even more important issue to overcome in the turbomachinery sector as well, due to the increasing trend of wet compression applications in industry. The requirement to determine gas turbine performance when processing a wet gas leads to the need to understand certain phenomena, such as type of liquid flow re-distribution, and errors introduced when the mass flow rate measurement of a two-phase gas is attempted. Unfortunately, this measurement is often affected by the presence of liquid. Literature does not offer a unique definition of the term wet gas, although it is recognized that a wet gas can generally be defined as a two-phase gas in which the liquid percentage is lower than the gas one. This paper aims to collect and describe the main works present in literature in order to clarify i) the most used parameters that describe the types of wet gas, and ii) the types of errors and flow patterns which occur in different types of applications, in terms of pressure, percentage of liquid, Reynolds number, etc. Therefore, this literature review offers a comprehensive description of the possible effects of liquid presence in a wet gas and, and an in-depth analysis of the limitations and beneficial effects of current single-phase flow rate sensors in order to identify the best solutions, and empirical corrections available in literature to overcome this challenge.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher A. Konishi ◽  
Weilin Qu ◽  
Frank E. Pfefferkorn

This study concerns pressure drop of adiabatic water liquid-vapor two-phase flow across an array of 1950 staggered square micropin-fins having a 200×200 μm cross section by 670 μm height. The ratios of longitudinal pitch and transverse pitch to pin-fin equivalent diameter are equal to 2. An inline immersion heater upstream of the micropin-fin test module was employed to produce liquid-vapor two-phase mixture, which flowed across the micropin-fin array. The test module was well insulated to maintain adiabatic condition. Four maximum mass velocities of 184 kg/m2 s, 235 kg/m2 s, 337 kg/m2 s, and 391 kg/m2 s, and a range of vapor qualities for each maximum mass velocity were tested. Measured pressure drop increases drastically with increasing vapor quality. Nine existing two-phase pressure drop models and correlations were assessed. The Lockhart–Martinelli correlation for laminar liquid-laminar vapor combination in conjunction with a single-phase friction factor correlation proposed for the present micropin-fin array provided the best agreement with the data.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document