Heat Transfer Characteristics in a Slug Unit

Author(s):  
Valery Babin ◽  
Dvora Barnea ◽  
Lev Shemer

Heat transfer mechanism in two-phase flows and particularly in vertical slug flow is of high interest both for basic hydrodynamic research and for industrial applications. Two-phase slug flow is highly complicated and only a limited number of heat transfer studies have been carried out. The flow field around a single Taylor bubble propagating in a vertical pipe can be subdivided into three distinct hydrodynamic regions: the gas bubble surrounded by a thin liquid film, a highly turbulent liquid wake in the vicinity of the bubble bottom, and the far wake region. Experimental and theoretical works have been presented during the last decades investigating the hydrodynamic parameters in each region. Due to the complexity and intermittent nature of slug flow the existing data on the heat transfer in slug flow is limited to a narrow range of operational conditions. To improve the understanding of the heat transfer mechanism in slug flow a new experimental setup was constructed. A part of the vertical pipe wall was replaced by a thin metal foil heated by electrical current. An IR video camera was used to determine the temporal variation of the instantaneous temperature field along the foil. The video camera was synchronized with a sensor that determined the instantaneous location of the Taylor bubble. The results of the instantaneous heat transfer measurements along the liquid film and in the wake of the Taylor bubble can be correlated with the detailed velocity measurements carried out in the same facility (Shemer et al. 2007). The effect of the local hydrodynamic parameters on the heat transfer coefficient in each region is examined.

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 100-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuki Wada ◽  
Tri Dan Le ◽  
Akira Satou ◽  
Yasuteru Sibamoto ◽  
Taisuke Yonomoto

Author(s):  
Mirco Magnini ◽  
John R. Thome

This work presents a new boiling heat transfer prediction method for slug flow within microchannels, which is developed and benchmarked against the results of two-phase CFD simulations. The proposed method adopts a two-zone decomposition of the flow for the sequential passage of a liquid slug and an evaporating elongated bubble. The heat transfer is modeled by assuming transient heat conduction across the liquid film surrounding an elongated bubble and sequential conduction/convection within the liquid slug. Embedded submodels for estimating important flow parameters, e.g. bubble velocity and liquid film thickness, are implemented as “building blocks”, thus making the entire modeling framework totally stand-alone. The CFD simulations are performed by utilizing ANSYS Fluent v. 14.5 and the interface between the vapor and liquid phases is captured by the built-in Volume Of Fluid algorithm. Improved schemes to compute the surface tension force and the phase change due to evaporation are implemented by means of self-developed functions. The comparison with the CFD results shows that the proposed method emulates well the bubble dynamics during evaporation, and predicts accurately the time-averaged heat transfer coefficients during the initial transient regime and the terminal steady-periodic stages of the flow.


Author(s):  
Yang Wang ◽  
Changqi Yan ◽  
Licheng Sun ◽  
Chaoxing Yan ◽  
Yanmin Zhou ◽  
...  

The characteristics of two-phase slug flow in a narrow rectangular channel with cross section of 3.25 mm × 43 mm under vertical and inclined conditions are investigated using a high speed video camera system. It is found that the velocity of Taylor bubble in vertical continuous slug flow could be well predicted by the Nicklin et al. (1962) correlation, in which C0 is given by the correlation of Ishii (1977), and the drift velocity given by the correlation of Sadatomi et al. (1982) or Clanet et al. (2004). For low two-phase superficial velocity (FrTP ≤ 3.5), the Taylor bubble velocities gradually increase with the increasing in inclination angles and almost approximate the maximum value for θ = 30°. For high two-phase superficial velocity (FrTP > 3.5), the influence of the inclination angles on the Taylor bubble velocity is insignificant, and the bubble velocity under vertical condition is slight lower than those under inclined conditions. For the inclined cases, the nose of Taylor bubble is deviated from the centerline and its position is the function of the two-phase superficial velocity as well as the inclination angle.


1989 ◽  
Vol 55 (519) ◽  
pp. 3479-3484
Author(s):  
Masaki O-UCHI ◽  
Yasuo TAKAMORI ◽  
Masaaki IZUMI ◽  
Norio YAMAKAWA ◽  
Toshiro TAKEYAMA

2011 ◽  
Vol 71-78 ◽  
pp. 1228-1232
Author(s):  
Xiang Yu Li ◽  
Xiao Long Zhao ◽  
Xiang Yong Guo ◽  
Li Qiang Cao

A new theoretical equation that represents the thermal conductivity of two-phase composite has been proposed. The Cheng-Vachon equation has been modified by introducing a new parameter that is the corrected porosity. It was found that the new equation can describe the thermal conductivity of cellular concrete very accurately. Development of the equation is helpful to understanding heat transfer mechanism and improving thermal property of cellular concrete.


Author(s):  
Ewelina Sobierska ◽  
Rudi Kulenovic ◽  
Rainer Mertz

Experimental investigations on flow boiling phenomena in a vertical narrow rectangular microchannel with the hydraulic diameter dh = 0.48 mm were carried out. The experiments were performed under fluid-inlet subcooling conditions with deionised and degassed water for different mass fluxes. Investigations on pressure drop and heat transfer during single-and two-phase flow have been carried out. Moreover, flow visualisation of the two-phase flow patterns along the channel was performed using a digital high-speed video camera. The present work outlines local heat transfer coefficients for three mass fluxes (200, 700 and 1500 kg/m2s) and heat fluxes (30–110, 35–150 and 65–200 kW/m2, respectively) during two-phase flow. The fluid temperature at the inlet was about 50 °C what corresponds to inlet subcooling, depending on flow pressure conditions, from 34 °C to 57 °C. The visual observations were used to obtain a better insight about the heat transfer mechanism.


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