Experimental and numerical study of air-water flow characteristics in a horizontal duct

Author(s):  
Mohamed H Mansour ◽  
Ali A Zahran ◽  
Lotfy H Rabie ◽  
Ibrahim M Shabaka

The horizontal bubbly two-phase flow is preferably used in various industrial applications because it provides high interfacial areas which enhance the heat and mass transfer. In the present research, the phase distribution of controlled air-water flow in a horizontal acrylic round pipe with 60 mm inside diameter (D) has been investigated experimentally and modeled numerically. The modeled differential pressure and the mixture velocity profile at a distance of 33D from the mixing section (fully developed region) are computed numerically and compared with those obtained experimentally from the two-phase flow system established and maintained at the National Institute of Standards (NIS-Egypt). Furthermore, the numerical and the experimental data have been compared with previous correlations and models. Reasonable quantitative agreement between all data is found. An electronic device based on Arduino Uno board was designed and used with careful data manipulation for measuring the slug bubble velocity. The results point out that the air volume fraction has a maximum value at the upper pipe wall as the gas bubbles tend to migrate to the upper wall. A new correlation was obtained for bubble migration length to the upper pipe wall which is very important in chemical industrial processes and other engineering application.

2018 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Salameh ◽  
Y. Zurigat ◽  
A. Badran ◽  
C. Ghenai ◽  
M. El Haj Assad ◽  
...  

This paper presents three-dimensional numerical simulation results of the effect of surface tension on two-phase flow over unglazed collector covered with a wire screen. The homogenous model is used to simulate the flow with and without the effect of porous material of wire screen and surface tension. The Eulerian-Eulerian multiphase flow approach was used in this study. The phases are completely stratified, the interphase is well defined (free surface flow), and interphase transfer rate is very large. The liquid–solid interface, gas–liquid interface, and the volume fraction for both phases were considered as boundaries for this model. The results show that the use of porous material of wire screen will reduce the velocity of water flow and help the water flow to distribute evenly over unglazed plate collector. The possibility of forming any hot spot region on the surface was reduced. The water velocity with the effect of surface tension was found higher than the one without this effect, due to the extra momentum source added by surface tension in longitudinal direction. The use of porous material of wires assures an evenly distribution flow velocity over the inclined plate, therefore helps a net enhancement of heat transfer mechanism for unglazed solar water collector application.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Renato P. Coutinho ◽  
Paulo J. Waltrich ◽  
Wesley C. Williams ◽  
Parviz Mehdizadeh ◽  
Stuart Scott ◽  
...  

Abstract Liquid-assisted gas-lift (LAGL) is a recently developed concept to unload wells using a gas–liquid fluid mixture. The success deployment of the LAGL technology is related to the behavior of two-phase flow through gas-lift valves. For this reason, this work presents an experimental and numerical study on two-phase flow through orifice gas-lift valves used in liquid-assisted gas-lift unloading. To the knowledge of the authors, there is no investigation in the literature on experimental characterization of two-phase flow through gas-lift valves. Experimental data are presented for methane-water flow through gas-lift valves with different orifice port sizes: 12.7 and 17.5 mm. The experiments were performed for pressures ranging from 1.00 to 9.00 MPa, gas flow rates from 0 to 4.71 m3/h, and water flow rate from 0 to 0.68 m3/min. The experimental results are compared to numerical models published in the literature for two-phase flow through restrictions and to commercial multiphase flow simulators. It is observed that some models developed for two-phase flow through restrictions could successfully characterize two-phase flow thorough gas-lift valves with errors lower than 10%. However, it is first necessary to experimentally determine the discharge coefficient (CD) for each gas-lift valve. The commercial flow simulators showed a similar performance as the models available in the literature.


Author(s):  
Jingwen Ren ◽  
Fenglei Niu ◽  
Weiqian Zhuo ◽  
Da Wang

During a LOCA accident, the debris caused by the action of high energy fluid discharged from the break may transport to the containment sump, then may be entrained into the core by the ECCS water. The debris may cause the blockage of fuel assembly. The air may also enter the reactor with water. Numerical simulations are performed to analyze the air-water flow and particle-water flow through the blocked fuel assembly. The pressure drop in fuel assembly will impact the long-term core cooling capability. The effects of different parameters on the pressure drop over the fuel assembly are analyzed. Pressure drop increases as blockage percentage, mass flow rate or inlet velocity increases for both two-phase flow. The decrease of air volume fraction and the increase of particle volume fraction all cause the increase of pressure drop. Pressure drop increases slightly as bubble diameter increases, and the tiny effect of particle diameter on pressure drop was found as particle diameter varying at an increment of 10um.


2011 ◽  
Vol 54 (9) ◽  
pp. 2412-2420 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZhaoQin Huang ◽  
Jun Yao ◽  
YueYing Wang ◽  
Ke Tao

Author(s):  
Marco Pellegrini ◽  
Giulia Agostinelli ◽  
Hidetoshi Okada ◽  
Masanori Naitoh

Steam condensation is characterized by a relatively large interfacial region between gas and liquid which, in computational fluid dynamic (CFD) analyses, allows the creation of a discretized domain whose average cell size is larger than the interface itself. For this reason generally one fluid model with interface tracking (e.g. volume of fluid method, VOF) is employed for its solution in CFD, since the solution of the interface requires a reasonable amount of cells, reducing the modeling efforts. However, for some particular condensation applications, requiring the computation of long transients or the steam ejected through a large number of holes, one-fluid model becomes computationally too expensive for providing engineering information, and a two-fluid model (i.e. Eulerian two-phase flow) is preferable. Eulerian two-phase flow requires the introduction of closure terms representing the interactions between the two fluids in particular, in the condensation case, drag and heat transfer. Both terms involve the description of the interaction area whose definition is different from the typical one adopted in the boiling analyses. In the present work a simple but effective formulation for the interaction area is given based on the volume fraction gradient and then applied to a validation test case of steam bubbling in various subcooling conditions. It has been shown that this method gives realistic values of bubble detachment time, bubble penetration for the cases of interest in the nuclear application and in the particular application to the Fukushima Daiichi accident.


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