Simultaneous Measurement of Two-Phase Velocities in Particle Laden Water Jet by Means of PIV

2003 ◽  
Vol 2003.6 (0) ◽  
pp. 307-308
Author(s):  
Tsuneaki ISHIMA ◽  
Toshimichi ARAI ◽  
Toru YAMAMOTO ◽  
Tomio OBOKATA
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas S. Tavouktsoglou ◽  
Aggelos Dimakopoulos ◽  
Jeremy Spearman ◽  
Richard J. S. Whitehouse

Abstract Submerged water jet causing soil excavation is a typical water-soil interaction process that occurs widely in many engineering disciplines. In hydraulic engineering for instance, a typical example would be scour downstream of headcuts, culverts, or dam spillways. In port and waterway engineering, erosion of the channel bed or quay wall by the propellers of passing ships are also typical water jet/soil interaction problems. In ocean engineering, trenching by impinging high-velocity water jets has been used as an efficient method for cable and pipeline burial. At present, physical modelling and simple prediction equations have been the main practical engineering tool for evaluating scour in these situations. However, with the increasing computational power of modern computers and the development of new Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) solvers, scour prediction in such engineering problems has become possible. In the present work three-dimensional (3D) numerical modelling has been applied to reproduce the capability of a pair of water jets to backfill an excavated trench. The simulations are carried out using a state-of-the-art three-dimensional Eulerian two-phase scour model based on the open source CFD software OpenFOAM. The fluid phase is resolved by solving modified Navier-Stokes equations, which take into consideration the influence of the solid phase, i.e., the soil particles. This paper first presents a validation of the numerical model against vertical jet erosion tests from the literature and conducted at HR Wallingford. The results of the model show good agreement with the experimental tests, with the numerical model predicting the scour hole depth and extent with good accuracy. The paper then presents a validation of the model’s ability to reproduce deposition which is evaluated through a comparison with settling velocity data and empirical formulations found in literature, again with the model showing good agreement. Finally, the model is applied to a prototype cable burial problem using a commercially available controlled flow jet excavator. The study found that the use of water jets can be effective (subject to confirmation of the time-scale required for real operations) for performing backfill operations but that the effectiveness is closely related to the type of sediment and selection of an appropriate jet discharge. As a result, in order for the water jet method to be effective for backfill, there is a requirement for a good description of the variation in sediment type along the trench and a requirement for the jet discharge to be varied as different sediment types are encountered.


2011 ◽  
Vol 189-193 ◽  
pp. 2181-2184
Author(s):  
Heng Zhang ◽  
Xiao Ming Qian ◽  
Zhi Min Lu ◽  
Yuan Bai

The functions of hydroentangled nonwovens are determined by the degree of the fiber entanglement, which depend mainly on parameters of the water jet. According to the spun lacing technology, this paper set up the numerical model based on the simplified water jetting model, establishing the governing equations, and the blended two-phase flow as the multiphase flow model. This paper simulation the water needle after the water jetting from the water needle plate in the different pressure (100bar, 60bar, 45bar, 35bar).


Author(s):  
Daniel Trainer ◽  
Sung Jin Kim

Air injection into a liquid impinging jet has been shown to be a method of improving non-phase change heat transfer rates by up to twice the normal amount. Previous work has shown that there exists an optimal operating point in terms of the volumetric fraction of air injection when the pumping power is held constant because of an optimal two-phase flow pattern. However, previous work focused on heat transfer from the impingement point only, and neglected performance at other points. The present work studies the local heat transfer performance of an air-assisted water jet, at the impingement point and at positions moving radially outward, under constant pumping power conditions. The area-averaged heat transfer is also considered. Heat transfer at the stagnation point is shown to be optimized between β = 0.1∼0.2, where a bubbly flow pattern exists. Nuavg(r/D ≤ 1) is optimized when the flow pattern was plug-flow and off-center peaks in Nur exist. Nuavg(r/D > 1) is optimized when the water is accelerated by the injected air, but splattering is avoided. Flow patterns have no direct effect outside the impingement region.


Author(s):  
Kenji Yoshida ◽  
Isao Kataoka ◽  
Hiroshi Yoshida ◽  
Mitsuru Yokoo ◽  
Kiyoshi Horii

Analyses of water jet based on two-fluid model of two-phase dispersed flow have been carried out for single water jet and cross water jet in relation to the water jet technology in civil engineering. Mass and momentum conservation equations for liquid phase (droplet) gas phase (air) were formulated separately (two-fluid model formulation). Physical modeling of diffusion of droplets, drag coefficient of droplet in dispersed flow, shear stress at jet interface, etc has been carried out in detail and constitutive equations for these physical phenomena have been developed. Based on the two-fluid model basic equations and constitutive equations, one-dimensional analysis has been carried out considering simplified model. In the practical application of present analyses, some preliminary analyses on cross jet where two water jets collide with certain collision angles have been carried out and the predicted results reasonably explain the experimental results.


Author(s):  
J. C. Jepsen ◽  
J. L. Ralph

The object of this study was to obtain data on the radial variation of gas- and liquid-phase mass flux profiles in two-phase upflow in vertical pipelines. Experimental data were obtained on the radial gas-liquid flux, impact pressure, and linear liquid-phase velocity profiles for superficial gas- and liquid-phase velocities ranging from 20 to 125 ft/s and from 5 to 15 ft/s, respectively. Studies were made on 1-in, 4-in, and 8·4-in vertical pipelines and in a 1-in i.d. by 8·4-in o.d. vertical annular flow pipeline. Gas-liquid systems studied were air-water, air-aqueous glycerol, and air-tetrabromoethane. In Part 2 time-averaged radial liquid hold-up and linear-phase velocities were estimated from radial mass flux and impact pressure data. Estimates were also made on the magnitude, frequency, and velocity of the flow disturbances. Empirical correlations for mean liquid hold-up and pressure drop were developed from experimental data.


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. G. McDonell ◽  
G. S. Samuelsen

The present data set consists of detailed measurements obtained within methanol sprays produced by a research atomizer which is operated with three atomizing air modes: none, non-swirling, and swirling. In addition, the cases with nonswirling and swirling atomizing air are characterized under reacting conditions. In each case, state-of-the-art diagnostics are applied. Measurements of the gas phase velocities in both the single and two-phase cases, droplet size distributions, and vapor concentration are obtained. The data are reported in a standardized format to ensure usefulness as modeling challenges. The results obtained reveal the presence of significant interaction between phases and significant changes in spray structure as a result of altering the atomizing air characteristics. Efforts have been directed toward delineation of errors and comparison with existing data sets where possible. The results is a comprehensive data base for vaporizing sprays under reacting and non-reacting conditions which permit a systematic variation in aerodynamic effects to be explored.


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