scholarly journals CFD Modelling of Multi-Particulate Flow through Concentric Annulus

Author(s):  
Satish Kumar Dewangan ◽  
Vivek Deshmukh

In this investigation, flow of multiparticulate lodaded liquid through concentric annulus has been considered with the consideration of rotating inner wall. The present work guides the research studies for petroleum industries in the field of wellbore drilling. The hole-cleaning issue is of utmost importance for the wellbore drilling applications. In oil-well drilling, the horizontal drilling is given more priority. The behaviour of hole cleaning is analyzed through various parameters like axial inlet flow velocity of particulate flow, inner cylinder rotational speed and inlet solid cuttings particle concentration. The effect of these aforementioned parameters on the distribution of solid-phase concentration is studied. Flow is taken as steady, incompressible and multi-particulate slurry flow with primary medium (which carries the solid phase) being water and silica sand with 6 different sizes as the six different phases. The present flow simulation has been done by taking the Eulerian approach. The shape of Silica sand is considered as spherical. ANSYS FLUENT has been used for modelling and solution. Graphs for comparison are obtained using Microsoft Excel.

2008 ◽  
Vol 11 (06) ◽  
pp. 1071-1081 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Whitaker ◽  
C. Shah Kabir ◽  
Wayne Narr

Summary The extent to which fractures affect fluid pathways is a vital component of understanding and modeling fluid flow in any reservoir. We examined the Wafra Ratawi grainstone for which production extending for 50 years, including recent horizontal drilling, has provided some clues about fractures, but their exact locations, intensity, and overall effect have been elusive. In this study, we find that a limited number of total fractures affect production characteristics of the Ratawi reservoir. Although fractures occur throughout the Wafra field, fracture-influenced reservoir behavior is confined to the periphery of the field where the matrix permeability is low. This work suggests that for the largest part of the field, explicit fractures are not necessary in the next-generation Earth and flow-simulation models. The geologic fracture assessment included seismic fault mapping and fracture interpretation of image logs and cores. Fracture trends are in the northeast and southwest quadrants, and fractures are mineralized toward the south and west of the field. Pressure-falloff tests on some peripheral injectors indicate partial barriers, and most of these wells lie on seismic-scale faults in the reservoir, suggesting partial sealing. A few wells show fractured-reservoir production characteristics, and rate-transient analysis on a few producers indicates localized dual-porosity behavior. Producers proximal to dual-porosity wells display single-porosity behavior, however, to attest to the notion of localized fracture response. The spatially restricted fracture-flow characteristics appear to correlate with fracture or vug zones in a low-permeability reservoir. Presence of fracture-flow behavior was tested by constructing the so-called flow-capacity index (FCI), the ratio of khwell (well test-derived value) to khmatrix (core-derived property). Data from 80 wells showed khmatrix to be consistently higher than khwell, a relationship that suggests insignificant fracture production in these wells. Introduction The Wafra field is in the Partitioned Neutral Zone (PNZ) between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, as shown in Fig. 1. The field has been producing since the 1950s and has seen renewed drilling activity since the late 1990s, including horizontal drilling and implementation of peripheral water injection (Davis and Habib 1999). The Lower Cretaceous Ratawi formation contains the most reserves of the producing intervals at Wafra. The Ratawi oolite (a misnomer--it is a grainstone) reservoir has variable porosity (5 to 35%) and permeability that ranges from tens to hundreds of md (Longacre and Ginger 1988). The main Wafra structure is a gentle (i.e., interlimb angle >170°), doubly plunging anticline trending north-northwest to south-southeast, which culminates near its northern end. The East Wafra spur is a north-trending branch that extends from the center of the main Wafra structure. As seen in Fig. 1, relief on the Main Wafra structure exceeds that on East Wafra. The Ratawi oolite in the Wafra field has been studied at length, and various authors have reported geologic and engineering elements, leading to reservoir characterization and understanding of reservoir performance. Geologic studies are those of Waite et al. (2000) and Sibley et al. (1997). In contrast, Davis and Habib (1999) presented implementation of peripheral water injection, whereas Chawathé et al. (2006) discussed realignment of injection pattern owing to lack of pressure support in the reservoir interior. Previous studies considered the reservoir to behave like a single-porosity system. But recent image-log fracture interpretations indicate high fracture densities, suggesting that the implementation of a dual-porosity model may be necessary because the high impact of fractures during field development has been recognized in some Middle East reservoirs for more than 50 years (Daniel 1954). Static and dynamic data are required to characterize fracture reservoir behavior accurately (Narr et al. 2006). Geologic description of the fracture system, by use of cores, borehole images, seismic data, and well logs, does not in itself determine whether fractures affect reservoir behavior. While seismic and some image logs were available to locate fractures in the Wafra Ratawi reservoir, no dynamic testing with the specific objective of understanding fracture impact has occurred. So, to determine whether fractures influence oil productivity significantly, we used diagnostic analyses of production data and well tests of available injectors. The assessment of fracture effects in the Ratawi reservoir will be used to guide the next generation of geologic and flow-simulation models. Dynamic data involving pressure and rate have the potential to reveal the influence of open fractures in production performance. Unfortunately, pressure-transient testing on single wells does not always provide conclusive evidence about the presence of fractures with the characteristic dual-porosity dip on the pressure-derivative signature (Bourdet et al. 1989). That is because a correct mixture of matrix/fracture storativity must be present for the characteristic signature to appear (Serra et al. 1983). In practice, interference testing (Beliveau 1989) between wells appears to provide more-definitive clues about interwell connectivity, leading to inference about fractures. In contrast to pressure-transient testing, rate-transient analysis offers the potential to provide the same information without dedicated testing. In this field, all wells are currently on submersible pumps. Consequently, the pump-intake pressure and measured rate provided the necessary data for pressure/rate convolution or rate-transient analysis. We provide the Ratawi-reservoir case study primarily as an example of the integration of diverse geologic and engineering data to develop an assessment of fracture influence on reservoir behavior. It illustrates the use of production-data diagnostic tests to determine fracture influence in the absence of targeted fracture-analysis testing. The workflow can be applied to similar static/dynamic problems, such as fault-transmissivity determination. Secondly, this analysis illustrates the process of deciding that fractures, although present throughout the reservoir, may not lead to widespread fractured-reservoir characteristics (e.g., Allan and Sun 2003).


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (6) ◽  
pp. 5366-5372
Author(s):  
MARIAN BOJKO ◽  
◽  
LUKAS HERTL ◽  
SYLVA DRABKOVA ◽  
◽  
...  

The twin-screw pump is designed for pumping highly viscous materials in the food industry. Rheological characteristics of materials are important in the specification of design parameters of screw pumps. Analysis of flow in the twin-screw pumps with definition of non-newtonian materials can be made by numerical modelling. CFD generally oriented software ANSYS Fluent and ANSYS Polyflow has been used for modelling. In this study those software’s (ANSYS Fluent and ANSYS Polyflow) were defined for solution of flow in the twin-screw pumps. Results were compared for the same boundary conditions on the inlet and outlet of the 3D model. For definition of the viscosity were used the Nonnewtonian power law. Parameters as consistency coefficient and flow exponent for Nonnewtonian power law were analysed by software ANSYS Fluent and ANSYS Polyflow. Postprocessing form ANSYS Fluent and ANSYS Polyflow were made by contours of field and by graphs.


2020 ◽  
pp. 45-51
Author(s):  
Pavel Timofeev ◽  
◽  
Vladimir Panchenko ◽  
Sergey Kharchyk ◽  
◽  
...  

This study presents flow simulation over the reentry capsule at supersonic and hypersonic speeds. Numerical algorithms solve for the CFD method, which is produced using help ANSYS Fluent 19.2. The using GPU core to get a solution faster. The main purpose – flow simulation and numerical analysis reentry capsule; understand the behavior of supersonic and hypersonic flow and its effect on the reentry capsule; compare temperature results for the range Mach numbers equals 2–6. This study showed results on velocity counters, on temperature counters and vector of velocity for range Mach numbers equals 2–6. This study demonstrates the importance of understanding the effects of shock waves and illustrates how the shock wave changes as the Mach number increases. For every solves, the mesh had adapted for pressure gradient and velocity gradient to get the exact solution. As a result of the obtained solution, it is found that a curved shock wave appears in front of the reentry capsule. The central part of which is a forward shock. An angular expansion process is observed, which is a modified picture of the Prandtl- Mayer flow that occurs in a supersonic flow near the sharp edge of the expanding region. It is revealed that with an increase in the Mach number, the shock wave approaches the bottom of the reentry capsule, and there is also a slope of the shock to the flow direction, with an increase in the Mach number. The relevance and significance of this problem for the design of new and modernization of old reentry capsules.


Author(s):  
Mansour Al Qubeissi ◽  
Nawar Al-Esawi ◽  
Hakan Serhad Soyhan

The previously developed models for fuel droplet heating and evaporation processes, mainly the Discrete Multi Component Model (DMCM), and Multi-Dimensional Quasi-Discrete Model (MDQDM) are investigated for the aerodynamic combustion simulation. The models have been recently improved, and generalised for a broad range of bio-fossil fuel blends so that the application areas are broadened with increased accuracy. The main distinctive features of these models are that they consider the impacts of species thermal conductivities and diffusivities within the droplets to account for the temperature gradient, transient diffusion of species and recirculation. A formulation of fuel surrogates is made, using the recently introduced model, referred to as ‘’Complex Fuel Surrogate Model (CFSM)’’ and analysing their heating, evaporation, and combustion characteristics. The CFSM is aimed to reduce the full composition of fuel to a much smaller number of components based on their mass fractions, and to formulate fuel surrogates. Such approach has provided a proof of concept with the implementation of the developed model into a commercial CFD code ANSYS-Fluent. A case study is made for the CFD modelling of gas-turbine engine using kerosene fuel surrogate. The surrogate is proposed using the CFSM. The model is implemented into ANSYS-Fluent via a user-defined function to provide the first full simulation of the combustion process. Detailed chemical mechanism is also implemented into ANSYS Chemkin for the combustion study.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 1602-1615
Author(s):  
Xu-Yue Chen ◽  
Tong Cao ◽  
Kai-An Yu ◽  
De-Li Gao ◽  
Jin Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractEfficient cuttings transport and improving rate of penetration (ROP) are two major challenges in horizontal drilling and extended reach drilling. A type of jet mill bit (JMB) may provide an opportunity to catch the two birds with one stone: not only enhancing cuttings transport efficiency but also improving ROP by depressuring at the bottom hole. In this paper, the JMB is further improved and a new type of depressure-dominated JMB is presented; meanwhile, the depressurization capacity of the depressure-dominated JMB is investigated by numerical simulation and experiment. The numerical study shows that low flow-rate ratio helps to enhance the depressurization capacity of the depressure-dominated JMB; for both depressurization and bottom hole cleaning concern, the flow-rate ratio is suggested to be set at approximately 1:1. With all other parameter values being constant, lower dimensionless nozzle-to-throat-area ratio may result in higher depressurization capacity and better bottom hole cleaning, and the optimal dimensionless nozzle-to-throat-area ratio is at approximately 0.15. Experiments also indicate that reducing the dimensionless flow-rate ratio may help to increase the depressurization capacity of the depressure-dominated JMB. This work provides drilling engineers with a promising tool to improve ROP.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingyu Qu ◽  
Tie Yan ◽  
Xiaofeng Sun ◽  
Zijian Li ◽  
Wei Li

The hole cleaning device is a powerful application which can effectively slow down the deposition of cuttings during drilling. However, in this complicated swirl flow created by the device, the decay of the swirl flow and the particle behavior are not evident yet. In this paper, the decay of the swirl flow and the particle behavior in the swirl flow field are studied by the Eulerian–Eulerian two-fluid model (TFM) coupled with the kinetic theory of granular flows (KTGF), and sliding mesh (SM) technique for simulating the fluid flow. The results show that the swirl intensity decays exponentially along the flow direction under laminar flow conditions. The swirl flow has a longer acting distance at a higher rotational speed, which can effectively slow down the deposition of cutting particles. The initial swirl intensity of swirl flow induced by the blades increases significantly with the increase of blade height and the decrease of the blade angle. The tangential velocity of the cutting particles in the annulus is more significant near the central region, gradually decreases toward the wall in the radial direction, and rapidly decreases to 0 at the wall surface. The decay rate is negatively correlated with the initial swirl intensity. The results presented here may provide a useful reference for the design of the hole cleaning device.


2018 ◽  
Vol 232 ◽  
pp. 04047
Author(s):  
Chia-kan Chang ◽  
Jingjing Huang ◽  
Cong Zhang ◽  
Yue Gao ◽  
Ya-ni Wang ◽  
...  

Traditional tilt rotor aircraft rely on turning the whole engine nacelle, to accomplish the transformation between vertical take-off and landing as well as flying. This scheme has a large rotational inertia and requires a heavy and complex tilting mechanism. the engine jet flow in the process of vertical take-off and landing directly spray down, and this flow could blow up the sand and stone, let engine suck it in or hurt people. So this paper designed a new rotated way based on variable shaft Angle gear transmission. The carrier aircraft design scheme referenced the data come from following software and website. The data of airfoils come from the software profili and the website Airfoil Investigation Database. The pressure distribution as well as air flow simulation and calculation is based on XFLR5. The mechanical, appearance and overall design is based on CATIA. The gear contour design is based on CAXA CAD and the full-aircraft aerodynamic simulation is based on ANSYS/FLUENT. The engine with this design is fixed, so it only needs rotate the tilting rotor shaft, and the mechanical structure is relatively simple, which make this aircraft can play an important role in the future logistics and transportation system.


2014 ◽  
Vol 699 ◽  
pp. 730-735
Author(s):  
Kamariah Md Isa ◽  
Kahar Osman ◽  
Nik Rosli Abdullah ◽  
Azfarizal Mukhtar ◽  
Nor Fadzilah Othman

One of the unresolved issues in using the gasifier is the inability to determine the occurrence of the transition regime of fluidized bed. In modeling gas-solid phase, drag force is one of the main mechanisms for inter-phase momentum transfer. Thus, a simulation of fluidized bed was developed to study the effect of using various drag models over different bed height of H/D ratio such as 0.5, 1 and 2. A two dimensional model using Eulerian-Granular Multiphase Model (EGM) based on two fluid models have been used to simulate hydrodynamics of a bubbling fluidized beds. Gas-solid interactions are modeled via inter-phase of a drag model. The drag correlations of Gidaspow, Wen Yu, Syamlal-O'Brien, Hill Koch Ladd (HKL) and Representative Unit Cell (RUC) were implemented to simulate the interaction between phases. From this study, we found that different H/D ratio such as 0.5, 1 and 2 yields different volume fraction as increasing bed height slows kinetic transport of particle sand to the upper side of the bed. Besides that, different H/D ratio also resulted in different velocity vector. The results also show that Wen Yu and Syamlal-O'Brien are sufficient enough in detecting the change from one regime to another regardless of the bed height.


Author(s):  
Sahand Pirouzpanah ◽  
Gerald L. Morrison

Electrical Submersible Pumps (ESPs) are widely used in upstream oil production. The presence of a low concentration solid phase, particle-laden flow, in the production fluid may cause severe damage in the internal sections of the pump which reduces its operating lifetime. To better understand the ESP pump’s endurance, an ESP-WJE1000, manufactured by Baker Hughes Company was studied numerically to determine the pump’s flow behavior at its best efficiency point. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysis was conducted on two stages of the pump’s primary flow path employing Eulerian-Granular scheme in ANSYS-Fluent. The key parameters affecting the erosion phenomena within the pump such as turbulence kinetic energy, local sand concentration and near wall relative sand velocity were identified. The predictive erosion model applicable to pumps was developed by correlating the erosion key parameters with available experimental results.


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