The impact of flow regimes on asymmetry of orographic drag at moderate and low Rossby numbers

2000 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haraldur Ólafsson
SPE Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (03) ◽  
pp. 1234-1247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuangmei Zou ◽  
Ryan T. Armstrong

Summary Wettability is a major factor that influences multiphase flow in porous media. Numerous experimental studies have reported wettability effects on relative permeability. Laboratory determination for the impact of wettability on relative permeability continues to be a challenge because of difficulties with quantifying wettability alteration, correcting for capillary-end effect, and observing pore-scale flow regimes during core-scale experiments. Herein, we studied the impact of wettability alteration on relative permeability by integrating laboratory steady-state experiments with in-situ high-resolution imaging. We characterized wettability alteration at the core scale by conventional laboratory methods and used history matching for relative permeability determination to account for capillary-end effect. We found that because of wettability alteration from water-wet to mixed-wet conditions, oil relative permeability decreased while water relative permeability slightly increased. For the mixed-wet condition, the pore-scale data demonstrated that the interaction of viscous and capillary forces resulted in viscous-dominated flow, whereby nonwetting phase was able to flow through the smaller regions of the pore space. Overall, this study demonstrates how special-core-analysis (SCAL) techniques can be coupled with pore-scale imaging to provide further insights on pore-scale flow regimes during dynamic coreflooding experiments.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annelize VanNiekerk ◽  
Irina Sandu

<p>Mountains are know to impact the atmospheric circulation on a variety of spatial scales and through a number of different processes. They exert a drag force on the atmosphere both locally through deflection of the flow and remotely through the generation of atmospheric gravity waves. The degree to which orographic drag parametrizations are able to capture the complex impacts on the circulation from realistic orography in high resolution simulations is examined here. We present results from COnstraing ORographic Drag Effects (COORDE), a project joint with the Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WGNE) and Global Atmospheric System Studies (GASS). The aim of COORDE is to validate parametrized orographic drag in several operational models in order to determine both systematic and model dependent errors over complex terrain. To do this, we compare the effects of parametrized orographic drag on the circulation with those of the resolved orographic drag, deduced from km-scale resolution simulations which are able to resolve orographic low-level blocking and gravity-wave effects. We show that there is a large spread in the impact from parametrized orographic drag between the models but that the impact from resolved orography is much more robust. This is encouraging as it means that the km-scale simulations can be used to evaluate the caveats of the existing orographic drag parametrizations. Analysis of the parametrized drag tendencies and stresses shows that much of the spread in the parametrized orographic drag comes from differences in the partitioning of the drag into turbulent and flow blocking drag near the surface. What is more, much of the model error over complex terrain can be attributed to deficiencies in the parametrized orographic drag, particularly coming from the orographic gravity wave drag.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Betty Sovilla ◽  
Michael Kyburz ◽  
Camille Ligneau ◽  
Jan-Thomas Fischer ◽  
Mark Schaer

<p>Measurements of snow avalanche impact pressures are performed at the Vallée de la Sionne test site since winter 1999. In these years of operation, we recorded the impact pressure of around 60 avalanches characterized by different flow regimes and dimensions.</p><p>Pressure measurements were performed, simultaneously, on three different structures which are spatially distributed with a maximum distance of 30 m, in the run-out zone of the Vallée de la Sionne test site. The structure widths range from 0.25 to 1 m. On these structures pressure sensors ranging from small cells with 0.10 to 0.25 m in diameter to large pressure plates with area of 1m<sup>2 </sup>are mounted at different heights.</p><p>A systematic analysis of all 60 avalanche data sets shows that the pressure measured at the different obstacles varies considerably, even within the same avalanche, both in space and time. Part of these differences can be attributed to different drag coefficients and dependence on obstacle size, but a large part of these differences can only be explained by the spatial variability of the flow properties and the temporal variability of the physical processes governing the interaction of the avalanche and the structures.</p><p>In this contribution we show how spatial and temporal impact pressure variabilities correlate to avalanche dimension and flow regimes and we discuss the implication of such variations for structural design and hazard mapping.</p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 783-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Döll ◽  
J. Zhang

Abstract. River flow regimes, including long-term average flows, seasonality, low flows, high flows and other types of flow variability, play an important role for freshwater ecosystems. Thus, climate change affects freshwater ecosystems not only by increased temperatures but also by altered river flow regimes. However, with one exception, transferable quantitative relations between flow alterations and ecological responses have not yet been derived. While discharge decreases are generally considered to be detrimental for ecosystems, the effect of future discharge increases is unclear. As a first step towards a global-scale analysis of climate change impacts on freshwater ecosystems, we quantified the impact of climate change on five ecologically relevant river flow indicators, using the global water model WaterGAP 2.1g to simulate monthly time series of river discharge with a spatial resolution of 0.5 degrees. Four climate change scenarios based on two global climate models and two greenhouse gas emissions scenarios were evaluated. We compared the impact of climate change by the 2050s to the impact of water withdrawals and dams on natural flow regimes that had occurred by 2002. Climate change was computed to alter seasonal flow regimes significantly (i.e. by more than 10%) on 90% of the global land area (excluding Greenland and Antarctica), as compared to only one quarter of the land area that had suffered from significant seasonal flow regime alterations due to dams and water withdrawals. Due to climate change, the timing of the maximum mean monthly river discharge will be shifted by at least one month on one third on the global land area, more often towards earlier months (mainly due to earlier snowmelt). Dams and withdrawals had caused comparable shifts on less than 5% of the land area only. Long-term average annual river discharge is predicted to significantly increase on one half of the land area, and to significantly decrease on one quarter. Dams and withdrawals had led to significant decreases on one sixth of the land area, and nowhere to increases. Thus, by the 2050s, climate change may have impacted ecologically relevant river flow characteristics more strongly than dams and water withdrawals have up to now. The only exception refers to the decrease of the statistical low flow Q90, with significant decreases both by past water withdrawals and future climate change on one quarter of the land area. However, dam impacts are likely underestimated by our study. Considering long-term average river discharge, only a few regions, including Spain, Italy, Iraq, Southern India, Western China, the Australian Murray Darling Basin and the High Plains Aquifer in the USA, all of them with extensive irrigation, are expected to be less affected by climate change than by past anthropogenic flow alterations. In some of these regions, climate change will exacerbate the discharge reductions, while in others climate change provides opportunities for reducing past reductions. Emissions scenario B2 leads to only slightly reduced alterations of river flow regimes as compared to scenario A2 even though emissions are much smaller. The differences in alterations resulting from the two applied climate models are larger than those resulting from the two emissions scenarios. Based on general knowledge about ecosystem responses to flow alterations and data related to flow alterations by dams and water withdrawals, we expect that the computed climate change induced river flow alterations will impact freshwater ecosystems more strongly than past anthropogenic alterations.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anselm Köhler ◽  
Jan-Thomas Fischer ◽  
Riccardo Scandroglio ◽  
Mathias Bavay ◽  
Jim McElwaine ◽  
...  

Abstract. Large avalanches usually encounter different snow conditions along their track. When they release as slab avalanches comprising cold snow, they can subsequently develop into powder snow avalanches entraining snow as they move down the mountain. Typically, this entrained snow will be cold (T < −1 °C) at high elevations near the surface, but warm (T > −1 °C) at lower elevations or deeper in the snow pack. The intake of thermal energy in the form of warm snow is believed to cause a flow regime transition. Measurements of flow regime transitions are performed at the Vallée de la Sionne avalanche test site in Switzerland using two different radar systems. The data are then combined with snow temperatures calculated with the snow cover model SNOWPACK. We define transitions as complete, when the deposit at runout is characterized only by warm snow, or as partial, if there is a warm flow regime but the furthest deposit is characterized by cold snow. We introduce a transition factor Ft, based on the runout of cold and warm flow regimes, as a measure to quantify the transition type. Finally, we parameterize the snow cover temperature along the avalanche track by the altitude Hs, which represents the point where the average temperature of the uppermost 0.5 m changes from cold to warm. We find that Ft is related to the snow cover properties, i.e. approximately proportional to Hs. Thus, the flow regime in the runout area and the type of transition can be predicted by knowing the snow cover temperature distribution. We find, that, if Hs is more than 500 m above the valley floor for the path geometry of Vallée de la Sionne, entrainment of warm surface snow leads to a complete flow regime transition and the runout area is reached by only warm flow regimes. Such knowledge is of great importance since the impact pressure and the effectiveness of protection measures are greatly dependent on the flow regime.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Saxe ◽  
Terri S. Hogue ◽  
Lauren Hay

Abstract. This research investigates the impact of wildfires on watershed flow regimes, specifically focusing on evaluation of fire events within specified hydroclimatic regions in the western United States. Information on fire events and watershed characteristics were collected through federal and state-level databases and streamflow data were collected from U.S. Geological Survey stream gages. Eighty two watersheds were identified with at least ten years of continuous pre-fire daily streamflow records and five years of continuous post-fire daily flow records. For each watershed, percent change in annual runoff ratio, low-flows, high-flows, peak flows, number of zero flow days, baseflow index, and Richards-Baker flashiness index were calculated using pre- and post-fire periods. The gathered watersheds were divided into nine regions or clusters through k-means clustering and regression models were produced for watersheds grouped by total area burned. The coefficient of determination (R2) was used to determine the accuracy of the resulting models. Results show that low flows, high flows, and peak flows increase significantly in the first two years following a wildfire and decrease over time. Relative response was utilized to scale response variables with respective percent area of watershed burned in order to compare regional differences in watershed response. Watersheds in Cluster 9 (eastern CA, western NV, OR) typically demonstrate a negative relative post-fire response, in that when scaling response to area burned, a slight negative response is observed in flow regimes. Most other watersheds show a positive mean relative response. In addition, regression models show limited correlation between percent watershed burned and streamflow response, implying that other watershed factors strongly influence response.


Author(s):  
Chekema N. Prince ◽  
Sean D. Peterson ◽  
Michael W. Plesniak

The complex geometry of the vascular system can induce the development of complex primary and secondary flow regimes within blood vessels. Recent literature has focused on the impact of these complex flow regimes on endothelial cells (EC), which line blood vessels, and their role on the progression of vascular disease. One such disease, atherosclerosis has been linked to the reaction of ECs to flow conditions. Atherosclerosis is often treated by stent implantation to return the vessel lumen to its native diameter. It is hypothesized that stent struts may alter the development of secondary flow within the vessel and cause re-stenosis and/or thrombosis distal to the stent.


2019 ◽  
Vol 864 ◽  
pp. 449-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Scheichl ◽  
A. Kluwick

The steady laminar annular spread of a thin liquid film generated by a circular jet which impinges perpendicularly in direction of gravity on the centre of a rotating disc is examined both analytically and numerically. Matched asymptotic expansions of the flow quantities provide the proper means for studying the individual flow regimes arising due to the largeness of the Reynolds number formed with the radius of the jet, its slenderness and the relative magnitude of the centrifugal body force. This is measured by a suitably defined Rossby number, $Ro$. The careful analysis of jet impingement predicts a marked influence of gravity and surface tension on the film flow, considered in the spirit of a shallow-water approach, only through the vorticity imposed by the jet flow. Accordingly, associated downstream conditions are disregarded as the local Froude and Weber numbers are taken to be sufficiently large. Hence, the parabolic problem shaped from the governing equations in a rigorous manner describes the strongly supercritical spread of a developed viscous film past an infinite disc, essentially controlled by $Ro$. Its numerical solutions are discussed for a wide range of values of $Ro$. The different flow regimes reflecting varying effects of viscous shear and centrifugal force are elucidated systematically to clarify the surprising richness of flow phenomena. Special attention is paid to the cases $Ro\gg 1$ and $Ro\ll 1$. The latter, referring to relatively high disc spin, implies a delicate breakdown of the asymptotic flow structure, thus requiring a specific analytical and numerical treatment. Finally, the impact of gravity and capillarity and thus of the disc edge on the film flow is envisaged in brief.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon M. Graham ◽  
Hunter Thomson ◽  
Deborah Bowering ◽  
Robert Stalker

Abstract Current scale risk analysis focuses on thermodynamic calculations to determine the risk of scale, ignoring system kinetics and the impact of flow regimes on scale precipitation from mildly oversaturated systems. It is however recognised that flow regimes affect scale precipitation. Surface growth is influenced by mass transport and diffusion which are susceptible to shear stress and turbulence. Little work has been reported which examine these factors under conditions that can be readily tuned to match field production conditions. Scale inhibitor evaluation exercises therefore often rely on conventional low shear/static or laminar flow conditions which have been demonstrated in many papers to be largely inadequate for mildly oversaturated systems. This work addresses this concept and focuses on scale deposition and growth at metal surfaces as well as bulk (liquid phase) nucleation and growth in mildly oversaturated brines as a function of increasing shear. A series of controlled experiments have been conducted under “mildly oversaturated” conditions to examine the effect of; no shear conventional “static” tests, moderate shear mixed statics and much higher shear regimes including rotating cage and jet impingement approaches with calculated shear stresses up to 500 Pa and higher. This builds on previous work published by the authors in this area1 and further illustrates the importance of conducting tests at field representative shear conditions. Since shear and turbulence have a governing effect on the critical scaling tendency (the level of oversaturation below which brines remain stable under normal production conditions) the ability to correlate between shear and the propensity for scaling in mildly oversaturated systems is critically important in determining the risk of scale at different locations in the production stream. New test methods have been validated which allow the impact of shear and turbulence to be observed under conditions more representative of production conditions. These methodologies lead to scaling in mildly oversaturated brine systems without having to adjust brine chemistry or otherwise increase the scaling regime, i.e. by adjusting the flow regime to reproduce the shear expected at critical locations in the production system. Improved methodologies are therefore presented which allow more appropriate scale inhibitor qualification, taking into account the impact of shear and turbulence under field representative conditions. The work shows that this is critically important for mildly oversaturated conditions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document