scholarly journals Machine Learning Classification and its Application Towards Two-phase Flow

2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 416-425
Author(s):  
Shuichiro MIWA
2020 ◽  
Vol 61 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongchao Zhang ◽  
Amirah Nabilah Azman ◽  
Ke-Wei Xu ◽  
Can Kang ◽  
Hyoung-Bum Kim

Author(s):  
Jefferson dos Santos Ambrosio ◽  
André Eugenio Lazzaretti ◽  
Daniel Rodrigues Pipa ◽  
Marco Jose da Silva

Author(s):  
Arturo Rodriguez ◽  
V. M. Krushnarao Kotteda ◽  
Luis F. Rodriguez ◽  
Vinod Kumar ◽  
Arturo Schiaffino ◽  
...  

Due to global demand for energy, there is a need to maximize oil extraction from wet reservoir sedimentary formations, which implies the efficient extraction of oil at the pore scale. The approach involves pressurizing water into the wetting oil pore of the rock for displacing and extracting the oil. The two-phase flow is complicated because of the behavior of the fluid flow at the pore scale, and capillary quantities such as surface tension, viscosities, pressure drop, radius of the medium, and contact angle become important. In the present work, we use machine learning algorithms in TensorFlow to predict the volumetric flow rate for a given pressure drop, surface tension, viscosity and geometry of the pores. The TensorFlow software library was developed by the Google Brain team and is one of the most powerful tools for developing machine learning workflows. Machine learning models can be trained on data and then these models are used to make predictions. In this paper, the predicted values for a two-phase flow of various pore sizes and liquids are validated against the numerical and experimental results in the literature.


Author(s):  
André M. Quintino ◽  
Davi L. L. N. da Rocha ◽  
Roberto Fonseca Jr. ◽  
Oscar M. H. Rodriguez

Abstract Flow pattern is an important engineering design factor in two-phase flow in the chemical, nuclear and energy industries, given its effects on pressure drop, holdup, and heat and mass transfer. The prediction of two-phase flow patterns through phenomenological models is widely used in both industry and academy. In contrast, as more experimental data become available for gas-liquid flow in pipes, the use of data-driven models to predict flow-pattern transition, such as machine learning, has become more reliable. This type of heuristic modeling has a high demand for experimental data, which may not be available in some industrial applications. As a consequence, it may fail to deliver a sufficiently generalized transition prediction. Incorporation of physics in machine learning is being proposed as an alternative to improve prediction and also to reduce the demand for experimental data. This paper evaluates the use of hybrid-physics-data machine learning to predict gas-liquid flow-pattern transition in pipes. Random forest and artificial neural network are the chosen tools. A database of experiments available in the open literature was collected and is shared in this work. The performance of the proposed hybrid model is compared with phenomenological and data-driven machine learning models through confusion matrices and graphics. The results show improvement in prediction performance even with a low amount of data for training. The study also suggests that graphical comparison of flow-pttern transition boundaries provides better understanding of the performance of the models than the traditional metric


Author(s):  
Yuta Saito ◽  
Shuhei Torisaki ◽  
Shuichiro Miwa

For rational design of industrial machineries such as nuclear power plants and heat exchanging devices, understanding of the two-phase flow regime is crucial. In this study, a new method of flow regime identification using the two-phase fluctuating force signals is proposed. Unlike the existing methodologies to measure two-phase flow parameters, the advantageous feature of utilizing the fluctuating force signal is that the measurement can be conducted under completely intrusive environment. Experiments were conducted using the tri-axial force transducers installed at the 90 degrees pipe bend of the vertical upward flow. For signal classification, machine learning techniques were utilized to identify flow regime, and four types flow regimes, namely, bubbly, slug, churn-turbulent, and annular flows were considered. From the obtained fluctuating force database, the features that characterize the signal were selected in the time and the frequency domain. In the current study, three types of machine learning algorithms such as the artificial neural network (ANN), support vector machine (SVM), and decision tree were examined and results obtained by each learning technique was compared.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaushik Manikonda ◽  
Abu Rashid Hasan ◽  
Chinemerem Edmond Obi ◽  
Raka Islam ◽  
Ahmad Khalaf Sleiti ◽  
...  

Abstract This research aims to identify the best machine learning (ML) classification techniques for classifying the flow regimes in vertical gas-liquid two-phase flow. Two-phase flow regime identification is crucial for many operations in the oil and gas industry. Processes such as flow assurance, well control, and production rely heavily on accurate identification of flow regimes for their respective systems' smooth functioning. The primary motivation for the proposed ML classification algorithm selection processes was drilling and well control applications in Deepwater wells. The process started with vertical two-phase flow data collection from literature and two different flow loops. One, a 140 ft. tall vertical flow loop with a centralized inner metal pipe and a larger outer acrylic pipe. Second, an 18-ft long flow loop, also with a centralized, inner metal drill pipe. After extensive experimental and historical data collection, supervised and unsupervised ML classification models such as Multi-class Support vector machine (MCSVM), K-Nearest Neighbor Classifier (KNN), K-means clustering, and hierarchical clustering were fit on the datasets to separate the different flow regions. The next step was fine-tuning the models' parameters and kernels. The last step was to compare the different combinations of models and refining techniques for the best prediction accuracy and the least variance. Among the different models and combinations with refining techniques, the 5- fold cross-validated KNN algorithm, with 37 neighbors, gave the optimal solution with a 98% classification accuracy on the test data. The KNN model distinguished five major, distinct flow regions for the dataset and a few minor regions. These five regions were bubbly flow, slug flow, churn flow, annular flow, and intermittent flow. The KNN-generated flow regime maps matched well with those presented by Hasan and Kabir (2018). The MCSVM model produced visually similar flow maps to KNN but significantly underperformed them in prediction accuracy. The MCSVM training errors ranged between 50% - 60% at normal parameter values and costs but went up to 99% at abnormally high values. However, their prediction accuracy was below 50% even at these highly overfitted conditions. In unsupervised models, both clustering techniques pointed to an optimal cluster number between 10 and 15, consistent with the 14 we have in the dataset. Within the context of gas kicks and well control, a well-trained, reliable two-phase flow region classification algorithm offers many advantages. When trained with well-specific data, it can act as a black box for flow regime identification and subsequent well-control measure decisions for the well. Further advancements with more robust statistical training techniques can render these algorithms as a basis for well-control measures in drilling automation software. On a broader scale, these classification techniques have many applications in flow assurance, production, and any other area with gas-liquid two-phase flow.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. e798
Author(s):  
Harold Brayan Arteaga-Arteaga ◽  
Alejandro Mora-Rubio ◽  
Frank Florez ◽  
Nicolas Murcia-Orjuela ◽  
Cristhian Eduardo Diaz-Ortega ◽  
...  

Recent advances in artificial intelligence with traditional machine learning algorithms and deep learning architectures solve complex classification problems. This work presents the performance of different artificial intelligence models to classify two-phase flow patterns, showing the best alternatives for this specific classification problem using two-phase flow regimes (liquid and gas) in pipes. Flow patterns are affected by physical variables such as superficial velocity, viscosity, density, and superficial tension. They also depend on the construction characteristics of the pipe, such as the angle of inclination and the diameter. We selected 12 databases (9,029 samples) to train and test machine learning models, considering these variables that influence the flow patterns. The primary dataset is Shoham (1982), containing 5,675 samples with six different flow patterns. An extensive set of metrics validated the results obtained. The most relevant characteristics for training the models using Shoham (1982) dataset are gas and liquid superficial velocities, angle of inclination, and diameter. Regarding the algorithms, the Extra Trees model classifies the flow patterns with the highest degree of fidelity, achieving an accuracy of 98.8%.


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