Joule-Thomson Effect on Heat Transfer in CO2 Injection Wellbore

2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 1411-1414
Author(s):  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Cheng Hu ◽  
Yong Chen Song

Ramey model is a classical wellbore heat transfer model. However Ramey model did not consider Joule-Thomson effect. In this paper, Ramey model is improved by considering Joule-Thomson effect. The results show that Joule-Thomson effect will cause fluid temperature higher due to a positive Joule-Thomson coefficient and pressure rise. Injection temperature has little effect on fluid temperature. Fluid pressure is influenced by fluid viscidity. Higher injection pressure leads to faster pressure increasing speed.

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1001
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Lu ◽  
Yarong Wang ◽  
Jing Ding

The temperature distribution and thermal efficiency of a molten salt cavity receiver are investigated by a nonuniform heat transfer model based on thermal resistance analysis. For the cavity receiver MSEE in Sandia National Laboratories, thermal efficiency in this experiment is about 87.5%, and the calculation value of 86.93–87.79% by a present nonuniform model fits very well with the experimental result. Different from the uniform heat transfer model, the receiver surface temperature in the nonuniform heat transfer model is remarkably higher than the backwall temperature. The incident radiation flux plays a primary role in thermal performance of cavity receiver, and thermal efficiency approaches to maximum under optimal incident radiation flux. In order to increase thermal efficiency, various methods are proposed and studied, including heat convection enhancement by an increase of flow velocity or the decrease of the tube diameter and number of tubes in the panel, and heat loss decline by a decrease of view factor, surface emissivity and insulation conductivity. According to calculation results by different modes of the nonuniform heat transfer model, the thermal efficiency of the cavity receiver is reduced by nonuniform heat transfer caused by variable fluid temperature or variable circumferential temperature, so thermal efficiency calculated by variable fluid temperature and variable circumferential temperature is lower than that calculated by average fluid temperature and bilateral uniform circumferential temperature for 0.86%.


2014 ◽  
Vol 889-890 ◽  
pp. 1638-1643
Author(s):  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Tong Tong Li ◽  
Yong Chen Song ◽  
Duo Li ◽  
Yang Chun Zhan ◽  
...  

The sensitivity analysis of wellbore heat transfer during the CO2injection process is of vital importance to Carbon dioxide utilization and sequestration (CCUS). A numerical simulation method is developed to simulate the process of wellbore heat transfer during injecting carbon dioxide by amending the classical heat transfer modelRamey models. It analyses how the selected parameters affect the distribution of the wellbore temperature and pressure, which include CO2injection temperature, pressure and density, the injection flow rate and Joule Thomson coefficient. The results show that, CO2injection temperature has greater impact on the initial level of the temperature distribution; higher injection pressure raises the temperature mainly because of the effect of Joule Thomson coefficient; also, when the injection process lasts a longer time, the distribution is much more stable. When the injection flow rate is higher, the strata temperature has less influence on the flow temperature. The injection pressure and density has very appreciable effect on the pressure distribution. However, the other parameters have less influence on it. The modified simulation method was applied in Jiangsu Caoshe oil field and the simulation results coincided with the measuring data well.


Author(s):  
Johnathon P. Putrus ◽  
Stanley T. Jones ◽  
Badih A. Jawad ◽  
Giscard Kfoury ◽  
Selin Arslan ◽  
...  

Thermal management systems (TMS) of armored ground vehicle designs are often incapable of sustained heat rejection during high tractive effort conditions and ambient conditions. Latent heat energy storage systems that utilize Phase Change Materials (PCMs) present an effective way of storing thermal energy and offer key advantages such as high-energy storage density, high heat of fusion values, and greater stability in temperature control. Military vehicles frequently undergo high-transient thermal loads and often do not provide adequate cooling for powertrain subsystems. This work outlines an approach to temporarily store excess heat generated by the transmission during high tractive effort situations through the use of a passive PCM retrofit thereby extending the operating time, reducing temperature transients, and limiting overheating. A numerical heat transfer model has been developed based on a conceptual vehicle transmission TMS. The model predicts the transmission fluid temperature response with and without a PCM retrofit. The developed model captures the physics of the phase change processes to predict the transient heat absorption and rejection processes. It will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of proposed candidate implementations and provide input for TMS evaluations. Parametric studies of the heat transfer model have been conducted to establish desirable structural morphologies and PCM thermophysical properties. Key parameters include surface structural characteristics, conduction enhancing material, surface area, and PCM properties such as melt temperature, heat of fusion, and thermal conductivity. To demonstrate proof-of-concept, a passive PCM enclosure has been designed to be integrated between a transmission bell housing and torque converter. This PCM-augmented module will temporarily strategically absorb and release heat from the system at a controlled rate. This allows surging fluid temperatures to be clamped below the maximum effective fluid temperature rating thereby increasing component life, reliability, and performance. This work outlines cooling system boundary conditions, mobility/thermal loads, model details, enclosure design characteristics, potential PCM candidates, design considerations, performance data, cooling system impacts, conclusions, and potential future work.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-150
Author(s):  
Murat Tunc ◽  
Ayse Nur Esen ◽  
Doruk Sen ◽  
Ahmet Karakas

A theoretical post-dryout heat transfer model is developed for two-phase dispersed flow, one-dimensional vertical pipe in a post-CHF regime. Because of the presence of average droplet diameter lower bound in a two-phase sparse flow. Droplet diameter is also calculated. Obtained results are compared with experimental values. Experimental data is used two-phase flow steam-water in VVER-1200, reactor coolant system, reactor operating pressure is 16.2 MPa. On heater rod surface, dryout was detected as a result of jumping increase of the heater rod surface temperature. Results obtained display lower droplet dimensions than the experimentally obtained values.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filip Kitanoski ◽  
Wolfgang Puntigam ◽  
Martin Kozek ◽  
Josef Hager

2021 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 104456
Author(s):  
Zhuoran Zhang ◽  
Pratik Krishnan ◽  
Zeren Jiao ◽  
M. Sam Mannan ◽  
Qingsheng Wang

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