Engineering Applications of Computational Fluid Mechanics (Dec 2024)
Mass shedding rate of an isolated high-speed slug propagating in a pipeline
Abstract
An isolated liquid slug in the pipeline can accelerate and achieve a high speed when subjected to a driving pressure. During the slug’s high-speed movement in a pipeline, part of the liquid will shed from it resulting in changes in the slug’s mass and length. To understand the mass shedding mechanism, the mass shedding rate is studied using three-dimensional computational-fluid-dynamics methodology, in which the volume-of-fluid technique is applied to track the water–air interface and the RNG [Formula: see text] model is used to describe the turbulence. The effects of driving pressure, initial slug length, pipe inclination angle, pipe wall roughness and gravity on the slug mass shedding rate are investigated. The results show that the slug mass shedding rate is independent of driving pressure, initial slug length, pipe inclination angle and gravity, and it increases as a power function with the increase in wall roughness. It is explained from the mass shedding rate that when the slug’s traveled distance exceeds six times the initial slug length, the slug will break up. This paper solves the problem that there is no standard to select a reliable mass shedding rate for modeling the isolated high-speed slug propagating in pipelines.Highlights Simulate the movement of an isolated liquid slug propelled by pressurized air with 3D CFD model.Propose a model for calculating the slug mass shedding rate.Study three influence factors of the slug mass shedding rate.
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