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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Stability And Objectivity Of A Bubbly And Slug Flow Two-Fluid Model With Wake Entrainment

Krishna chaitanya Chetty anamala (9746450) 15 December 2020 (has links)
<div>The current study is aimed at developing a well-posed and objective, i.e., frame invariant, Eulerian one-dimensional (1D) Two-Fluid Model (TFM) to predict flow regime transition from dispersed to clustered bubbly and slug flow for vertical adiabatic two-phase flows. Two-phase flows in general are characterized by local material wave or void fraction wave instabilities and flow regime transitions are one of the important consequences of these instabilities. The physical mechanism of wake entrainment for clustering of dispersed bubbles is proposed, leading to formation of bubble clusters and Taylor bubbles. The focus of the work is on simulation of the local interfacial structures for bubble clusters and Taylor bubbles, using a well-posed, unstable and non-linearly bounded 1D Shallow Water TFM.</div><div><br></div><div>The first part of the current study investigates the dynamic behavior of the well posed 1D mechanistic TFM obtained from the averaging approach of Ishii [1], due to wake entrainment instability. For this, a 1D Shallow Water TFM derived from the 1D mechanistic TFM is used, which retains the same dynamic behavior as that of the latter at short wavelengths and the required wake entrainment force is derived mechanistically. Three stability approaches are followed to study the dynamic behavior of the 1D Shallow Water TFM: characteristics, dispersion analysis, and nonlinear numerical simulations. An in-house code is used for the 1D numerical simulations of the growth of void fraction waves due to wake entrainment. The simulation results are validated with the experimental data of Cheng and Azzopardi [2] and Song et al. [3] To conclude the first part, the 1D results of the two-equation Shallow Water TFM are carried over to the complete four-equation TFM for quasi 1D simulations using the commercial CFD code of ANSYS Fluent.</div><div><br></div>As an alternative to the mechanistic approach, which is based on Newtonian mathematics, a variational approach based on Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mathematics is used in the second part of the thesis. While the mechanistic approach operates in terms of forces acting on the two-phase mixture, the variational approach operates in terms of energies of the two-phase system. To derive the equations of motion using the variational approach, the extended Hamilton principle of least action is applied to the Lagrangian density of the two-phase mixture. One of the appealing features<br>17<br>of this procedure is that the derived equations of motion are objective (Geurst [4]), in particular the added mass terms.<br>Thus, the second part of the current study focuses on deriving an objective, well-posed and unstable 1D TFM as well as developing a constitutive model for the wake entrainment effect using the variational method. Additional momentum transfer terms present in both the liquid phase and gas phase momentum equations, which render the variational TFM objective, are discussed. The variational method is then used to derive the 1D Shallow Water TFM using the fixed flux assumption. The conservative interfacial momentum transfer terms require formulation of the inertial coupling between the phases. Potential flow theory is first used to derive the inertial coupling coefficient for a single bubble and then for a pair of bubbles to consider interaction between the two bubbles. Then, a lumped parameter model is used to derive the inertial coupling coefficient for the wake entrainment effect. A local drag coefficient is obtained for the non-conservative interfacial drag force from the experimental data using kinematic approximation, i.e., force balance between drag and gravity. The linear and non-linear stability analyses are used to address the stability of the 1D variational Shallow Water TFM. The presence of appropriate short-wave physics makes the 1D Shallow Water TFM hyperbolic well-posed and kinematically unstable. Finally, numerical simulations are performed to demonstrate the development of void fraction waves due wake entrainment. The growth of void fraction waves is non-linearly bounded, i.e., Lyapunov stable. The simulation results are compared with the experimental data to validate the propagation properties of void fraction waves for bubble clusters and Taylor bubbles. This work illustrates the short-wave two-phase flow simulation capability of the TFM for the bubbly to slug flow regime transition.
32

Modelagem dinâmica de separador bifásico com alimentação por escoamento em regime de golfadas / Dynamic modeling of two-phase separator with feeding for draining in regimen of slug

Rosilene Abreu Portella 07 August 2008 (has links)
Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. / O presente trabalho aborda o comportamento da planta de processamento primário com alimentação por fluxo em padrão de golfadas. O fluxo no sistema de tubulações é descrito por um modelo de parâmetros concentrados, fornecendo as características principais necessárias para o controle da planta, e a resposta dinâmica desta pode então ser analisada. Usando a estratégia de controle tradicional verifica-se que as oscilações de fluxo são transmitidas para as vazões de saída de líquido e gás, para obter uma vazão de saída mais estável é permitida a flutuação de carga no separador dentro de uma tolerância, isto é possível reduzindo a atuação do controlador e estabelecendo um controle adicional diretamente na válvula de entrada. / The present work addresses the behavior of a primary processing plant subjected to slug flow pattern at its entrance. The flow in a pipeline system is described by a simplified concentrated parameter model, which preserves the main physical features that are important to control the plant. The dynamic response of the plant is then analyzed. Using a standard control strategy for the gas liquid separator, it is seen that the flow oscillations are transmitted to the liquid and gas outlets. In order to obtain a more stable outlet flow, the liquid level in the separator is then allowed to fluctuate within a given range, by reducing the effect of the controller constants, and establishing an additional control directly on the inlet entrance valve.
33

Modelagem dinâmica de separador bifásico com alimentação por escoamento em regime de golfadas / Dynamic modeling of two-phase separator with feeding for draining in regimen of slug

Rosilene Abreu Portella 07 August 2008 (has links)
Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. / O presente trabalho aborda o comportamento da planta de processamento primário com alimentação por fluxo em padrão de golfadas. O fluxo no sistema de tubulações é descrito por um modelo de parâmetros concentrados, fornecendo as características principais necessárias para o controle da planta, e a resposta dinâmica desta pode então ser analisada. Usando a estratégia de controle tradicional verifica-se que as oscilações de fluxo são transmitidas para as vazões de saída de líquido e gás, para obter uma vazão de saída mais estável é permitida a flutuação de carga no separador dentro de uma tolerância, isto é possível reduzindo a atuação do controlador e estabelecendo um controle adicional diretamente na válvula de entrada. / The present work addresses the behavior of a primary processing plant subjected to slug flow pattern at its entrance. The flow in a pipeline system is described by a simplified concentrated parameter model, which preserves the main physical features that are important to control the plant. The dynamic response of the plant is then analyzed. Using a standard control strategy for the gas liquid separator, it is seen that the flow oscillations are transmitted to the liquid and gas outlets. In order to obtain a more stable outlet flow, the liquid level in the separator is then allowed to fluctuate within a given range, by reducing the effect of the controller constants, and establishing an additional control directly on the inlet entrance valve.

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