4.7 Article

Numerical and experimental simulation of gas-liquid two-phase flow in 90-degree elbow

Journal

ALEXANDRIA ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 61, Issue 3, Pages 2536-2550

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aej.2021.07.011

Keywords

Air-water; Horizontal Slug Flow; 90-degree Elbow; Curvature radius; Hydrodynamics behavior

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This research investigated the effects of 90-degree horizontal elbows on gas-liquid slug flow patterns using experimental and numerical methods. The results showed that, while the dominant frequency remained unchanged, the signal bandwidth increased with increasing curvature radius of the elbows. Additionally, turbulence intensity behaved smoother with larger curvature radius, and swirling intensity increased with smaller elbow radius.
In the present research, the effects of four 90-degree horizontal elbows with different curvature radii (17, 34, 51, and 68 cm) and an identical rectangular cross-section (20 * 34 mm) on a gas-liquid slug flow pattern have been studied experimentally and numerically. Gas and liquid superficial velocities in numerical and experimental parts were set in 2.5 m/s and 0.44 m/s, respectively. In the computational fluid dynamics section, the distribution of volume fraction, velocity, pressure, turbulence intensity, and swirling intensity parameters were investigated using the VoF model and the SST k-u method. Experimental studies were conducted utilizing pressure data and signal processing tools to study the dominant frequency of slug flow alongside bandwidth distribution as well as the Shannon entropy. The results exhibited that although the dominant frequency of slug flow did not change after passing the 90-degree elbow, the frequency signal's bandwidth increased. In this regard, the application of Shannon entropy quantity revealed that the frequency distribution signal experienced a greater increase in bandwidth as the elbows' curvature radius increases. The turbulent intensity of the elbows' outlet reveals that by increasing the curvature radius, the flow field behaves smoother. Also, swirling intensity distribution shows that decreasing the elbow radius leads to increment in the swirling intensity. (C) 2021 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier BV on behalf of Faculty of Engineering, Alexandria University.

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