4.6 Article

Gas/Liquid Two-Phase Flow in Pipes: Slugs, Classical Flow-Map, and 1D Compositional Simulation

Journal

SPE JOURNAL
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages 532-551

Publisher

SOC PETROLEUM ENG
DOI: 10.2118/206743-PA

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This paper presents numerical results of gas/liquid flows in pipelines obtained from a new simulation code. The code uses a compositional approach, which is rarely found in published articles about gas/liquid flow in the oil and gas industry. The algorithm can calculate both pressure and material fast waves generated during the transportation of gas and liquid in pipes. The solution algorithm is based on a two-fluid model and uses a mixed implicit-explicit integration schema.
In this paper, I present numerical results of gas/liquid flows in pipelines obtained from a new simulation code. One difference, with respect to other 1D fluid dynamic commercial simulation products, is the use of a compositional approach to the problem: This is rarely found in published articles about gas/liquid flow in the oil and gas industry. It is shown that the algorithm can calculate both pressure and material fast waves generated during the transportation of gas and liquid in pipes. The solution algorithm is based on the application of a two-fluid model to the mass, momentum, and energy conservation equations, which are solved using a mixed implicit-explicit integration schema. Closure equations for the calculation of interface stress are taken from literature articles. A dam-break simulation (i.e., a Riemann initial value problem) is presented as a severe test case for validation of the two-phase flow algorithm. Because the code is able to capture sharp and fast changes in the liquid holdup connected to the formation of pressure waves, it is applied to the simulation of slug flow without the use of steady-state unit cell models and slug tracking functions. In this context, the experimental results on pseudoslug formation in inclined pipes at high pressures, published by the Tulsa University Fluid Flow Project (TUFFP), are used to compare simulated results with experimental data. The last part is dedicated to the simulation of some cases taken from a classical flow-map of a fundamental article by Taitel and Dukler (1976). At constant liquid superficial velocity, the formation of liquid slugs and their subsequent termination with the increase of gas flow rate is simulated with details never previously presented.

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