Slug Flow Prediction for Subsea Applications Using Dynamic Anisotropic Mesh Optimisation with Tetrahedral Control-Volume Finite Elements
ORAL
Abstract
We present a three-dimensional Direct Numerical Simulation of two-phase air-water flow inside complex pipe configurations with very large aspect ratios (Length/Diameter >100) for subsea applications. We focus on the challenging slug flow regimes using a dynamically unstructured mesh, which can modify and adapt to the complex air-water interface in order to represent optimally these flows minimising the use of computational resources. The numerical framework consists of a mixed control-volume and finite-element formulation, and a volume-of-fluid method for the interface-capturing based on a compressive control-volume advection method. The resulting slug length and frequency are compared with experimental data for horizontal pipes.
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Authors
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Claire Heaney
Imperial College London
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Lyes Kahouadji
Imperial College London
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Lluis Via-Estrem
Imperial College London
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Asiri Obeysekara
Imperial College London
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Pablo Salinas
Imperial College London
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Christopher Pain
Imperial College London
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Omar Matar
Imperial College London, Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London