Abstract

Investigations on the gas-oil mixture flow of highly viscous oils have become increasingly significant in various industries for the past couple of years. This study examines the characteristics of air-oil flow patterns to understand the effect of the oil phase's thermophysical properties and flow rates on flow patterns. An experimental study was conducted to visualize the air-oil mixture flow in horizontal pipes. The diameters of the horizontal pipes were selected as 20 and 40 mm, respectively. Two different oils having substantially different viscosities were employed as the liquid phase. Based on the visualization results, air-oil mixture flow is categorized into seven flow patterns: stratified smooth, stratified wavy, annular, plug, slug, bubbly, and dispersed bubble flows. Along with representative images, this study demonstrates the essential characteristics of individual flow patterns. Furthermore, it discusses the influence of each phase's flow rate, oil viscosity, and surface tension on flow patterns. The processes of liquid entrainment in stratified wavy flow, bubble tip breakup in plug flow, and liquid slug aeration in slug flow are also illustrated, respectively, with the corresponding sequential representative images and schematic diagrams.

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