Abstract

The present work seeks to develop a detailed experimental database and characterize the local effects of inclination on horizontal and upward bubbly air–water two-phase flows. Experimental conditions are selected to investigate bubbly flows at a variety of orientations while reducing the influence of flow regime transition. Detailed time-averaged data is collected using state-of-the-art four-sensor conductivity probes for measurements across the flow area for five flow conditions at five inclination orientations in a 25.4 mm inner diameter pipe. Using the newly established database, effects of inclination on bubbly flows are analyzed, as are changes in liquid and gas flow rate at different orientations. The observations include (1) bubble migration and agglomeration at the top pipe wall as orientation changes from vertical to horizontal; (2) reducing the angle from vertical reduces the local gas velocity, and correspondingly reduces the global slip from greater than unity at 90° to less than unity for 60° and lower; (3) changes in the bubble size distribution are primarily at the interface between the bubble cluster and the liquid region of the pipe, not coalescence within the bubble cluster. Physical mechanisms for these observations are proposed, and the present trends at different orientations support previous experiments in horizontal two-phase flows.

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