Abstract

Slug flow is a two-phase fluid flow pattern, characterized by a series of liquid slugs dispersed by relatively large air bubbles. Air bubbles produced and trapped during the slug flow phenomenon conduct to interruption in flow which induces pressure and velocity fluctuations. These effects have destructive circumstances in conduits and conveyance structures. This paper deals with studying numerically two-phase flows using computational fluid dynamic (CFD) techniques performed in OpenFOAM (an open source software) by interFoam solver. Most of the previous concerning studies on slug flow were performed in micro-channels with small scales in which the expansion of the air bubbles was negligible. By contrast, we investigated the systems with large pressure drops which conduct to abrupt increases on the volume of air phase. The slug flow phenomenon could be created by introducing air and water with different velocities at inlet of a culvert with air to water velocity ratio varied from 1.1 to 34. First, this study focused on temporal and spatial variations of pressure and velocity along the culvert. After that, by dimensional analysis, the nondimensional parameters influencing the slug flow phenomenon are extracted and analyzed. Finally, different strategies for reducing the destructive effects of slug flow, including the shape and location of ribs, are evaluated and the best strategy is proposed.

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