Abstract

A new flow measuring technique is introduced to measure liquid flow velocities under harsh circumstances in environments with dirt, high pressures and elevated temperatures as in boreholes within the earth’s crust. A glass fiber embedded in a cable with heating wires measures the temperature within the heated cable with fiber-optic temperature sensing. Similar to hot-wire anemometry (HWA), the velocity dependence of convective heat transfer is exploited to measure the velocity around the cable as a cylinder in crossflow. In the first experiment, a borehole-mimicking test rig and a realistic prototype of a borehole probe were built and the flow along the borehole axis was investigated. The concept of this new measurement technique was proven, since the expected Nusselt-Reynolds characteristic of a cylinder in crossflow has been successfully measured. Furthermore, a temperature profile model across the cables cross section has been developed to account for the unexpectedly low ranges of Nusselt number. The model accuracy has been addressed with a second experiment, where a straight segment of a custom-built heated cylinder was placed in a water channel perpendicular to the flow direction. The upstream flow speed during this set of measurements was recorded using particle image velocimetry (PIV), while multiple temperature sensors in the channel, on the probe’s sheath and within the probe delivered the information for the heat transfer model.

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