Abstract

An application of wire–mesh sensors to obtain the interfacial area concentration in vertical pipes is presented as an alternative to the widely used multiple-tip electrical or optical fibre probes. The measuring data of a mesh sensor consists of a three-dimensional matrix of local instantaneous gas fractions measured at each crossing point of the wires and recorded as a time sequence. Bubbles are clearly distinguishable in this data matrix, since they represent regions of interconnected elements containing the gaseous phase. The method to deduce the interfacial area concentration from this data is based on a full reconstruction of the gas–liquid interface, where the interfacial area of each bubble is recovered as the sum of the surface area of all surface elements belonging to the given bubble. The new method can be applied to large bubbles with an arbitrary shape. To study the change of the interfacial area concentration along the pipe the distance between sensor and gas injection was varied. The axial development of the interfacial area density measured in the test pipe of 195.3 mm inner diameter was compared to the measurements carried out by Sun et al. [Sun, X., Smith, T., Kim, S., Ishii, M., Uhle, J., 2002. Interfacial area of bubbly flow in a relatively large diameter pipe. Exp. Thermal Fluid Sci. 27, 97–109] in a pipe of 101.6 mm diameter, which is the largest pipe for which interfacial area densities are presented in literature. An acceptable agreement was found, whereas deviations are consistent with the differences in the boundary conditions of both experiments.

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