Abstract

An experimental and numerical study is presented in the current work for gas entrainment using an inverted vertical U-tube. Water flows vertically up in an inverted U-tube which creates a low-pressure region in the tube upper portion. This low-pressure region can be used to extract gases by connecting it to a branch pipe. The extracted gases considered in this work are a mixture of air and water vapor. The water vapor from the side branch pipe is mixed with the flowing water under the siphon effect. This results in a progressive water vapor condensation as the mixture proceeds towards the exit due to an increase in vapor partial pressure. The air is drawn by inertia to be released out at the tube lower exit of the inverted U-pipe. The current study deals with these complicated flow behaviors due to the mixing undergoing condensation. A test rig is designed for experimentally studying the behavior of water flow in an inverted U-tube where the air is mixed with the flowing water at the top region of this tube. The CFD computations are accomplished for a side gas mixture with volume fractions up to 0.7 with water vapor mass fractions in this mixture to be 0.1–0.5. The tested water mass flow rates in the main tube are 2, 4, 6, 8 kg/s to account for all possible flow mass ratios. The CFD computations are validated with water and air two phase flow with the measurements of both the experiments of the current research and the literature. The present results reveal that slightly raising the water mass flow rate at a constant side mixture mass ratio produces a reduced generated pressure in the upper tube part. This is attributed to extra water vapor condensation taking place rapidly by increasing the water flow rate in the tube upper part. Furthermore, the turbulence quantities begin to break down at a side mixture volume fraction of 0.55 with water and air mass flow rates of 2 kg/s and 0.002 kg/s, respectively. On the other side, raising the air mass flow rate at the higher values of water vapor and water mass flow rates breaks the generated vacuum pressure and turbulence due to entrainment. Moreover, this proposed framework can produce a lower static pressure, reaching 55.1 kPa, which makes it attractive for gas extraction. This new technique presents innovative usage with less consumable energy for extracting gases in engineering equipment.

Highlights

  • Few engineering and medical applications need evacuated cavities during certain manufacturing and testing processes

  • The main objective of the current study is to investigate the two-phase flow interactions when it encounters condensation in the considered U-tube

  • Side entrainment is considered a mixture of air and water vapor with different mass ratios

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Summary

Introduction

Few engineering and medical applications need evacuated cavities during certain manufacturing and testing processes. These evacuated cavities may contain a variety of gases and liquids. The continuous removal of these undesired fluids and maintenance of the required evacuated cavities at a specific pressure becomes mandatory for these applications. The most used devices for venting these gases are categorized as a steam trap, liquid ring, vacuum pumps, manual valve, automatic valve and steam ejector. All these devices consume a considerable amount of energy to accomplish their duties.

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