Abstract

The leak experiment for underwater gas leakage was carried out by using a self-designed circular pipeline and air as an experimental medium. The diffusion characteristics of gas in water and the variation of flow rate as a function of different water depth, hole diameter, and leakage pressure were studied. The results show that the leakage rate has a linear relation, second order relation with the leakage pressure and diameter of the hole respectively, while it decreases with the increase of water depth. The change of the hole diameter has the greatest influence on the leakage rate, followed by the pressure, while the effect of water depth is the smallest. The nonlinear fitting of the experimental data is carried out to obtain the quantitative relationship between the release flow rate and the hole diameter, leakage pressure, and water depth. At the same time, by introducing coefficient α, a quantitative formula for predicting the leakage rate of underwater gas pipelines under the conditions of small hole diameter (d ≤ 20▒mm) and subsonic flow (p ≤ 90 kPa) is obtained.

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