Abstract

Gas-driven limnic eruption can happen in a lake with an aqueous gas solution that becomes supersaturated due to some reason. In this case, the exsolution of massive gases dissolved in the water could occur in a very short time, resulting in a disaster as happened in the Lake Nyos (Cameroon, Africa) in 1986. Using degassing pipe to artificially release the dissolved gases is a good way to minimize the risk of an eruption. In this study, a transient multi-component gas-liquid two-phase flow model of the degassing pipe used in Lake Nyos has been established and verified with the observed eruption data. The drift flux model has been used for modelling of a transient multi-component gas-liquid flow formed due to the spontaneous exsolution of gases dissolved in the water inside the degassing pipe. The governing equations for the mechanistic drift model include continuity equation for each phase, a single momentum equation for a homogeneous mixture of the fluid, constitutive equations for mass transfer rates between the phases, and the drift velocity formulas. The model considered not only CO2 but also CH4 as dissolved gases. The “chain reaction” conjecture predicted to have the degassing-point migrating downward with time during the transient degassing process is verified by using this model. The relationship between the eruption height and the CO2 concentration at the bottom of the degassing pipe has been simulated in detail. This relationship supplies people with a quick and convenient way to estimate the CO2 concentration in the lake, based on which one can evaluate the risk of lake eruption and hence to formulate or adjust the degassing plan. In addition, the effects of diameter and equivalent roughness of the degassing pipe on the eruption height has been investigated. Meanwhile, the eruption height upper-limit in different lake-depth scenarios has also been determined. Finally, the role of CH4 component in the degassing process has been analyzed. Although the influence of CH4 on eruption height can be neglected in Lake Nyos' case, CH4 as a dissolved gas plays an important role at Lake Kivu. The multi-component gas-liquid flow model developed in this study is useful to study the role of CH4 in the degassing process.

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