Abstract

A fundamental difficulty of studying gas–liquid pipe flows is the prediction of the occurrence and characteristics of the slug flow regime, which plays a crucial role in the safety design of oil pipelines. Current empirical methods and one-dimensional computational models only achieve limited success. While 3-D numerical simulations are highly recommended, they have been very seldom used. We perform 3-D Lagrangian numerical simulations of gas–liquid pipe flows by adapting an existing multi-phase smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) method based on a Riemann solver to achieve an efficient solver. To realize the high inlet velocities of gas and liquid an in- and outlet boundary condition is presented. The results are validated against existing experimental data, numerical simulations and analytical solutions. Multiple gas–liquid pipe flow patterns are predicted, namely, smooth stratified, stratified wavy, bubble flow, slug flow and bubble flow. Several principle characteristics of slug flows, e.g., pressure gradient, slug development and slug frequency are analyzed in a 3-D fully Lagrangian framework.

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