Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
655486 | International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow | 2013 | 14 Pages |
To study the three-dimensional interfacial structure development in vertical two-phase flow, air–water upflow experiments were performed in a rectangular duct. Various non-uniform two-phase profiles were created by injecting air from individually controlled spargers at the duct inlet into uniformly injected water flow. A four-sensor conductivity probe was used to measure local void fraction, interfacial area concentration, bubble velocity and Sauter mean diameter at three axial locations to record the development of two-phase parameters. Experimental results showed that the lateral development across the wider dimension of the duct was significant with a non-uniform inlet profile when compared to a uniform inlet profile. It is postulated that lift, wall and turbulent forces are the major contributors to the lateral distribution of the two-phase interfacial structures making this an useful experiment for benchmarking three-dimensional two-fluid models. In examining the interfacial area, the shearing-off of group 1 bubbles (defined as the smaller spherical and distorted bubbles) from the skirt region of group 2 bubbles (defined as the bigger cap and churn bubbles), the coalescence of group 2 bubbles due to wake entrainment, and random collision are the major source and sink mechanisms of interfacial area concentration.
► Lateral flow development is significant with a non-uniform inlet profile. ► The major interfacial area sources for group 1 bubbles are shearing-off. ► Wake entrainment and random collision are major group 2 IAC sources. ► Lateral transport of group 1 bubbles is driven by turbulent dispersion. ► Significant lateral forces exist which push group 2 bubbles to the duct center.