Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7060076 | International Journal of Multiphase Flow | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
In a recent work, Serres et al. (2016) considered the stability of Taylor bubbles entering a confined highly porous medium (open cell solid foam of 96% porosity). This experimental work pointed out that a periodic alternation of gas bubbles and liquid slugs in a millichannel can either keep its regularity, or be destructured at the porous medium entrance. A critical bubble length was proposed as a transition parameter between the two observed regimes. This study presents two key results which complement the previous work and explain the regime transition. (1) The comparison of the Taylor flow upstream the porous medium with the Taylor flow in an empty millichannel demonstrates that the regime transtion is not due to the possible feedback of the foam on the upstream flow. (2) A phenomenological model is proposed, which accounts for the observed bubble coalescence and gas channelling in the porous medium in the range of parameters explored in the experiments.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
Marion Serres, Timothée Maison, Régis Philippe, Valérie Vidal,