Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8061996 | Ocean Engineering | 2018 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
Unstable hydrodynamic slug flow is extensively encountered in marine risers, resulting in internal flow-induced vibration, which is quite different with the vortex-induced vibration caused by a cross flow. Experiments were performed in an air-water test loop to study the internal slug flow-induced vibration of a free-hanging flexible riser with aspect ratio (the ratio of the length to the diameter of a riser) of 158. A non-intrusive technique of high speed imaging method was employed to record the vibration displacements of the riser model and the flow regime of two-phase mixture in the riser simultaneously. The results show that an in-plane vibration is created by the internal slug flow, and the responses along the two directions in the plane are interdependent to each other. In the considered gas-liquid ratio (the ratio of air flow rate to water flow rate), the second-order mode dominates the response. The hydrodynamic behaviors of slug flow, including the gas-liquid ratio, liquid slug length and superficial velocity, affect the local pressure fluctuation and hence influence the vibration amplitude. The fluid-structure interaction is reflected from the same frequencies presenting in the vibration and pressure fluctuation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Ocean Engineering
Authors
Hongjun Zhu, Yue Gao, Honglei Zhao,