Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient

Flow experiments have been conducted for two-phase flow in a vertical pipe. The experiments were made for highly viscous oil–water in a stainless pipe at 250 psig pressure through the laboratory-scale flow test equipment. The test section used is a vertical transparent tube of 50 cm length and 40 mm...

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Main Authors: Ganat, Tarek A., Ridha, Syahrir, Hrairi, Meftah, Arisa, Juhairi, Gholami, Raoof
Format: Article
Language:English
English
English
Published: Springer 2019
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spelling my.iium.irep.767172019-12-16T02:48:36Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/ Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient Ganat, Tarek A. Ridha, Syahrir Hrairi, Meftah Arisa, Juhairi Gholami, Raoof TP315 Fuel TP690 Petroleum refining and products Flow experiments have been conducted for two-phase flow in a vertical pipe. The experiments were made for highly viscous oil–water in a stainless pipe at 250 psig pressure through the laboratory-scale flow test equipment. The test section used is a vertical transparent tube of 50 cm length and 40 mm ID. The test fluid utilized in this experiments is synthetic oil (viscosity = 35 mPas, density = 860 kg/m3) and filtered tap water (interfacial tension 31 mN/m at 20 °C, viscosity 0.95 mPas at 25 °C). The measurements of superficial velocities of oil and water were varied between 0.01 to 3 m/s. According to the experimental observations using audiovisual recordings, a flow pattern map was identified at different condition. Measuring the variations in pressure gradient and flow patterns at different superficial velocities of two-phase flow, six typical flow patterns were categorized and mapped under two groups, oil-dominant region and water-dominant region, and categorized based on the variations of oil and water superficial velocities, and mixture fluid velocity, at different amount of the water holdup in the vertical tubing. The measurements of the total pressure gradient at five different mixture fluid velocities were conducted verses water holdup in vertical tubing. The results show that all the upward flows show an identical flow pattern, where the pressure gradients increase with increasing mixture fluid velocity and water cut with similar trend. The experiments show a clear peak in the pressure gradient as a result of the frictional factor, specifically at the point of flow patterns occurs (i.e., water holdup ~ 30%). The results concluded that the pressure gradient is significantly influenced by flow patterns and flow rates. Besides, the oil viscosity has a high effect on the pressure gradients; however, it is observed that at similar water and oil superficial velocities, there is a subsequent increase in the pressure gradient due to the increase in oil viscosity. Springer 2019-12 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/1/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/2/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity_SCOPUS.pdf application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/3/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity_WOS.pdf Ganat, Tarek A. and Ridha, Syahrir and Hrairi, Meftah and Arisa, Juhairi and Gholami, Raoof (2019) Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient. Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology, 9. pp. 2911-2918. ISSN 2190-0558 E-ISSN 2190-0566 https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs13202-019-0677-y.pdf 10.1007/s13202-019-0677-y
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
English
English
topic TP315 Fuel
TP690 Petroleum refining and products
spellingShingle TP315 Fuel
TP690 Petroleum refining and products
Ganat, Tarek A.
Ridha, Syahrir
Hrairi, Meftah
Arisa, Juhairi
Gholami, Raoof
Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
description Flow experiments have been conducted for two-phase flow in a vertical pipe. The experiments were made for highly viscous oil–water in a stainless pipe at 250 psig pressure through the laboratory-scale flow test equipment. The test section used is a vertical transparent tube of 50 cm length and 40 mm ID. The test fluid utilized in this experiments is synthetic oil (viscosity = 35 mPas, density = 860 kg/m3) and filtered tap water (interfacial tension 31 mN/m at 20 °C, viscosity 0.95 mPas at 25 °C). The measurements of superficial velocities of oil and water were varied between 0.01 to 3 m/s. According to the experimental observations using audiovisual recordings, a flow pattern map was identified at different condition. Measuring the variations in pressure gradient and flow patterns at different superficial velocities of two-phase flow, six typical flow patterns were categorized and mapped under two groups, oil-dominant region and water-dominant region, and categorized based on the variations of oil and water superficial velocities, and mixture fluid velocity, at different amount of the water holdup in the vertical tubing. The measurements of the total pressure gradient at five different mixture fluid velocities were conducted verses water holdup in vertical tubing. The results show that all the upward flows show an identical flow pattern, where the pressure gradients increase with increasing mixture fluid velocity and water cut with similar trend. The experiments show a clear peak in the pressure gradient as a result of the frictional factor, specifically at the point of flow patterns occurs (i.e., water holdup ~ 30%). The results concluded that the pressure gradient is significantly influenced by flow patterns and flow rates. Besides, the oil viscosity has a high effect on the pressure gradients; however, it is observed that at similar water and oil superficial velocities, there is a subsequent increase in the pressure gradient due to the increase in oil viscosity.
format Article
author Ganat, Tarek A.
Ridha, Syahrir
Hrairi, Meftah
Arisa, Juhairi
Gholami, Raoof
author_facet Ganat, Tarek A.
Ridha, Syahrir
Hrairi, Meftah
Arisa, Juhairi
Gholami, Raoof
author_sort Ganat, Tarek A.
title Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
title_short Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
title_full Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
title_fullStr Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
title_full_unstemmed Experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
title_sort experimental investigation of high‑viscosity oil–water flow in vertical pipes: flow patterns and pressure gradient
publisher Springer
publishDate 2019
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/1/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/2/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity_SCOPUS.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/3/76717_Experimental%20investigation%20of%20high%E2%80%91viscosity_WOS.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/76717/
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2Fs13202-019-0677-y.pdf
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