Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study

Carbon steel pipelines used for transporting oils generally have some water flowing concurrently with the oil phase. The presence of water can lead to internal corrosion problems when free water contacts/wets the pipe wall surface. Therefore, it is pertinent to study how the distribution of water un...

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Main Authors: Kee, K.E., Richter, S., Babic, M., Nesic, S.
Format: Article
Published: National Assoc. of Corrosion Engineers International 2014
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84922286306&partnerID=40&md5=53fe0e3e971e4c3e55c8044e5cb37db8
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/31811/
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spelling my.utp.eprints.318112022-03-29T03:37:48Z Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study Kee, K.E. Richter, S. Babic, M. Nesic, S. Carbon steel pipelines used for transporting oils generally have some water flowing concurrently with the oil phase. The presence of water can lead to internal corrosion problems when free water contacts/wets the pipe wall surface. Therefore, it is pertinent to study how the distribution of water under different oil-water flow conditions can affect the steel surface wetting, i.e. whether the wall surface is wetted by water or oil phase. In this experimental work, a large scale 0.1m ID inclinable flow loop was used to study the two phase oil-water flow in horizontal and vertical positions. Paraffinic model oil and 1wt NaCl aqueous solutions were utilized as the test fluids. Two measurement techniques: flush mounted conductivity pins and high speed camera were employed for surface wetting determination and flow patterns visualization, respectively. The wetting data were classified based on four types of wetting behaviors: stable water wet, unstable water wet, unstable oil wet, and stable oil wet. The wetting results from the conductivity pins were found to match with the visualization results from the high speed camera. The horizontal oilwater flow results showed that water flows separately and wets the pipe bottom at low mixture liquid velocity. Moreover, not all of the water is fully dispersed at higher mixture liquid velocities, as traces of water can still be found to wet the surface intermittently. ©2014 by NACE International. National Assoc. of Corrosion Engineers International 2014 Article NonPeerReviewed https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84922286306&partnerID=40&md5=53fe0e3e971e4c3e55c8044e5cb37db8 Kee, K.E. and Richter, S. and Babic, M. and Nesic, S. (2014) Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study. NACE - International Corrosion Conference Series . http://eprints.utp.edu.my/31811/
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building UTP Resource Centre
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continent Asia
country Malaysia
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content_source UTP Institutional Repository
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description Carbon steel pipelines used for transporting oils generally have some water flowing concurrently with the oil phase. The presence of water can lead to internal corrosion problems when free water contacts/wets the pipe wall surface. Therefore, it is pertinent to study how the distribution of water under different oil-water flow conditions can affect the steel surface wetting, i.e. whether the wall surface is wetted by water or oil phase. In this experimental work, a large scale 0.1m ID inclinable flow loop was used to study the two phase oil-water flow in horizontal and vertical positions. Paraffinic model oil and 1wt NaCl aqueous solutions were utilized as the test fluids. Two measurement techniques: flush mounted conductivity pins and high speed camera were employed for surface wetting determination and flow patterns visualization, respectively. The wetting data were classified based on four types of wetting behaviors: stable water wet, unstable water wet, unstable oil wet, and stable oil wet. The wetting results from the conductivity pins were found to match with the visualization results from the high speed camera. The horizontal oilwater flow results showed that water flows separately and wets the pipe bottom at low mixture liquid velocity. Moreover, not all of the water is fully dispersed at higher mixture liquid velocities, as traces of water can still be found to wet the surface intermittently. ©2014 by NACE International.
format Article
author Kee, K.E.
Richter, S.
Babic, M.
Nesic, S.
spellingShingle Kee, K.E.
Richter, S.
Babic, M.
Nesic, S.
Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
author_facet Kee, K.E.
Richter, S.
Babic, M.
Nesic, S.
author_sort Kee, K.E.
title Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
title_short Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
title_full Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
title_fullStr Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
title_full_unstemmed Flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - A flow loop study
title_sort flow patterns and water wetting in oil-water two phase flow - a flow loop study
publisher National Assoc. of Corrosion Engineers International
publishDate 2014
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84922286306&partnerID=40&md5=53fe0e3e971e4c3e55c8044e5cb37db8
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/31811/
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