Publication | Open Access
Modelling the non-equilibrium two-phase flow during depressurisation of CO 2 pipelines
70
Citations
36
References
2014
Year
EngineeringSingle-phase FlowFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringCompressorHeat PipeGas-liquid FlowPressure VesselFull Bore RuptureTwo-phase FlowCompressible FlowFluid PropertiesCo2 Miscible FloodingCo2 Immiscible FloodingPipe FlowCo 2Homogeneous Equilibrium ModelMultiphase FlowReservoir SimulationHeat TransferSupercritical Co2Thermal HydraulicsCivil EngineeringRupture PlaneNon-equilibrium Two-phase Flow
The development, testing and validation of a two-fluid transient flow model for simulating outflow following the failure of high pressure CO2 pipelines is presented. Thermal and mechanical non-equilibrium effects during depressurisation are accounted for by utilising simple constitutive relations describing inter-phase mass, heat and momentum transfer in terms of relaxation to equilibrium. Pipe wall/fluid heat exchange on the other hand is modelled by coupling the fluid model with a finite difference transient heat conduction model. The two-fluid transient flow model's performance is tested by comparison of the predicted transient pressure and temperature profiles along the pipeline against those based on the simplified homogeneous equilibrium model (HEM) as well as real data captured during the full bore rupture of a 260 m long, 233 mm internal diameter pipeline containing CO2 at 36 bara and 273 °C. The two-fluid model is found to produce a reasonably good degree of agreement with the experimental data throughout the depressurisation process. The HEM based flow model on the other hand performs well only near the rupture plane and during the early stages of the depressurisation process.
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