The shape and motion of gas bubbles in a liquid flowing through a thin annulus

ORAL

Abstract

We study the shape and motion of gas bubbles in a liquid flowing through a horizontal or slightly-inclined thin annulus. Experimental data show that in the horizontal annulus, bubbles develop a unique “tadpole” shape with an elliptical cap and a highly-stretched tail, due to the confinement between the closely-spaced channel walls. As the annulus is inclined, the bubble tail tends to decrease in length, while the geometry of the cap remains almost invariant. To model the bubble evolution, the thin annulus is conceptualised as a ``Hele-Shaw” cell in a curvilinear space. The three-dimensional flow within the cell is represented by a gap-averaged, two-dimensional model constrained by the same dimensionless quantities. The complex bubble dynamics are solved using a mixed control-volume finite-element method combined with interface-capturing and mesh adaptation techniques. A close match to the experimental data is achieved, both qualitatively and quantitatively, by the numerical simulations. The mechanism for the elliptical cap formation is interpreted based on an analogous irrotational flow field around a circular cylinder. The shape regimes of bubbles flowing through the thin annulus are further explored based on the simulation results.

*Funding from STATOIL gratefully acknowledged

Authors

  • Qinghua Lei

    • Imperial College London
  • Zhihua Xie

    • Cardiff University
  • Dimitrios Pavlidis

    • Imperial College London
  • Pablo Salinas

    • Imperial College London
  • Jeremy Veltin

    • TNO, Netherlands
  • Ann Muggeridge

    • Imperial College London
  • Christopher C. Pain

    • Imperial College London
  • Omar Matar

    • Imperial College London
    • Imperial College
    • Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London
  • Matthew Jackson

    • Imperial College London
  • Kristine Arland

    • STATOIL, Norway
  • Atle Gyllensten

    • STATOIL, Norway