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November 5, 2019 at 3:22 am
ophshore
SubscriberAll,
Good Day. I have a problem that i am trying to solve and i would really appreciate some ideas.
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I am new to Ansys Fluent(few months old). I have the problem attached picture. This is a vertical 15m column with two separate vertical sections meshed together with a wall in between as shown
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1) Water and Air are injected into the domain at known mass rates. Here i have used "Mass" Inflow as my boundary inlet conditions
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2). Water and air leaks into another column which transports vertically to outlet at 4
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3) Gas is removed from a Gas cap or gas filled domain section which according to our experiment stays almost constant . This gas section we have been measuring moves 1 or 2mtr at maximum during the experiment. For (3), i have used the "Degassing" boundary outlet
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4) This section, we are collecting both water and air into another tank(tank not modelled here), here in my domain i have used a "Pressure" boundary outlet
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My problem:
I have created a flow domain, describing the below, the air volume from (3) is nothing compared with our experiments.
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According to our experiments, we are injecting about 50,000scf/d of air at (1) and are measuring about 30,000scf/d of air at (3) while the rest goes with the water to (4).
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Please does anyone have any ideas on a better method of modelling this ?
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November 5, 2019 at 5:55 am
DrAmine
Ansys EmployeePlease insert the image if you want us to look into it. -
November 5, 2019 at 11:55 am
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November 5, 2019 at 2:31 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorWhy won't water pass up the right hand column too?
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November 5, 2019 at 5:31 pm
ophshore
SubscriberPressure in the RH Column is slightly higher than pressure on the LH Column(LHC), achieved by a choke valve which from what we see its easier for liquid and air to go via the LHC
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November 5, 2019 at 5:57 pm
DrAmine
Ansys EmployeeAnd how would you enforce that in the model. I would not use degassing boundary condition for this kind of continuous pocket of air. Rather to enforce the pressure via pressure boundary.
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