Investigation of Drag Reducing Polymers by Dielectric Spectroscopy

Investigation of Drag Reducing Polymers by Dielectric Spectroscopy

Author: Gavin MacInnes

Publisher:

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 322

ISBN-13:

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Drag reducing polymers are studied to determine if the drag reduction effect correlates universally to the polymer relaxation time as determined by dielectric spectroscopy. Study tentatively concludes that there is not a universal correlation between the maximum drag reduction ability of a polymer and its relaxation time as determined by dielectric spectroscopy.


Investigations on Drag Reduction by Interactions Between Polymer and Surfactant and Polymer and Polymer

Investigations on Drag Reduction by Interactions Between Polymer and Surfactant and Polymer and Polymer

Author: Jia Yang

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13:

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A large amount of studies have been carried out on pipeline flow with several kinds of drag reducing agents, especially polymers and surfactants. Drag reducing agents, by definition, are additives which help suppress or eliminate turbulence in a pipeline. The mechanism and methodology of polymer only or surfactant only as drag reducing additives have been fully discovered. Whether mixed drag reducers such as polymer-surfactant or polymer-polymer systems would be effective is still not clear. In our study, polymer-surfactant and polymer-polymer mixed additives are used in order to explore the synergistic effects and interactions in pipeline flow loops. The experimental work was divided into two sections: bench-scale experiments and pilot-scale experiments. In bench-scale experiments, the properties of prepared fluids such as, surface tension, conductivity and shear viscosity were measured. Several comparison methods and calculations were applied to give better understandings of the properties resulting from mixing of polymer with surfactant and polymer with polymer. After analysis of the properties, several combinations of concentrations were selected and solutions were prepared in the main tank of pilot plant and pumped into the pipeline set-up to test the pipeline flow behaviors. Turbulence structure/Reynolds number, pipe diameter, polymer-surfactant concentration were all considered as influencing factors. Critical micelle concentration, critical aggregation concentration, polymer saturation point, the onset of drag reduction, and the interactions between the mixed additives were discussed. A comparison between pipeline results and the predictions of Blasius Equation or Dodge-Metzner Equation were also discussed.. For polymer-surfactant studies, a commonly used polymer additive - carboxylmethylcellulose (referred to as CMC which is anionic) was selected as the drag reducing agent. The performance of this polymer was investigated in the presence of six surfactants respectively - Alcohol ethoxylate (referred to as Alfonic 1412-9 and Alfonic 1412-3 which are nonionic), Aromox DMC (nonionic surfactant), Stepanol WA-100 and Stepwet DF-95 (which mainly consist sodium lauryl sulfates, anionic surfactant) and Amphosol (which is zwitterionic).The experiments were first conducted with pure CMC solution with different concentrations (100ppm, 500ppm, 700ppm and 1000ppm) as a standard. The 500ppm CMC solution was selected as the best polymer concentration with highest drag reduction efficiency. For polymer-surfactant combinations, CMC-Alfonic 1412-9, CMC-Alfonic1412-3, CMC-Stepanol and CMC-Stepwet systems were found to have significant interactions. High surfactant concentration resulted in reduction in %DR. The addition of Aromox increased the drag reduction ability and onset point when concentration was higher than the polymer saturation points. Also, both hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions were thought to have an effect on critical micelle concentration, which led to the fluctuations in the %DR. For polymer-polymer studies, PAM-PEO system at two different polymer concentrations were investigated. Overall, Pure PAM solution had much higher drag reduction ability than pure PEO solutions. Mixing them together, strong interactions occurred when PEO fraction was high (over 50%) which affected %DR and shear viscosity substantially. Power-law constants n and k were also taken into account and found to exhibit opposite trends with the increase of PEO fraction.


Investigating the Degradation Resistance Improvement of the Polymeric Drag Reduction

Investigating the Degradation Resistance Improvement of the Polymeric Drag Reduction

Author: Esmail Abdullah Mohammed Basheer

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 69

ISBN-13:

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An important practical aspect in the application and study of drag reduction by polymer additives is the degradation of the polymer, for instance due to intense shearing, especially in circulatory flow systems. Such degradation leads to a marked loss of the drag-reducing capability of the polymer. Polymers-Surfactant complex efficacy in reducing the drag and improving the degradation resistance is a new subject in drag reduction research. Turbulent drag reduction (DR) efficacy of ionic Sodium Polystyrene Sulfonate (NaPSS) and sodium Alkylbenzene sulfonate, complexes systems regarding polymer-surfactant interaction was examined under a turbulent flow in a rotating disk apparatus, in which the DR efficacy indicates how the torque is being reduced with a tiny amount of additives under a turbulent flow at a fixed rotational speed. It was found that the addition of the surfactant to the ionic increased the polymer chain dimensions via a conformational structural change, thus enhancing the DR efficacy. Polymer-surfactant system also shows that there exists a critical polymer concentration at which the drag reduction becomes a maximum, and then above the critical concentration, the DR efficacy decreases more rapidly than that of pure polymeric systems. On the other hand, it was found that the addition of the surfactant to the ionic polymer enhance its ability to resist the degradation caused by the high shear stress in the eddy flow. The addition of sodium Alkylbenzene sulfonate to the ionic polymer was found to have higher improvement than the addition of DDAB in degradation resistance. The DR and degradation resistance efficacy induced by the polymer-surfactant mixture is found to be obvious higher than of pure polymer. In addition, the maximum of DR efficacy versus polymer concentration occurred at 700 ppm.


Shear-Resistant Drag Reduction Polymers. Part 1. Molecular Investigations of Polymer Drag Reduction and the Development of Laboratory Screening Methods

Shear-Resistant Drag Reduction Polymers. Part 1. Molecular Investigations of Polymer Drag Reduction and the Development of Laboratory Screening Methods

Author: Oh-Kil Kim

Publisher:

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 23

ISBN-13:

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Polyacrylic acid (PAA) is a water-soluble polymer that is well suited for studying molecular influences on polymer drag reduction behavior since its polymer chain conformation and size in water are extremely sensitive to solution conditions. Effects of PAA molecular weight and solution factors such as pH and water quality were investigated. Solution pH is the most important factor governing conformation of polyelectrolytes such as PAA; a higher pH (leading to size expansion) gives a polymer drag reduction. As is known, molecular weight is an intrinsic factor in polymer drag reduction. Another critical factor for PAA drag reduction is water quality, since mineral ions present in water can induce collapse of the polymer molecules and subsequently, the drag reduction becomes null. However, in mineral-free water (obtained by either demineralization or chemical treatment), PAA drag reduction is remarkable.(jes).


Investigation of Drag Reduction Obtained Through Boundary Layer Injection of Dilute Solutions of Poly (ethylene-oxide)

Investigation of Drag Reduction Obtained Through Boundary Layer Injection of Dilute Solutions of Poly (ethylene-oxide)

Author: Brian J. Doherty

Publisher:

Published: 1965

Total Pages: 58

ISBN-13:

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The objectives of this investigation were: To determine whether or not a significant reduction in drag could be obtained by the addition of a dilute high molecular weight linear polymer solution to the boundary layer surrounding a test model; To observe by closely controlling the experiment, how the effect of the polymer varied with vehicle velocity, injection rate and solution concentration; To determine how the additive was able to change the drag. The polymer used in this series of tests was Polyox WSR-301, a water soluble Poly-ethelene oxide produced by Union Carbide Corporation. It was chosen because it appeared to promise best results from pipe flow and rotating disk experiments. The dilute polymer solution was ejected from the model into the boundary layer. By varying the velocity, additive concentration and injection rate it was possible to determine how the drag reduction varied with these parameters.


Turbulent Drag Reduction by Surfactant Additives

Turbulent Drag Reduction by Surfactant Additives

Author: Feng-Chen Li

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2012-01-10

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 1118181115

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Turbulent drag reduction by additives has long been a hot research topic. This phenomenon is inherently associated with multifold expertise. Solutions of drag-reducing additives are usually viscoelastic fluids having complicated rheological properties. Exploring the characteristics of drag-reduced turbulent flows calls for uniquely designed experimental and numerical simulation techniques and elaborate theoretical considerations. Pertinently understanding the turbulent drag reduction mechanism necessities mastering the fundamentals of turbulence and establishing a proper relationship between turbulence and the rheological properties induced by additives. Promoting the applications of the drag reduction phenomenon requires the knowledge from different fields such as chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, municipal engineering, and so on. This book gives a thorough elucidation of the turbulence characteristics and rheological behaviors, theories, special techniques and application issues for drag-reducing flows by surfactant additives based on the state-of-the-art of scientific research results through the latest experimental studies, numerical simulations and theoretical analyses. Covers turbulent drag reduction, heat transfer reduction, complex rheology and the real-world applications of drag reduction Introduces advanced testing techniques, such as PIV, LDA, and their applications in current experiments, illustrated with multiple diagrams and equations Real-world examples of the topic’s increasingly important industrial applications enable readers to implement cost- and energy-saving measures Explains the tools before presenting the research results, to give readers coverage of the subject from both theoretical and experimental viewpoints Consolidates interdisciplinary information on turbulent drag reduction by additives Turbulent Drag Reduction by Surfactant Additives is geared for researchers, graduate students, and engineers in the fields of Fluid Mechanics, Mechanical Engineering, Turbulence, Chemical Engineering, Municipal Engineering. Researchers and practitioners involved in the fields of Flow Control, Chemistry, Computational Fluid Dynamics, Experimental Fluid Dynamics, and Rheology will also find this book to be a much-needed reference on the topic.