Stability Improvement of the One-dimensional Two-fluid Model for Horizontal Two-phase Flow with Model Unification

Stability Improvement of the One-dimensional Two-fluid Model for Horizontal Two-phase Flow with Model Unification

Author: Kent C. Abel

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 302

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The next generation of nuclear safety analysis computer codes will require detailed modeling of two-phase fluid flow. The most complete and fundamental model used for these calculations is known as the two-fluid model. It is the most accurate of the two-phase models since it considers each phase independently and links the two phases together with six conservation equations. A major drawback is that the current two-fluid model, when area-averaged to create a one-dimensional model, becomes ill-posed as an initial value problem when the gas and liquid velocities are not equal. The importance of this research lies in obtaining a model that overcomes this difficulty. It is desired to develop a modified one-dimensional two-fluid model for horizontal flow that accounts for the pressure difference between the two phases, due to hydrostatic head, with the implementation of a void fraction distribution parameter. With proper improvement of the one-dimensional two-fluid model, the next generation of nuclear safety analysis computer codes will be able to predict, with greater precision, the key safety parameters of an accident scenario. As part of this research, an improved version of the one-dimensional two-fluid model for horizontal flows was developed. The model was developed from a theoretical point of view with the three original distribution parameters simplified down to a single parameter. The model was found to greatly enhance the numerical stability (hyperbolicity) of the solution method. With proper modeling of the phase distribution parameter, a wide range of flow regimes can be modeled. This parameter could also be used in the future to eliminate the more subjective flow regime maps that are currently implemented in today's multiphase computer codes. By incorporating the distribution parameter and eliminating the flow regime maps, a hyperbolic model is formed with smooth transitions between various flow regimes, eliminating the unphysical oscillations that may occur near transition boundaries in today's multiphase computer codes.


Two-Fluid Model Stability, Simulation and Chaos

Two-Fluid Model Stability, Simulation and Chaos

Author: Martín López de Bertodano

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-11-09

Total Pages: 367

ISBN-13: 3319449680

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book addresses the linear and nonlinear two-phase stability of the one-dimensional Two-Fluid Model (TFM) material waves and the numerical methods used to solve it. The TFM fluid dynamic stability is a problem that remains open since its inception more than forty years ago. The difficulty is formidable because it involves the combined challenges of two-phase topological structure and turbulence, both nonlinear phenomena. The one dimensional approach permits the separation of the former from the latter.The authors first analyze the kinematic and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities with the simplified one-dimensional Fixed-Flux Model (FFM). They then analyze the density wave instability with the well-known Drift-Flux Model. They demonstrate that the Fixed-Flux and Drift-Flux assumptions are two complementary TFM simplifications that address two-phase local and global linear instabilities separately. Furthermore, they demonstrate with a well-posed FFM and a DFM two cases of nonlinear two-phase behavior that are chaotic and Lyapunov stable. On the practical side, they also assess the regularization of an ill-posed one-dimensional TFM industrial code. Furthermore, the one-dimensional stability analyses are applied to obtain well-posed CFD TFMs that are either stable (RANS) or Lyapunov stable (URANS), with the focus on numerical convergence.


Modelling and Experimentation in Two-Phase Flow

Modelling and Experimentation in Two-Phase Flow

Author: Volfango Bertola

Publisher: CISM International Centre for Mechanical Sciences

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 450

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This is an up-to-date review of recent advances in the study of two-phase flows, with focus on gas-liquid flows, liquid-liquid flows, and particle transport in turbulent flows. The book is divided into several chapters, which after introducing basic concepts lead the reader through a more complex treatment of the subjects. The reader will find an extensive review of both the older and the more recent literature, with abundance of formulas, correlations, graphs and tables. A comprehensive (though non exhaustive) list of bibliographic references is provided at the end of each chapter. The volume is especially indicated for researchers who would like to carry out experimental, theoretical or computational work on two-phase flows, as well as for professionals who wish to learn more about this topic.


Statistical Hydrodynamic Models for Developed Mixing Instability Flows

Statistical Hydrodynamic Models for Developed Mixing Instability Flows

Author: Antoine Llor

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2005-12-23

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 9783540283300

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Part textbook, part exploratory work, this book aims to raise the awareness of students, physicists, and engineers in turbulence on the modeling of gravitationally induced turbulent mixing flows as produced, for instance, by Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. The discussion is centered on the differences between single-fluid and two-fluid approaches, and it is illustrated with a 0D analysis of two specific elementary models in common use. Important deviations are shown to appear on many features, among others the prominence of directed energy, the simultaneous restitution of test cases, the responses to variable acceleration and shocks, and the behavior of various length scales.