Institutional Repository
Technical University of Crete
EN  |  EL

Search

Browse

My Space

Experimental study and predictions of pressure losses of fluids modeled as Herschel–Bulkley in concentric and eccentric annuli in laminar, transitional and turbulent flows

Kelesidis Vasilis, Dalamarinis Panagiotis , Maglione Roberto

Full record


URI: http://purl.tuc.gr/dl/dias/964535CE-74BC-4F37-9464-7561D6064627
Year 2011
Type of Item Peer-Reviewed Journal Publication
License
Details
Bibliographic Citation V.C. Kelessidis, P. Dalamarinis , R. Maglione, " Experimental study and predictions of pressure losses of fluids modelled as Herschel-Bulkley in concentric and eccentric annuli in laminar, transitional and turbulent flow," Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering, vol. 77, no. 3-4 ,pp. 305–312, Jun. 2011. doi: 10.1016/j.petrol.2011.04.004 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.petrol.2011.04.004
Appears in Collections

Summary

Experimental data is presented for the flow of bentonite–water dispersions, modeled as Herschel–Bulkley fluids, for the pressure loss at different flow rates covering laminar, transitional and turbulent flow regimes, while flowing in concentric and fully eccentric annuli. The concentric experimental data has been compared with predictions from a recently-introduced model which covers the full flow regimes for concentric annulus, while corrections for eccentricity, previously suggested for non-Newtonian fluids, have also been used to compare with eccentric data. Laminar flow data not only from this work but also from work from the literature is very well predicted while transitional and turbulent flow data are predicted with less accuracy, requiring improvements on predicting transition points. The corrections for eccentricity work well and can be used to accurately correct concentric annulus data. Turbulent non-Newtonian flow data exhibit a power law exponent relationship between flow rate and pressure loss smaller than the Newtonian case pointing out directions for future research.

Services

Statistics