Depressurization and two-phase flow of water containing high levels of dissolved nitrogen gas
Abstract
Depressurization of water containing various concentrations of dissolved nitrogen gas was studied. In a nonflow depressurization experiment, water with very high nitrogen content was depressurized at rates from 0.09 to 0.50 MPa per second and a metastable behavior which was a strong function of the depressurization rate was observed. Flow experiments were performed in an axisymmetric, converging diverging nozzle, a two dimensional, converging nozzle with glass sidewalls, and a sharp edge orifice. The converging diverging nozzle exhibited choked flow behavior even at nitrogen concentration levels as low as 4 percent of the saturation level. The flow rates were independent of concentration level. Flow in the two dimensional, converging, visual nozzle appeared to have a sufficient pressure drop at the throat to cause nitrogen to come out of solution, but choking occurred further downstream. The orifice flow motion pictures showed considerable oscillation downstream of the orifice and parallel to the flow. Nitrogen bubbles appeared in the flow at back pressures as high as 3.28 MPa, and the level at which bubbles were no longer visible was a function of nitrogen concentration.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- July 1981
- Bibcode:
- 1981STIN...8128389S
- Keywords:
-
- Critical Flow;
- Dissolved Gases;
- Liquid Nitrogen;
- Orifice Flow;
- Pressure Reduction;
- Two Phase Flow;
- Chokes (Restrictions);
- Flow Characteristics;
- Gas Expansion;
- Nozzle Efficiency;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer