Interphase transport in horizontal stratified cocurrent flow
Abstract
The problem of interfacial transport is cocurrent, horizontal stratified gas-liquid systems is considered. Local condensation heat transfer coefficients and interface shear stress were obtained from mass and force balances. These balances were based on gas phase pitot traverses at various streamwise locations. Laser anemometer measurements of liquid mean and rms fluctuation velocities were made at similar locations. Based on cocurrent stratified air-water flow data the noncondensing interface shear stress was found to be a functhe relative velocity between the phases and the liquid fraction. Incorporated into Linehan's relation for condensing flow shear stress, the correlation was found to estimate the shear velocity for the condensation data considered. Local condensation heat transfer coefficients and gas absorption mass transfer coefficients were found to be directly proportional to the shear velocity. The correlations for interfacial shear stress and scalar transport can be combined to yield an interactive technique suitable for an engineering analysis of the interface heat, mass, and momentum transfer in a single driving force cocurrent system.
- Publication:
-
Ph.D. Thesis
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982PhDT.........9J
- Keywords:
-
- Heat Transfer;
- Liquid-Vapor Interfaces;
- Mass Transfer;
- Stratified Flow;
- Two Phase Flow;
- Condensing;
- Flow Velocity;
- Heat Transfer Coefficients;
- Laser Anemometers;
- Momentum Transfer;
- Shear Stress;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer