CFD modeling of water-in-crude oil emulsions
Southwest Process Technology Conference
2014
6th Southwest Process Technology Conference
Southwest Process Technology Conference
Upstream Oil & Gas
Thursday, October 9, 2014 - 4:00pm to 4:30pm
A CFD model has been developed that fits laminar data of both suspensions and stabilized water-in-oil emulsions using a relative viscosity model combined with a model for the stress of particles in a suspension. An analysis of rheology data for both suspensions and emulsions revealed that they share similar physics. We follow the approach that an emulsion can be treated as a suspension that does not reach maximum packing of particles, but rather undergoes a phase inversion at a critical dispersed volume fraction. By combining the rheology with a model of suspension stress in the context of Eulerian multiphase flow in a commercial CFD code STAR-CCM+, it has been possible to quantitatively model the pressure drop of salt water in crude oil emulsions during pipe flow with minimal fitting.
Checkout
This paper has an Extended Abstract file available; you must purchase the conference proceedings to access it.
Do you already own this?
Log In for instructions on accessing this content.
Pricing
Individuals
AIChE Pro Members | $240.00 |
AIChE Graduate Student Members | $240.00 |
AIChE Undergraduate Student Members | $240.00 |
AIChE Explorer Members | $290.00 |
Non-Members | $290.00 |