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One-dimensional drift-flux model for two-phase flow in NaCl solutions: The role of surface mobility

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIPHASE FLOW [2023]
Hao Zhang, Haiqiang Yang, Zhengjun Chen, Fang Yuan, Qiang Yang, Bo Liu
ABSTRACT

The presence of dissolved salts in water inhibits bubble coalescence, facilitating the generation of microbubbles, while also maintaining a tangentially mobile air-water surface. In this study, we investigated the variation of bubble size and gas holdup with gas velocity in NaCl solutions using a rectangular bubble column and interpreted the experimental data using the one-dimensional drift-flux model. For the generated bubbles at the size between 0.4 mm and 1 mm, we found that the Moore model assumes mobile air-water surfaces, rather than the Schiller and Naumann model, should be used to describe the bubble terminal velocity. The latter model, which assumes an immobile air-water surface, has been used successfully to predict two-phase flow in surfactant solutions but would overestimate the gas holdup by almost 100 % for NaCl solutions. This finding emphasizes the crucial role of surface mobility in determining gas holdup. Thus, we propose the use of a one-dimensional drift-flux model, incorporating the Moore model to describe bubble terminal velocity, for microbubble systems with a mobile air-water interface.

MATERIALS

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