SPE Journal
Volume 16,
Number 2,
June 2011,
pp. 482-488
Summary
In the process of performing either scientific experiments or research and
development related to the design and optimization of high-pressure
liquid-from-gas separator units, both laboratory experiments and tests in
prototypes are needed. In order to emulate the low interfacial tensions often
experienced in high-pressure hydrocarbon systems, the use of carbon dioxide
(CO2) as model fluid is studied. This paper describes how the
CO2 system behaves at saturation conditions. It describes this
system and compares it with traditional laboratory systems and real fluids
(from the field). CO2 at saturation pressure under normal
temperatures presents an interesting system with low interfacial tension, below
3 mN/m, while the liquid/gas-density ratio is approximately 3. The availability
of the fluid (CO2) in research centers and academia is high. When
planning a matrix of experiments as part of a database of reproducible
laboratory fluids, the present system is an independent base vector ideal for
studying the high-Weber/low-Reynolds-number regime. This paper shows how a
dispersed CO2-droplet phase, representative of a
hydrocarbon-gas/condensate system, can be achieved in the laboratory and used
for studying collision outcomes.
Results show that it is possible to obtain streams of droplets for droplet
experiments. The mean diameter in the studied regime with the particular nozzle
used was on the order of 100 μm, while the smallest droplets possible to track
with the presented technique were approximately 40 μm. Droplet/wall-collision
experiments were focused in this work. Both coalescence and bouncing were
observed on both dry and wet walls.
The absence of real fluid experiments at laboratory conditions generates a
lack of basic knowledge about what is happening in real scrubbers. This system
is proposed to be representative for a part of the flow-property region of
interest in real gas/liquid scrubbers. This basic knowledge is fundamental when
designing separation units at high pressures for gas-processing stages such as
subsea gas-separation concepts.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
5 February 2010
- Meeting paper published:
3 May 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
25 May 2010
- Manuscript approved:
26 May 2010
- Published online:
23 December 2010
- Version of record:
17 June 2011