Investigation into Behavior of a Steam-Water Mixture Flow Through Holes in a Submerged Perforated Sheet at High Void Fractions

2018 
Processing of experimental data on the pressure difference across a submerged perforated sheet (SPS) revealed that, at sufficiently high void fractions under SPS, the pressure difference across it became less than the pressure difference for the pure steam stream with the same flowrate. To find the cause of this, the effect of a liquid film, which can be formed on the SPS upstream surface as a result of water droplets’ impact and can smooth over sharp edges of holes in SDS, was examined. This can decrease the pressure drop across the sharp edges of holes. This assumption was checked through numerical solution to several model problems in the axisymmetric formulation for a steam flow in a round pipe with an orifice. The flow of steam and water was modeled using the viscous incompressible liquid approximation, while the turbulence was described by the k–e model. The evolution of the interfacial area was modeled using the VOF model. The following model problems of steam flow through an orifice were studied: a single-phase flow, a flow through the orifice with a liquid film on its upstream surface, a flow through a chamfered hole, and a flow through the orifice with a liquid film on its upstream surface without liquid supply to the film. The predictions demonstrate that even the approximate account of the liquid film effect on the steam flow yields a considerable decrease in the pressure drop across the hole (from 8 to 24%) due to smoothing its sharp outlet edges over. This makes it possible to make a conclusion that the cause of a decrease in the pressure drop across SPS observed in the experiments at high void fractions is the formation of a liquid film, which smooths the sharp edges of the hole.
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