AndreaSagninese
Chemical
Hello everyone,
nice to join the forum! I've recently started a R&D, ChemEng post, even if my background is in Numerical Analysis and Applied Maths. So I will ask you a couple of questions more related to the Engineering/Thermodynamics.
Suppose you are transporting CO2 in a pipe and then you want to inject it in the ground through a well. The C02 is arriving with certain pressure and temperature. At the wellhead the injection flowrate is regulated through a valve.
1) How would you model the choked flow? Consider that upstream pressure in the pipe is 120bar (liquid C02), while at the top of the well we see 38bar (gaseous CO2) as initial condition.
2) How would you model the JT expansion? Physics tells me that C02 will cool down.
I am a bit confused. In my CFD code I need to initialise the internal cells of the domain (so far, so good) and the ghost cells. But I need to talk into account the choke and the JT expansion. What is the correct way of doing it?
Cheers,
A.
nice to join the forum! I've recently started a R&D, ChemEng post, even if my background is in Numerical Analysis and Applied Maths. So I will ask you a couple of questions more related to the Engineering/Thermodynamics.
Suppose you are transporting CO2 in a pipe and then you want to inject it in the ground through a well. The C02 is arriving with certain pressure and temperature. At the wellhead the injection flowrate is regulated through a valve.
1) How would you model the choked flow? Consider that upstream pressure in the pipe is 120bar (liquid C02), while at the top of the well we see 38bar (gaseous CO2) as initial condition.
2) How would you model the JT expansion? Physics tells me that C02 will cool down.
I am a bit confused. In my CFD code I need to initialise the internal cells of the domain (so far, so good) and the ghost cells. But I need to talk into account the choke and the JT expansion. What is the correct way of doing it?
Cheers,
A.