Hi David:
You said: "The pipeline models generally do a poor job of modling water mobility - they all assume a steady-state multi-phase flow regime which is a contridiction in terms. All the flow visualization work that has been done in the last few years shows that every possible flow regime exists for very brief time and then the energy level changes and the flow is different."
I'm not sure I understand your point here. When you say that every possible flow regime exists for a brief moment and then things change, is that at the pipe entrance, at a disturbance, etc.? My day job with 2Ø steam systems, and the flow visualization videos I've seen, both show that the flow regime is stable over pipe runs of practical length as long as nothing else changes.
"While doing research for a paper at the SPE, my co-author found some new flow-visualization work that was done in Holland that shows velocities above 4 m/s (13 ft/sec) will keep liquids mobile in any size pipe. He (my co-author) said that the video of the test was pretty compelling, but I haven't seen it. He is usually reliable on flow stuff (he's the Petroleum Engineeing department head at a prominant west-Texas university) so I've changed my design conditions to use 13 ft/sec as a minimum instead of the 36 ft/sec that my intrepretation of Turner suggested."
I don't get this either. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but... this is all a function of liquid fraction. 13 ft/s, which I think you mean is vsg, or the vapor slip velocity, is not enough to guarantee a particular flow regime unless you know what the liquid fraction is - no?
Thanks!
Pete