Study of natural gas emission from a hole on underground pipelines using optimal design-based CFD simulations: Developing comprehensive soil classified leakage models
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引用次数: 6
Abstract
Gas leaks from natural gas pipelines can lead to catastrophic incidents, especially in the case of sour natural gas owing to the combination of its toxicity and flammability. As a safety consideration, these pipelines are underground to protect humans and installations. However, no comprehensive model has yet been proposed that can predict the leakage rate from the damaged buried pipelines in a wide range of influential factors. In this work, to compensate for this shortcoming, a set of soil classified models are presented considering the emission of sour natural gas in silty, sandy, and gravelly soils using the results of optimal design-based CFD simulations. In this way, a wide range is selected for effective factors of pipe pressure (2–100 bara), leakage hole diameter (2–40 mm), pipe diameter (4–56 in), soil porosity (0.3–0.45), and soil particle diameter (0.002–40 mm). These ranges cover the specifications of both urban distribution pipeline systems and transmission ones. A two-step solution strategy is implemented to consider the effect of pressure drop on the leakage rate. The CFD simulations are in good agreement with experimental data reported in literature. The leakage models are capable to predict the results of random simulations with a mean absolute percentage error of 13%, 9%, and 7.7% for silty, sandy, and gravelly soils, respectively, over a wide range of pressure and leakage hole diameter. Furthermore, the effects of soil mass properties and pipe wall thickness on the leakage process are investigated. To clarify the effect of soil mass on leakage rate, the CFD analysis of an aboveground leaking pipe is also performed comparatively.
期刊介绍:
The objective of the Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering is to bridge the gap between the engineering and the science of natural gas by publishing explicitly written articles intelligible to scientists and engineers working in any field of natural gas science and engineering from the reservoir to the market.
An attempt is made in all issues to balance the subject matter and to appeal to a broad readership. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering covers the fields of natural gas exploration, production, processing and transmission in its broadest possible sense. Topics include: origin and accumulation of natural gas; natural gas geochemistry; gas-reservoir engineering; well logging, testing and evaluation; mathematical modelling; enhanced gas recovery; thermodynamics and phase behaviour, gas-reservoir modelling and simulation; natural gas production engineering; primary and enhanced production from unconventional gas resources, subsurface issues related to coalbed methane, tight gas, shale gas, and hydrate production, formation evaluation; exploration methods, multiphase flow and flow assurance issues, novel processing (e.g., subsea) techniques, raw gas transmission methods, gas processing/LNG technologies, sales gas transmission and storage. The Journal of Natural Gas Science & Engineering will also focus on economical, environmental, management and safety issues related to natural gas production, processing and transportation.