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contributor authorXing-sen Guo
contributor authorDe-feng Zheng
contributor authorLu Zhao
contributor authorCui-wei Fu
contributor authorTing-kai Nian
date accessioned2022-05-07T20:37:38Z
date available2022-05-07T20:37:38Z
date issued2022-1-1
identifier other(ASCE)WW.1943-5460.0000680.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4282678
description abstractThe impact forces of submarine landslides (i.e., non-Newtonian fluids) on oil and gas pipelines, especially the most dangerous drag force, are of great significance in the design of deep-water pipelines. The drag force is composed of two parts: the pressure drag force and the frictional drag force. However, previous studies have not quantified their proportion and magnitude, and thus it is highly difficult to analyze their evolution characteristics and mechanisms in detail. In this paper, a methodology to quantitatively obtain the pressure and frictional drag forces of submarine landslide-ambient water–pipeline interaction using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is first proposed. Second, under four typical Reynolds number conditions, homogeneous fluidized submarine landslides impacting suspended pipelines applied by two boundary conditions (i.e., free slip and no-slip wall boundary conditions on the pipeline surface) are systematically simulated, respectively. Third, the quantitative relationship between the total, pressure, and frictional drag force coefficients is established, and the variation of their characteristic values with changing Reynolds number is analyzed. Finally, the evolutionary mechanism of the frictional drag force is explained by the change in the tangential stress of the landslide in the boundary layer on the pipeline surface, and the variation mechanism of the pressure drag force with changing Reynolds number is elucidated by the boundary layer separation, streamline evolution, and distributed pressure variation around the pipeline, which provides a theoretical basis for submarine pipeline design.
publisherASCE
titleQuantitative Composition of Drag Forces on Suspended Pipelines from Submarine Landslides
typeJournal Paper
journal volume148
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering
identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)WW.1943-5460.0000680
journal fristpage04021050
journal lastpage04021050-12
page12
treeJournal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering:;2022:;Volume ( 148 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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