Abstract
Phase separation in space is critical for gas-free propellant supply, life support systems, refueling of spacecraft in low earth orbit (LEO), and for deep space exploration missions. In the absence of gravity, the stability of the liquid-gas interface depends on capillary forces. High liquid flow rates, sudden accelerations, and vibrational disturbances can cause the free surface of the liquid to collapse, which results in the ingestion of gas. Propellant tanks may have screen channel liquid acquisition devices (SCLADs) to position and maintain a gas-free propellant supply to the outlet. A saturated porous screen permits liquid to pass through but acts as a barrier to the gas. We investigated phase separation in porous media integrated capillary channels during parabolic flights (33rd DLR parabolic flight campaign in March 2019). An open side of a rectangular channel was covered with a dutch twill weave 200×1400. The liquid was ingested into the channel from its surroundings by establishing a differential pressure across the screen section. The gas-phase was blocked during the liquid withdrawal. We could show that the gas breakthrough occurs when the pressure difference across the screen exceeds the bubble point pressure. The experimental results showed good agreement with correlations from literature.
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Introduction
In a compensated gravity environment, hydrostatic forces are diminished, and capillary forces dominate the orientation of a liquid in a spacecraft tank. Depending on the contact angle, which is usually very small for propellants, liquid adheres to the tank wall, and gas accumulates in the center. Therefore, the tank outlet is not necessarily covered with liquid all the time. The acceleration caused by the thrusters could also deposit liquid in the opposite direction. If the outlet loses the connection with liquid, the spacecraft engines can no longer be provided with propellant for its operation.
The transport of liquid to the tank outlet in a compensated gravity environment is accomplished by employing propellant management devices or PMDs. PMDs act passively and use capillary forces to operate. Based on the demand (size of the tank, propellant type), PMDs are specifically designed for each mission. PMDs can be classified into three types, as introduced by Rollins et al. (1985); a) total control, b) partial control, and c) total communication. Total control devices are non-refillable and consist of a trap that holds all of the propellants over the tank outlet. A partial control device traps a small amount of propellant over the tank outlet to restart the engine. Other devices do not constrain the remaining liquid. The acceleration exerted by the engine settles the propellant in the vicinity of the device. The walls of the partial control devices are made up of porous meshed screens, which allow the propellant to enter and refill it for further usage.
Total communication devices establish a continuous flow path between the bulk of the propellant and the tank outlet, regardless of the spin and acceleration of the spacecraft. They employ vanes, open channels, and galleries to transport and position the propellant. Vanes are thin sheets of metal positioned perpendicular or parallel to the tank wall. The liquid present in the proximity of the vanes flows through an open path to the tank outlet. Jaekle Jr. published the analysis of the design of vanes for steady and unsteady flows in 1991 (Jaekle 1991). An open capillary channel consists of closed solid walls and an open side facing the tank wall. The stability of the free surface (liquid-gas interface) in the channel is determined in accordance with the Gauss-Young-Laplace equation (see Bronowicki et al. 2015). An increase in the liquid flow rate corresponds to a rise of the free surface curvature. If the flow rate exceeds a specific value, the free surface collapses, and ambient gas is ingested into the liquid. This phenomenon was studied in detail by Rosendahl et al. (2004) for a parallel plate channel aboard a sounding rocket and in the drop tower. Grah et al. (2014), Canfield et al. (2013), and Bronowicki et al. (2015) investigated capillary dominated free surface flows in different open channel geometrical shapes (parallel plate, rectangular groove, and wedge) aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The stability of the free surface may also be affected by sudden accelerations and vibrational disturbances. The presence of gas in the liquid is an unwanted feature for applications in propellant management systems.
The limitations in the open channel design can be encountered by employing galleries, also known as screen channel liquid acquisition devices (SCLADs). In galleries, the open side of the channel is covered with a metallic porous screen. The saturated screen blocks the gas but permits the flow of the surrounding liquid into the channel. A surface tension tank may consist of several galleries positioned in the vicinity of the wall. The galleries are connected to the tank outlet and follow the wall contour to the tank top. Jaekle (1997) performed a design analysis and gave recommendations for different configurations. Hartwig and Darr (2014) showed that the SCLADs are more robust, can sustain a higher flow rate, and maintain a gas-free propellant supply against variable accelerations compared to other types of vanes.
We performed our experiment in an environment with variable accelerations to alter and partially eliminate the hydrostatic forces. This paper includes the results of a phase separation process in SCLADs. The bulk liquid from the surrounding is ingested into the channel, and a continuous gas-free propellant supply is established. The limitation of the setup was investigated during bubble point tests in micro- and hypergravity. The data can be used to improve SCLAD designs for future space missions, and to develop advanced life support and thermal systems.
State of the Art
A screen channel LAD shall always remain filled with liquid. The drained liquid from the channel to the tank outlet is replenished from the surroundings. The amount of liquid drawn into the channel through the screen depends on the pressure difference across the screen. As the liquid quantity in the tank reduces with time, the screen area in contact with the liquid also gets smaller. This leads to a higher flow rate per unit area and an increase in the pressure drop. If the differential pressure across the screen exceeds its bubble point pressure △pbp, the gas breakthrough occurs. The bubble point pressure is determined by the surface tension of the liquid, the contact angle of the liquid with the solid, and screen properties. Besides the flow-through screen pressure drop, viscous and dynamic pressure losses in the channel contribute to the differential pressure as well. The bubble point is calculated as
with
Dbp is the bubble point diameter, Dp is the particle retention size diameter, which indicates the largest particle that can pass through the screen, σ is the surface tension of the liquid, 𝜃 is the contact angle between the liquid and the porous material, and C0 a constant which depends on the pore geometry and breakthrough dynamics. For cylindrical pores, C0 is equal to 1 (Cady 1973). However, in the case of dutch twilled weaves, the pores are not cylindrical and have a complex geometry. Hartwig (2016b) showed that the pores in a dutch twilled weave are triangular in shape, using a scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of the screen. The value for Dp, as provided by the manufacturer of the screen, is based on the largest spherical particle, which could pass the screen, and could overestimate the bubble point. If the bubble point is calculated from the value of Dp, a constant C0 shall be added to the corresponding equation. The bubble point diameter Dbp is calculated from the experimentally obtained bubble point pressure. It represents the true pore geometry and an effective pore diameter. The screen resistance to a gas breakthrough was investigated by Cady (1973), Hartwig et al. (2014), Hartwig and Mcquillen (2015), Hartwig (2016a), and Kudlac and Jurns (2006) for various dutch twilled weaves (DTW) using cryogenic liquids in ground-based experiments. Conrath and Dreyer (2012) measured the static and dynamic bubble point of a DTW 200 × 1400 screen using a silicon fluid SF0.65.
According to Armour and Cannon (1968), the flow-through-screen pressure drop can be modeled as the sum of viscous and inertial flow pressure losses
Here, C1 and C2 are empirical constants, which depend on the screen type; τ denotes the tortuosity of the screen, B is the screen thickness, S is the surface area to volume ratio of the screen, ϕ is the porosity, and us is the superficial velocity. The superficial velocity is calculated from the flow rate approaching the screen, here Qt, and the effective screen area, here \(A_{S_{2}}\), through which the liquid can flow.
Equation 3 can be transformed into a dimensionless form to compare the pressure drop of various screens by introducing a friction factor f and pore Reynolds number Rep. The resulting equations read as
This is the form firstly introduced by Armour and Cannon (1968). The pore Reynolds number determines whether or not the inertial pressure loss term (second term in Eq. 3) shall be added. It can be neglected below a Reynolds number range of 1 ≤Rep ≤ 10.
Conrath and Dreyer (2012) define the screen cross flow pressure drop in non-dimensional form using a Euler number Eu, which relates △p to the dynamic pressure as
The dynamic pressure results from the liquid density ρ and the superficial velocity us with which it approaches the screen. The Euler number for a woven screen is defined as
The values of the empirical constants C1 and C2 were derived by various authors independently. Armour and Cannon (1968) studied five types of weaves in gaseous helium and nitrogen flow. They used the least square regression approach to find universal constants for all weaves. Cady (1973) performed experiments in liquid hydrogen and gaseous nitrogen in 1973. He used the same method to fit the data but obtained the coefficients for each weave type separately. Hartwig (2016b) proposed a common value for dutch twilled weaves based on his experiments with cryogenic liquids. Conrath and Dreyer (2012) found the constants for a dutch twilled weave 200 × 1400 under steady flow conditions. The constants C1 and C2 are listed in Table 1.
Camarotti et al. (2019a) studied 14 different screen types at room temperature with storable liquids. The results show that △pbp increases with the screen fineness and does not depend on the fluid properties. The difference between the bubble point pressure of stainless steel (304SS) DTW 200 × 600 and aluminum DTW 200 × 600 was attributed to the manufacturing process. The model predicted friction factor f and pore Reynolds number correlation Rep showed good agreement with experimentally obtained data for all weaves except the dutch twill weave. Therefore, it was suggested to use individual empirical constants for each DTW screen instead of a universal value.
The concept of a double porous screen element for passive phase separation of liquid from gas is shown by Conrath et al. (2013) for storable liquids under terrestrial conditions, and by Pingel and Dreyer (2019) for a cryogenic liquid in microgravity.
The fluid flow inside a porous medium and the capillary driven filtration has been investigated under compensated gravity by Smirnov et al. (1999), Smirnov et al. (2003), and Dushin et al. (2018).
Experimental Setup
A test facility was developed to evaluate the phase separation and rate of liquid withdrawal into the screen channel LAD from its surroundings. The experiment design was based on the Capillary Channel Flow (CCF) experiment (Canfield et al. 2013). The CCF experiment was conducted within the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG) on-board the International Space Station (ISS) to study the stability of free surfaces in the open capillary channels. The experiment included two modules to investigate a wedge, a parallel plate, and a rectangular-shaped channel. The length of the open surface in the channels was varied in the range of 0.1 mm ≤ l≤ 48 mm by employing moving sliders. In this project, we performed microgravity experiments in the drop tower of the University of Bremen and on-board the Airbus A310 aircraft during the 33rd DLR parabolic flight campaign. The test hardware experienced 4.74 s of the microgravity in the drop tower and 22 s during the parabolic flights. This paper focuses on the results obtained during the parabolic flight experiments.
The test facility includes two racks, a hydraulic rack, and an electrical rack. The hydraulic rack contains the test channel, fluid pump, flow meter, sensors, valves, and the optical system. The electrical rack consists of the process controller, the power supply distributor, and two laptop units. The electrical and hydraulic racks equipment were enclosed inside two separate aluminum containers manufactured by Zarges.
Test Channel
The geometry of the channel is shown in Fig. 1. The test channel has a rectangular shape and three closed solid walls. The open side is covered with a porous screen element at two locations. The length l1 of the porous screen section S1 is 48 mm. The screen section S2, located at 12 mm distance from S1, has a circular cross-section of diameter l2 = 5 mm. The width b of the channel is 30 mm, and the gap distance a is 5 mm.
A measurement tube of diameter dt = 5 mm and length h = 100 mm is positioned over the screen section S2. The tube was filled with liquid before each test to observe the rate of liquid withdrawal into the channel. The saturated screen section S1 is exposed to ambient pressure pa. The total length l of the channel is 65 mm, measured from the beginning of S1 to the end of S2. The direction of the liquid flow in the channel is shown with an arrow in Fig. 1. The channel and the measurement tube were made up of acrylic to see the liquid meniscus.
Screen
The performance of the LAD to deliver a gas-free propellant supply depends on the screen characteristics. An ideal screen should be light in weight, have a high bubble point pressure, and a fast wicking rate. Camarotti et al. (2019b) investigated the screen compliance as a function of mesh fineness, metal type, and open area in a transient flow regime. They concluded that in applications, where SCLADs are exposed to frequent engine restarts or sudden pressure change, meshes with smaller pore diameter and higher ability to bend exhibit better performance compared to other screen types. Darr and Hartwig (2014) list the influencing factors to select an optimal screen. They conclude that a dutch twill weave is best suited for screen channel LAD. Warp and weft wires are woven perpendicular to each other in a dutch twilled weave, which creates a small pore diameter and tortuous path for the gas flow. Hence, the bubble point threshold of the DTW screen is higher compared to other weaves. We have chosen the DTW 200 × 1400 screen as the porous medium for S1 and S2 in our experiments. A CAD model of the screen is depicted in Fig. 2.
The stainless steel screen has 200 warp wires (light gray color) and 1400 weft wires (dark gray color) per square inch. The warp wires have a diameter of 70 μm, while the weft wires have a diameter of 40 μm (Fries et al. 2008). The characteristic properties of the screen are listed in the Table 1. Conrath and Dreyer (2012) calculated the properties from reference equations of Armour and Cannon (1968). The value for Dp was taken from the manufacturer Spoerl, Germany (Spoerl 2019). The data from Cady (1973) is based on the same set of equations. Hartwig calculated the screen properties from newly derived equations in 2016 Hartwig (2016b). The pore diameter was obtained from a fit to bubble point experiment data.
Effective Area of the Screen Section S2
The porous screen was fixed to the test channel with JFM 1675 Class B fuel tank sealant, supplied by PPG Aerospace. A part of the screen section S2 was blocked with sealant (black color), as shown in Fig. 3. The open area \(A_{S_{2}}\) of the screen section S2, through which liquid flows from the measurement tube into the test channel, was calculated to 17.8 mm2. The effective \(A_{S_{2}}\) was approximately 9.3% smaller than the original area for dt = 5 mm.
Test Liquid
3MTM NovecTM Engineering Fluid HFE-7500 was selected as test liquid for the experiment. It is non-flammable and primarily used for heat transfer applications in electrical equipment. The contact angle 𝜃 of HFE-7500 with the acrylic channel and stainless steel porous screen is 0∘. The properties of the HFE-7500 at various temperature regimes are listed in Table 2. The surface tension of the liquid can be calculated as σ = (19.12 − 0.098T/∘C)10− 3 N m− 1 as a function of temperature.
Fluid Loop
The fluid loop with hydraulic components, valves, temperature, and pressure sensors is shown in Fig. 4. The black color represents the liquid lines and the gray color the gas lines. The liquid from the test channel flows through the pump (FP), the flow meter (FM), the phase separator (PS), and then re-enters the test channel. The direction of the liquid flow is depicted with arrows. A Micropump GA-T23 gear pump head drives the liquid flow. The flow rate is measured with a SIKA VG 0,02 VA volume flow rate sensor. The accuracy of the sensor is ± 3% of the measured value, as given by the manufacturer.
The test section upstream of the channel consists of the entrance nozzle and the entrance duct. The entrance nozzle is 30 mm long and has an elliptical profile in the XY -plane. The area of the nozzle at the inlet section is AN1 = 900 mm2 and converges towards the entrance duct. A partially developed flow exits the nozzle and then develops further in the entrance duct before entering the test channel. The entrance duct is 32 mm long, and has a cross-sectional area identical to the area of the test channel A0 = 150 mm2. The 58 mm long exit duct at the end of the test channel converges to an area of 19.63 mm2.
The phase separator PS is made of acrylic and designed to ensure gas-free liquid in the test channel. The PS consists of a DTW 200 × 1400 porous screen element of 90 mm diameter, which acts as a barrier to the gas phase and prevents it from entering into the test channel. The PS has a working volume of 267 mL upstream and 178 mL downstream of the screen element. The ingested gas bubbles through S1 are collected and separated from the liquid in the phase separator. The accumulated gas can be removed via the gas line located at the top section of the PS.
The liquid reservoir (LR) is filled before the experiment and used to remove the trapped gas volume between the entrance nozzle and PS. The LR has a total working volume of 62.83 mL.
The ambient and liquid temperatures are measured using PCA type PT100 sensors from JUMO. The sensors have an accuracy of ± 0.05 ∘C. The inlet liquid temperature is monitored in the line entering the PS (T1) and at the outlet of the test channel (T2). The ambient temperature is measured in the gaseous environment near the compensation tube CT. The CT is made up of acrylic and has a diameter of 60 mm, a height 70 mm, and a total working volume of 142 mL. The CT is partially filled with liquid and connected to the downstream side of the PS by a 180 mm long tube with an inner diameter of 7.75 mm. The gaseous phase section of the CT connects to the low-pressure reservoir (LPR) by a 1280 mm long tube of 4 mm diameter. The LPR is a CRVZS-0.75 air reservoir manufactured by Festo. The operating range of the reservoir is 0.05 bar to 16 bar as given by the supplier. The CT with the LPR is used to set the inlet boundary condition in the test channel. The CT also acts as a reservoir for the displaced liquid, when gas is ingested into the liquid line. The differential pressure in the gaseous region of the CT and at the top section of the measurement tube is monitored with a HCXM050D6V series differential pressure sensor, manufactured by First Sensor. The sensors have a measurement range of 0 mbar to 50 mbar and accuracy of ± 25 Pa, as given by the manufacturer. The ambient pressure was measured with an Analogue Pressure Transmitter (ATM) absolute pressure sensor, manufactured by Tetratec. The range of the sensor is 0 bar to 1.6 bar with an accuracy of ± 2.1 mbar.
A plunger-type bellow pump (BP) acts as a liquid reservoir to maintain the correct liquid level in the test channel and the CT. The BP is filled with liquid and connected to the PS by a 560 mm long tube of 4 mm diameter. The bellow pump is a custom-made piece of hardware.
Electrical Subsystem
The electrical subsystem contains the process controller and the power supply distributor. The experiment computer is a cRIO-9047 controller from National Instruments equipped with 4GB RAM and a 1.6 GHz Intel Atom E3940 Quad-Core processor. The power supply distributor coverts the 230 V AC input voltage to the 24 V DC output voltage and distributes it to the process controller and the experiment equipment. The total power consumption to run the experiment was measured as 270 W.
Optics
The optical system consists of three CMOS cameras (CAM1, CAM2, CAM3) from Imagingsource and two Stemmer Imaging LED light panels. CAM1 focuses on the lower section of the measurement tube and the rectangular channel to observe the occurrence of the bubble breakthrough under the screen section S1. The field of view of CAM1 was 96 mm by 54 mm. CAM2 monitors the liquid level in the measurement tube and the screen section S2. It covers an area of 131.5 mm by 74 mm. CAM3 focuses on the compensation tube to assist in maintaining the correct liquid level. The test section is illuminated with LED panels positioned parallel to the test channel and the compensation tube to produce sharp images of the liquid meniscus. The LEDs have a wavelength of 635 nm, which matches the spectral sensitivity of the cameras. During the entire parabolic flight, the cameras provided live video feedback of the test channel and the CT to Laptop 2. When triggered, the cameras record gray-scale images at 41 frames per second in a synchronized manner for 29 s. The resolution of each camera unit was set to 1920×1080 pixels per image. The measurement tube is marked with a black and white scale to determine the liquid height. Each marking on the tube represented a length of 5 mm.
Experiment Preparation
Liquid Filling
The experiment cell was filled with liquid before transportation and installation of the hardware in aircraft. After the installation, additional liquid was added through the compensation tube, entered into the phase separator, the test channel, and the lines shown in black color in Fig. 4. The displaced gas could escape from the screen sections S1 and S2. After the test section was filled, a steady liquid-gas interface was established in the compensation tube. Due to the hydrostatic head, the height of the liquid meniscus in the compensation tube corresponds to the liquid level in the test channel. When the experiment cell is filled completely, the screen sections S1 and S2 are saturated and become impermeable to the gas phase. The trapped gas in the vicinity of the screen sections S1 and S2 was removed by running the fluid pump and establishing a liquid flow in the channel. The gas bubbles were carried away with the liquid and accumulated at the exit duct. The exit duct has a bore of 4.134 mm diameter, located at 14.93 mm distance from the screen section S2, on its top surface. This bore is connected to the LPR through valve V7. The removal of the gaseous phase was performed by opening the valve V7, which applies the LPR suction pressure on the collected gas volume. A throttle valve TV2, positioned between the LPR and valve V7, controls the magnitude of the suction pressure to prevent liquid ingestion with the gas. On the upstream side of the channel, the collected gas volume between the PS and entrance nozzle is exchanged with the LR liquid by operating valve V8.
Hardware Installation
After filling the experiment cell with the test liquid, the hardware was installed in the aircraft. The aircraft coordinate axis system is described as follows: x direction from tail to front, y direction from left to right, z direction from floor to ceiling. Information of previous experiments and the parabolic flight manual suggest, that the y-axis of the plane is subjected to the smallest residual acceleration. Therefore, we aligned the flow direction or x-axis of our test channel with the y-axis of the aircraft coordinate system. The experiment coordinate system is aligned as follows: x direction from left to right-wing, y direction from tail to front, and z direction from floor to ceiling.
Experiment Procedure
The differential pressure between the ambient and the LPR is always maintained in the range of 0.2 bar to 0.25 bar to control the suction pressure magnitude. During the experiments, the cabin pressure in the aircraft dropped to approximately 0.85 bar. Therefore, the absolute pressure of the LPR was regulated to 0.6 bar by operating a swing piston vacuum pump NPK 09 DC, supplied from KNF with valve V2. For each parabola flight profile, the test facility is exposed to both microgravity and hypergravity environments. The 22 s of the microgravity phase is preceded and followed by a 1.8 ge hypergravity phase for approximately 24 s. The transition time between the hypergravity and microgravity phase was approximately 4 s.
Before Each Parabola
Initially, valves V1 and V5 are opened to set the test channel pressure to equilibrium with the ambient pressure and then closed. Afterward, valve V3 was opened, which depressurizes the CT by exposing it to the low pressure of the LPR. The CT is connected to the PS via a liquid line, thus, the pressure in the channel also reduces. The rate of depressurization is controlled by a throttle valve TV1. If the liquid is at rest, the pressure in the entire channel and CT remains the same. A differential pressure sensor connected to the gaseous area of the CT and the housing of the test channel measures the pressure △pct, as shown in Fig. 4. The applied differential pressure was selected to be less than the bubble point pressure of the screen element to avoid gas breakthrough into the channel through the screen sections S1 and S2. The fluid pump FP located downstream of the channel provides the liquid flow. The flow rate is set to a predefined value for each parabola and monitored with the flow meter FM. To raise the liquid level in the measurement tube, valve V6, connecting the top section of the measurement tube to the LPR, was opened. The LPR applies a suction pressure on the top end of the measurement tube, and liquid from the channel moves out into the tube. The pressure △pct reduces further due to the suction pressure of the LPR. The liquid level in the tube was monitored via live video feedback of CAM2. The valve V6 was closed when the liquid level in the tube reached the desired height. A differential pressure sensor located at the top section of the measurement tube measures the pressure △pt. The measured value of △pt was always higher than △pct. The difference is due to the hydrostatic head of the liquid column in the tube. At t = − 10 s before the start of the parabola, the sensor output data was triggered to be recorded with 100 Hz. During the microgravity phase, the hydrostatic head of the liquid column in the measurement tube becomes negligible; thus, △pt reduces and establishes an equilibrium with △pct.
During Each Parabola
CAM1, CAM2, and CAM3 are triggered to record images. If valve V5 opens, it exposes the liquid in the measurement tube to the ambient pressure. The withdrawal of liquid starts. If the liquid level in the tube reaches the screen section S2, valve V5 was closed. For bubble point experiments, only valve V6 was operated during parabola, and all other valves remain closed.
Results
We performed 91 experiments during the 33rd parabolic flight campaign of DLR (March 2019). We gathered quantitative data on the phase separation capability of the screen channel liquid acquisition device. The experiment was operated on-board by a team of two persons. The temperature, absolute and differential pressure sensor data were recorded continuously for the complete flight on each day at 10 Hz rate, and at 100 Hz during the parabola. The maximum flow rate in the channel was limited to 15.7 mL s− 1. The phase separator operated successfully. We removed the ingested gas after the aircraft had landed.
The differential pressure in the CT △pct, the liquid flow rate in the channel Qc, and the liquid column height ht in the measurement tube were used for the parametric study. We state all test parameters in Tables 3, 4 and 5. Experiments with IDs F1P1, F1P3, F1P4, F3P29, and F3P30 were performed in the hypergravity phase (indicated with bold letters in Tables 3 and 5) to investigate the sustainability of the device in cases of sudden acceleration and vibrational disturbances. All other experiments were conducted in the partly compensated phase of the flight. The first eleven experiments in Table 3 focused on the observation of the behavior of the system in a variable gravity environment. For those experiments, valve V5 remained closed, and the sensors and cameras were triggered to record the images and data. The liquid temperature is monitored by temperature sensors T1 and T2 at the inlet and outlet lines during the experiment (See Fig. 4). As seen in Tables 3, 4 and 5, the liquid temperature increased over time due to heat generated by the fluid pump FP.
Differential Pressure and Gravity Variation
The differential pressures △pct and △pt, as well as the acceleration in z-direction are shown in Fig. 5 for ID F3P18. At t = − 40 s, the temperature, pressure and flow rate sensors recording was switched to 100 Hz. The first hypergravity phase was initiated at approximately t = − 30 s. The acceleration in z-direction increased to 1.8 times the gravitational acceleration on Earth. This caused an increase of the hydrostatic head in the measurement tube. The differential pressure △pt increased from 23 hPa to 26 hPa, and then reduced during the transition phase.
The compensated gravity phase began at t = − 2 s, and ended at t = 19 s. In that phase, the hydrostatic head of the liquid column in the measurement tube became negligible, and an equilibrium state was established between △pt and △pct. The capillary force caused a reorientation of the meniscus shape in the measurement tube. HFE-7500 has a contact angle of 0∘ with the acrylic glass, and the radius of curvature of the liquid meniscus became equal to the tube radius. The reorientation time was calculated as 0.1 s Stange et al. (2003). The time t = 0 s corresponds to the first recorded image of the camera units. The first vertical line from the left represents the opening time of valve V5, and the tube was exposed to the ambient pressure. △pt reduced to zero, and △pct approached its initial state slowly. With the initial state, we define the instant of time when we first applied the LPR suction pressure on the tube to extract the liquid from the channel. We assume the screen characteristics influence the slow change in △pct. The liquid from the tube shall be transported back into the channel to reach the initial state. But the liquid flow rate through the screen is affected by the differential pressure across it. This behavior was observed in all the experiments; the system returned to its original state faster for higher values of △pct. The circular mark represents the time when the liquid meniscus in the tube reaches the screen section S2. The second vertical line from the left represents the closing of the valve V5. The second transition phase started at t = 19 s and was followed by a hypergravity phase.
Phase Separation
With Qc = 0, the system pressure remains in equilibrium, p0 = p1 = pa (Fig. 1). If a liquid flow rate is established in the channel, a pressure drop is induced along the length of the channel. The pressure at position 1 gets smaller than the pressure at position 0, p1 < p0. The pressure difference across the screen section S2 drives the liquid from the measurement tube into the channel. The rate of the liquid withdrawal is determined by the flow-through-screen resistance of the porous medium and the differential pressure across screen section S2. The total pressure loss in the channel can be determined from Rosendahl et al. (2004). The pressure drop from the entrance nozzle to the screen section S2 (including the pressure drop of the converging nozzle) was calculated to be 25 Pa for a maximum liquid flow rate Qc = 15 mL s− 1. This pressure difference is very small compared to the differential pressure across the screen, hence it is neglected in the data evaluation. Three experiments (IDs F1P20, F2P13, and F3P10) were chosen to show the performance of the test setup for each flight day (see Fig. 6). Experiment F1P20 had the lowest △pct, and experiment F3P10 had the highest △pct, as shown in Tables 3, 4, and 5. The images represent the state of the liquid meniscus at different time instances. The first set of images (I) was taken at the time of valve V5 opening. In sets (II) and (III), the liquid meniscus in the measurement tube is moving downward. In set (IV), liquid meniscus in the tube reached to screen. The higher differential pressure across the screen resulted in a higher liquid withdrawal rate. The saturated screen section S1 acts as a barrier to the ambient gas, no gas breakthrough into the channel was observed during phase separation experiments.
The recorded images were processed to detect the position of the liquid meniscus in the measurement tube. Figure 7 shows the differential pressure △pct, the liquid height ht, and flow rate Qt in the measurement tube for experiment F3P10. The liquid height ht was determined in the center of the tube with an error of 2 to 3 pixels, which corresponds to 0.14 mm. The left picture depicts ht and the corresponding △pct with respect to the experiment time. At t = 0 s, all camera units were started to record the images. The vertical line indicates the opening of the valve V5. The right picture in Fig. 7 shows Qt in the tube after opening the valve V5. Qt was calculated by subtracting the height ht at a time interval t1 from the previously recorded height at t0. The difference in height over the time interval △t = 0.1 s is used to compute the liquid flow rate Qt in the tube.
Figures 8, 9 and 10 show Qt relative to △pct for flight day 1, 2, and 3 experiments, respectively. The analytical solution is obtained using (3) and the screen properties from Table 1. We performed least-square fits for all collected data points and compared it with the analytical solutions in Fig. 11. The liquid flow rate Qt,E from the experiments is closest to the Conrath and Dreyer (2012) data. However, all analytical calculations under-predict the flow rate. We assumed that this deviation is due to an error in the calculation of the effective screen section S2. We observed that some part of S2 outside the 5 mm diameter region was not covered with sealant (Fig. 3). The screen in the defined area was also not attached to the channel surface and acted as an open space for the liquid flow. The open area \(A_{S_{2}}\) of the screen section S2 may be as large as 21.6 mm2. The analytical solution based on this new area \(A_{S_{2}}\) = 21.6 mm2 shows better agreement with the experiment data (see Fig. 12).
We analyze our data with regard to the correlations for the flow-through-screen pressure drop from “State of the Art”. We take the pressure drop △pct as the dependent variable (in the form of a friction factor f ) and plot it against the superficial velocity us as the independent variable (in the form of a Rep number). We have used the screen area \(A_{S_{2}} =\) 21.6 mm2. Each data point from Figs. 8, 9 and 10 is converted using the screen properties from Table 1. The screen parameters differ between different authors. The porosity reported by Cady (1973) has the highest difference. This has, together with a smaller C1, a remarkable effect on the friction factor. All other screen parameters except C1, C2, and ϕ are within a ± 10% variation.
We have marked the different results with different symbols in Fig. 13: △ for Cady (1973), ○ for Conrath and Dreyer (2012), and ▽ for Hartwig (Hartwig 2016b). Our experimental results, reorganized in the from f = f(Rep), are then compared with the correlations themselves.
Figure 13 reveals that our data recomputed with the data from Cady (1973) lead to a smaller friction factor than the data from Conrath and Dreyer (2012) and Hartwig (2016b). This was not visible in Fig. 11. All data points are in the range 0.01 ≤Rep ≤ 1. Therefor, the second term in Eq. 7 is negligible. We conclude that the differences in Figs. 8, 9 and 10 cannot be explained by the differences in the correlations. The largest source of error is the estimation of the effective screen area.
Bubble Point Pressure Test
We investigated the static bubble point of the porous screen in compensated gravity with experiments F2P30, F3P15, F3P20, F3P25, and in hypergravity with experiments F3P29, and F3P30. During the parabolic trajectory of the airplane (and the residual accelerations of 10− 3 ge associated with it), the liquid in the compensation tube moved and covered lines to the valves V1 and V3. To prevent flooding of the gas lines, the valves connected to the CT remained closed for bubble point experiments. The pressure in the channel was reduced in a stepwise manner by opening valve V6, which connects the measurement tube to the LPR. The images in xz-plane for experiments F3P15, F3P20, and F3P25 are shown in Fig. 14 at different time intervals. At t = 0 s (set I), both screen sections S1 and S2 were exposed to ambient pressure.
To established a differential pressure across the screen, valve V6 was opened for a short time interval and then closed. The sequential opening and closing of valve V6 allowed to control the LPR suction pressure on the screen section S2. The suction pressure is recorded as △pt by a differential pressure sensor located at the top end of the measurement tube. Due to the applied suction pressure, the pressure in the channel is reduced, and liquid moved into the tube from the channel. The screen section S2 was submerged in liquid, and only S1 was open to the ambient gas. This can be seen in set II of Fig. 14. Depending on the applied pressure, the channel pressure reduced further, and liquid continued to rise in the tube until the differential pressure △pct remained below the bubble point pressure △pbp of the screen. The gas breakthrough occurred through screen section S1 when △pct exceeded △pbp, as shown in set III of Fig. 14. The ingested gas formed bubbles, which detached due to the shear force of the liquid flow in the channel. The bubbles moved with the liquid and coalesced to larger non-circular bubbles.
The change in differential pressure versus time is shown in Figs. 15 and 16 for experiments F3P15, F3P20, F3P25, and F3P30. The vertical lines and circular marks represent the event of the bubble breakthrough. The applied differential pressure was reduced at the bubble point and then continues to recede until the pores become saturated again and block further gas ingestion. The ingested gas moves with the liquid flow. It is stored in the phase separator and does not enter the channel again. We compare experimental values with the theoretical results in Table 6. The data shows good agreement for all experiments. The analytical solution is based on Eqs. 1 and 2. The average of the experimentally obtained bubble point diameter is calculated to be (18.83 ± 0.12) μm. For experiments F2P30 and F3P29, the liquid in the measurement tube reached the top end while increasing the differential pressure in the channel. We stopped the experiments before the bubble point limit of the screen could be reached to prevent the flooding of the gas lines. In Table 7, DTW 200 × 1400 △pbp values are listed for storable and cryogenic liquid experiments and the measured Dbp is compared. The 4 data points of the current study are plotted with historical bubble point pressure against the surface tension in Fig. 17. A data fit is provided for the comparison with other studies.
Conclusion
We developed a test facility to investigate phase separation and the occurrence of bubble ingestion in a porous screen integrated rectangular capillary channel. The liquid withdrawal into the channel from its surroundings was evaluated in a compensated gravity environment and compared with the analytical values. The analytical solution is based on the screen properties, as reported by different authors. The comparison shows that the analytical result under-predicts the liquid flow rate Qt across the screen. The theoretical results were corrected by recomputing the open area of the screen, which shows better agreement with the experimental data. We did not observe a gas breakthrough during the phase separation experiments.
We performed bubble point experiments in a compensated gravity as well as in a hypergravity environment. We observed the occurrence of a gas breakthrough when the differential pressure across the screen exceeded the bubble point pressure limit. The measured bubble points are within the predicted range for all experiments.
We performed our parametric study by varying the compensation tube differential pressure △pct, the liquid flow rate in the channel Qc, and liquid column height ht in the measurement tube. The results show that a porous medium can be used as a passive phase separator. The combination of the bubble point pressure and the flow-through-screen pressure (correlations available in literature) can be used to design screen channel liquid acquisition devices. SCLAD can be used in different application, where gas-free liquid removal without the help of the hydrostatic pressure is required.
Abbreviations
- △pbp :
-
bubble point pressure, hPa
- △p0 :
-
bubble point reference pressure, hPa
- △p :
-
differential pressure, hPa
- △pct :
-
differential pressure in the CT, hPa
- △pt :
-
differential pressure in the tube, hPa
- b :
-
channel width, mm
- a :
-
gap distance, mm
- A 0 :
-
area of the test channel, mm2
- A N1 :
-
area of the nozzle, mm2
- \(A_{S_{2}}\) :
-
area of the screen section S2, mm2
- B :
-
screen thickness, μm
- C 0 :
-
screen constant, −
- C 1 :
-
viscous drag coefficient, −
- C 2 :
-
inertial drag coefficient, −
- d t :
-
tube diameter, mm
- D p :
-
particle retention diameter, μm
- D b p :
-
bubble point diameter, μm
- Eu:
-
Euler number, −
- f :
-
friction factor, −
- g e :
-
acceleration, gravity, 9.81 m s−2
- h :
-
measurement tube height, mm
- h t :
-
liquid height, mm
- l :
-
length of the channel, mm
- l 1 :
-
length of screen section S1, mm
- l 2 :
-
length of screen section S2, mm
- p a :
-
ambient pressure, bar
- p 0 :
-
pressure at the beginning of S1, hPa
- p 1 :
-
pressure at the screen section S2, hPa
- Q c :
-
flow rate in the channel, mL s− 1
- Q t :
-
flow rate in the tube, mL s− 1
- Rep :
-
pore Reynolds number, −
- S :
-
specific surface area, μm− 1
- S1, S2 :
-
screen sections
- t :
-
time, s
- Δt :
-
time difference, s
- T :
-
temperature, ∘C
- u s :
-
superficial velocity, mm s− 1
- X :
-
flow direction in channel, coordinate system
- Y :
-
coordinate system
- Z :
-
vertical direction, coordinate system
- μ :
-
dynamic viscosity, Pas
- ϕ :
-
porosity, −
- ρ :
-
density, kg m− 3
- σ :
-
surface tension, N m− 1
- τ :
-
screen tortuosity, −
- 𝜃 :
-
contact angle, ∘
- 0:
-
initial condition
- 1,2:
-
first, second
- bp :
-
bubble point
- l :
-
liquid
- c :
-
channel
- t :
-
tube
- ct :
-
compensation tube
- E :
-
experiment
- A :
-
analytical
- BP:
-
bellow pump
- CT:
-
compensation tube
- FM:
-
flow meter
- FP:
-
flow pump
- LPR:
-
low pressure reservoir
- LR:
-
liquid reservoir
- PS:
-
phase separator
- TV1,TV2,TV3:
-
throttle valves
- V1,V2,V3,V5,V6,V7,V9:
-
gas valves
- V4,V8:
-
liquid valves
- VP:
-
vacuum pump
- CCF:
-
capillary channel flow
- ISS:
-
International Space Station
- DTW:
-
dutch twill weave
- SEM:
-
Scanning Electron Microscopy
- MSG:
-
Microgravity Science Glovebox
- IPA:
-
isopropyl alcohol
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Acknowledgements
The project under grant number 50WM1745 is funded by the means of the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (BMWi) through the German Aerospace Center (DLR e.V.). The authors acknowledge the support provided by Holger Faust, Ronald Mairose, and Marcel Bernauer. We also acknowledge the support of Vishwas Kulkarni for helping with the data evaluation. We are grateful for the reviews comments. In particular the display of the flow-through-screen pressure helps to understand the differences in the results.
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Bisht, K.S., Dreyer, M.E. Phase Separation in Porous Media Integrated Capillary Channels. Microgravity Sci. Technol. 32, 1001–1018 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12217-020-09828-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12217-020-09828-6