In Chaos (Woodbury, N.Y.)
Gas-liquid two-phase flow is polymorphic and unstable, and characterizing its flow behavior is a major challenge in the study of multiphase flow. We first conduct dynamic experiments on gas-liquid two-phase flow in a vertical tube and obtain multi-channel signals using a self-designed four-sector distributed conductivity sensor. In order to characterize the evolution of gas-liquid two-phase flow, we transform the obtained signals using the adaptive optimal kernel time-frequency representation and build a complex network based on the time-frequency energy distribution. As quantitative indicators, global clustering coefficients of the complex network at various sparsity levels are computed to analyze the dynamic behavior of various flow structures. The results demonstrate that the proposed approach enables effective analysis of multi-channel measurement information for revealing the evolutionary mechanisms of gas-liquid two-phase flow. Furthermore, for the purpose of flow structure recognition, we propose a temporal-spatio convolutional neural network and achieve a classification accuracy of 95.83%.
Li Meng-Yu, Wang Rui-Qi, Zhang Jian-Bo, Gao Zhong-Ke
2023-Jan