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Faculty Publications

Series

2014

Pressure

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

New Advances In Post-Installed Subsea Monitoring Systems For Structural And Flow Assurance Evaluation, Reza Asgharzadeh Shishavan, David Brower, John Hedengren, Alexis Brower Jun 2014

New Advances In Post-Installed Subsea Monitoring Systems For Structural And Flow Assurance Evaluation, Reza Asgharzadeh Shishavan, David Brower, John Hedengren, Alexis Brower

Faculty Publications

An overview of fiber optic sensors for temperature, pressure, strain, and fatigue of subsea structures is provided. Current progress details efforts to ensure proper installation and bonding to existing risers, flow-lines, mooring lines, trees, and other structures in actual subsea environments. Developments include clamp prototypes, bonding techniques, long-term fatigue analysis, sensor calibration, and temperature compensation. Fiber optic technology in subsea monitoring began over 20 years ago by migrating expertise from decommissioning of rocket motors. The first installations were on new installations of subsea pipelines, production risers, and drilling risers to measure strain and vibration for fatigue life monitoring. Of particular …


Simulation Of The Evolution Of Pressure In A Lignite Particle During Pyrolysis, He Yang, Sufen Li, Thomas H. Fletcher, Ming Dong, Weishi Zhou Jan 2014

Simulation Of The Evolution Of Pressure In A Lignite Particle During Pyrolysis, He Yang, Sufen Li, Thomas H. Fletcher, Ming Dong, Weishi Zhou

Faculty Publications

The evolution of pressure in a lignite particle during pyrolysis was simulated on the basis of the gas motion equation in porous media and considering the Klinkenberg effect. The chemical percolation devolatilization (CPD) model was used to describe pyrolysis. The pore diameter in the particle is close to the average free path of volatile gas molecules; therefore, the solid phase restrains the movement of gas. Because flow out of the particle is restricted, the internal pressure rises. The internal pressure first increases and then decreases during pyrolysis, and the evolution is influenced by heating conditions. The pressure rise is larger …