Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids

Thesis (MTech (Electrical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology. === Pulsed Ultrasound Velocimetry combined with Pressure Difference (PUV+PD) measurement is a non-invasive in-line rheometric technique which is used to analyse the complex flow properties of industrial fluids for qual...

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Main Author: Shamu, Tafadzwa John
Other Authors: Kotze, Reinhardt
Language:en
Published: Cape Peninsula University of Technology 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2189
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-cput-oai-localhost-20.500.11838-21892018-05-28T05:09:51Z Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids Shamu, Tafadzwa John Kotze, Reinhardt Haldenwang, Rainer Fluids -- Industrial applications Pulsed ultrasound velocimetry Ultrasound beam properties Rheology Flow-Viz™ Thesis (MTech (Electrical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology. Pulsed Ultrasound Velocimetry combined with Pressure Difference (PUV+PD) measurement is a non-invasive in-line rheometric technique which is used to analyse the complex flow properties of industrial fluids for quality control purposes. Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) and Technical Research Institute of Sweden (SP) have developed and patented a new PUV+PD based system, called Flow-Viz™. Despite this advancement, the system and ultrasound sensor technology have not been fully tested and evaluated in a wide range of industrial fluids. Acoustic characterisation tests were carried out at SP, with the aim of understanding the ultrasound beam properties after propagating through industrial stainless steel (316L) pipe walls. For these tests, a high-precision robotic XYZ-scanner and needle hydrophone setup were used. Different ultrasound sensor configurations were mounted to a stainless steel pipe while using different coupling media between the transducer-to-wedge and sensor wedge-to-pipe boundaries. The ultrasound beam propagation after the wall interface was measured by navigating the needle hydrophone within a predefined 2-dimensional spatial grid. The most suitable coupling material was determined from the acoustic characterisation, and then used in the in-line rheological characterisation tests to evaluate the performance of the Flow-VizTM rheometric unit against conventional tube viscometry. The in-line rheological tests were conducted with bentonite, kaolin and Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) model fluids. The flow loop used consisted of three different pipe test sections; and two concentrations of each fluid were tested in order to ascertain the consistency of the measurements. The in-line rheological tests showed good agreement (±15%) between the two techniques and Flow-VizTM was able to provide important data at very low shear rates. Acoustic characterisation indicated that variations in the beam properties were highly dependent on the acoustic couplants used to mount the sensors to the stainless steel pipes. Furthermore, the in-line results showed the effectiveness of Flow-VizTM as an industrial rheometer. The non-invasive ultrasound sensor technology, was for the first time acoustically characterised through stainless steel. This information will now be used to further optimise the unique technology for advanced industrial applications, e.g. oil drilling fields, complex cement grout and food processing applications. 2016-04-11T13:14:26Z 2016-09-09T10:00:05Z 2016-04-11T13:14:26Z 2016-09-09T10:00:05Z 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2189 en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/za/ Cape Peninsula University of Technology
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Fluids -- Industrial applications
Pulsed ultrasound velocimetry
Ultrasound beam properties
Rheology
Flow-Viz™
spellingShingle Fluids -- Industrial applications
Pulsed ultrasound velocimetry
Ultrasound beam properties
Rheology
Flow-Viz™
Shamu, Tafadzwa John
Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
description Thesis (MTech (Electrical Engineering))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology. === Pulsed Ultrasound Velocimetry combined with Pressure Difference (PUV+PD) measurement is a non-invasive in-line rheometric technique which is used to analyse the complex flow properties of industrial fluids for quality control purposes. Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) and Technical Research Institute of Sweden (SP) have developed and patented a new PUV+PD based system, called Flow-Viz™. Despite this advancement, the system and ultrasound sensor technology have not been fully tested and evaluated in a wide range of industrial fluids. Acoustic characterisation tests were carried out at SP, with the aim of understanding the ultrasound beam properties after propagating through industrial stainless steel (316L) pipe walls. For these tests, a high-precision robotic XYZ-scanner and needle hydrophone setup were used. Different ultrasound sensor configurations were mounted to a stainless steel pipe while using different coupling media between the transducer-to-wedge and sensor wedge-to-pipe boundaries. The ultrasound beam propagation after the wall interface was measured by navigating the needle hydrophone within a predefined 2-dimensional spatial grid. The most suitable coupling material was determined from the acoustic characterisation, and then used in the in-line rheological characterisation tests to evaluate the performance of the Flow-VizTM rheometric unit against conventional tube viscometry. The in-line rheological tests were conducted with bentonite, kaolin and Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) model fluids. The flow loop used consisted of three different pipe test sections; and two concentrations of each fluid were tested in order to ascertain the consistency of the measurements. The in-line rheological tests showed good agreement (±15%) between the two techniques and Flow-VizTM was able to provide important data at very low shear rates. Acoustic characterisation indicated that variations in the beam properties were highly dependent on the acoustic couplants used to mount the sensors to the stainless steel pipes. Furthermore, the in-line results showed the effectiveness of Flow-VizTM as an industrial rheometer. The non-invasive ultrasound sensor technology, was for the first time acoustically characterised through stainless steel. This information will now be used to further optimise the unique technology for advanced industrial applications, e.g. oil drilling fields, complex cement grout and food processing applications.
author2 Kotze, Reinhardt
author_facet Kotze, Reinhardt
Shamu, Tafadzwa John
author Shamu, Tafadzwa John
author_sort Shamu, Tafadzwa John
title Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
title_short Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
title_full Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
title_fullStr Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
title_sort evaluation and characterisation of an ultrasound based in-line rheometric system for industrial fluids
publisher Cape Peninsula University of Technology
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/2189
work_keys_str_mv AT shamutafadzwajohn evaluationandcharacterisationofanultrasoundbasedinlinerheometricsystemforindustrialfluids
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