Natural Gas Technology - A Computer Simulation of Gas Flow in Long Pipelines

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. D. Taylor N. E. Wood J. E. Powers
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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6
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327 KB
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Abstract

A computer program has been developed to simulate a gas transmission 1ine operating under transient conditions. The program was developed by application of the basic mass and momentum balance equations. The nonlinear equations thus obtained were transformed by the method of characteristics and finite-difference techniques to make them suitable for machine computation. Three tests of the computer program were made. In each of these, the initial condition was assumed to be steady-state flow, the inlet density was held constant at the initial condition, and the outlet mass flow rate was varied with time. One test was theoretical in nature, but the others were made for direct comparison with actual field data. Results of the tests are presented in graphical form. INTRODUCTION Theoretical investigations of the transient flow of gas in long pipelines have been limited in number. In 1951, Olds and Sage4 developed a gaphical method of solving the nonlinear flow equations describing transient gas flow in a long pipeline. Research in this field at the U. of Oklahoma was initiated by Nelson1 in 1956. Nelson utilized a computer to solve numerical equations involving a lengthy trial-and-error procedure, and his results have been reported in the literature? It does not seem likely that Nelson's method can be extended to the analysis of transient behavior of pipeline networks; therefore, the investigation to be discussed in this paper was undertaken to improve and extend the previous work. The following discussion presents, briefly: (1) the basic differential equations governing transient flow, (2) transformation of these equations into a form suitable for machine computation. (3) role of boundary conditions in the calculations, (4) a very brief description of the computer program which was developed to simulate the pipeline and (5) results of tests of the computer program.
Citation

APA: T. D. Taylor N. E. Wood J. E. Powers  Natural Gas Technology - A Computer Simulation of Gas Flow in Long Pipelines

MLA: T. D. Taylor N. E. Wood J. E. Powers Natural Gas Technology - A Computer Simulation of Gas Flow in Long Pipelines. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers,

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