Assessment of leak tightness for swellable elastomeric seals considering fluid-structure interaction with the CEL approach
Gorash, Y. and Bickley, A. and Gozalo, F. (2018) Assessment of leak tightness for swellable elastomeric seals considering fluid-structure interaction with the CEL approach. In: 24th International Conference on Fluid Sealing, 2018-03-07 - 2018-03-08.
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Abstract
Swellable elastomeric seal is a type of specifically engineered packer that swell upon contact with wellbore fluids. Assessment of leakage tightness is a fundamental aspect in the design of swellable packers, since they should guarantee a reliable sealing under extreme pressures of the downhole fluids. Numerical capability of the leakage pressure prediction would facilitate improvement in the packer design methodology. Previous work was focused on investigation of the non-parametric optimisation capability seeking for an optimal external shape with a goal to maximise the grip of a packer with a borehole. The verification of an optimised design was done with a dynamic FE-simulation of packer's failure by extrusion under an excessive pressure. The downside of that verification analysis was that Abaqus/Explicit solver couldn't implement a realistic adaptive pressure application due to changing packer disposition and contact conditions. This simulation challenge is addressed in this paper by application of the Coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian (CEL) approach in Abaqus/Explicit, which provides the ability to simulate a class of problems where the fluid-structure interaction (FSI) is important.
ORCID iDs
Gorash, Y. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2802-7814, Bickley, A. and Gozalo, F.;-
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Item type: Conference or Workshop Item(Paper) ID code: 67308 Dates: DateEvent7 March 2018Published5 February 2018AcceptedSubjects: Technology > Mechanical engineering and machinery Department: Faculty of Engineering > Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 14 Mar 2019 12:57 Last modified: 21 Nov 2024 01:40 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/67308