Validation of the Combustion Space Simulation of a Glass Furnace Model

Author(s):  
B. Golchert ◽  
S. L. Chang ◽  
M. Petrick ◽  
C. Q. Zhou

Abstract A completely coupled glass furnace simulation that combines calculations for the combustion space, glass melt, and radiative heat transfer throughout the furnace has been developed as part of a Department of Energy sponsored program. A major component of this program entailed the collection of an extensive set of data from an operating glass furnace for the purpose of validation. The data collected were compared with the results from computer simulations of the furnace based on the actual operating conditions. These comparisons indicated that the computated results were valid. This paper will present and discuss the gas velocity and gas temperature measurements/validation studies.

Author(s):  
Adamos Adamou ◽  
Colin Copeland

Abstract Augmented backside cooling refers to the enhancement of the backside convection of a combustor liner using extended heat transfer surfaces to fully utilise the cooling air by maximising the heat transfer to pumping ratio characteristic. Although film cooling has and still is widely used in the gas turbine industry, augmented backside cooling has been in development for decades now. The reason for this, is to reduce the amount of air used for liner cooling and to also reduce the emissions caused by using film cooling in the primary zones. In the case of micro gas turbines, emissions are of even greater importance, since the regulations for such engines will most likely become stricter in the following years due to a global effort to reduce emission. Furthermore, the liners investigated in this paper are for a 10 kWe micro turbine, destine for various potential markets, such as combine heat and power for houses, EV hybrids and even small UAVs. The majority of these markets require long service intervals, which in turn requires the combustor liners to be under the least amount of thermal stress possible. The desire to also increase combustor inlet temperatures with the use of recuperated exhaust gases, which in turn increase the overall system efficiency, limits the cooling effectiveness of the inlet air. Due to all these reasons, an advanced form of augmented backside cooling would be of substantial significance in such a system. Currently some very simple designs are used in the form of straight plain fins, transverse strips or other similar geometries, but the creation of high heat transfer efficiency surfaces in such small sizes becomes very difficult with traditional subtractive manufacturing methods. When using additive manufacturing though these types of surfaces are not an issue. This paper covers the comparison of experimental results with conjugate heat transfer CFD models and empirical heat balance models for two different AM liner cooling geometries and an AM blank liner. The two cooling fin geometries include a rotating plain fin and an offset strip fin. The liners were tested in an AM built reverse flow radial swirl stabilised combustion chamber at a variety of operating conditions. During the experiments the surfaces were compared using a thermal camera to record the outer liner temperature which was viewed through a quartz outer casing. The experimental results showed that the cooling surfaces were effective at reducing the liner temperatures with minimal pressure losses for multiple operating points. Those results were then compared against the conjugate heat transfer CFD models and the empirical calculations used to design the surfaces initially. From this comparison, it was noticed both the CFD and empirical calculations under predicted the wall temperatures. This is thought to be due to inaccuracies in the predicted flame temperatures and the assumed emissivity values used to calibrate the thermal imaging camera. Further uncertainties arise from the assumption of a constant air and hot gas temperature and mass flow along the cooling surfaces and the lack of data for the surface roughness of the parts.


Author(s):  
Antonio Andreini ◽  
Matteo Cerutti ◽  
Bruno Facchini ◽  
Luca Mangani

One of the driving requirements in gas turbine design is the combustion analysis. The reduction of exhaust pollutant emissions is in fact the main design constraint of modern gas turbine engines, requiring a detailed investigation of flame stabilization criteria and temperature distribution within combustion chamber. At the same time, the prediction of thermal loads on liner walls continues to represent a critical issue especially with diffusion flame combustors which are still widely used in aeroengines. To meet such requirement, design techniques have to take advantage also of the most recent CFD tools that have to supply advanced combustion models according to the specific application demand. Even if LES approach represents a very accurate approach for the analysis of reactive flows, RANS computation still represents a fundamental tool in industrial gas turbine development, thanks to its optimal tradeoff between accuracy and computational costs. This paper describes the development and the validation of both combustion and radiation models in a object-oriented RANS CFD code: several turbulent combustion models were considered, all based on a generalized presumed PDF flamelet approach, valid for premixed and non premixed flames. Concerning radiative heat transfer calculations, two directional models based on the P1-Approximation and the Finite Volume Method were treated. Accuracy and reliability of developed models have been proved by performing several computations on well known literature test-cases. Selected cases investigate several turbulent flame types and regimes allowing to prove code affordability in a wide range of possible gas turbine operating conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samira Gharehkhani ◽  
Ali Nouri-Borujerdi ◽  
Salim Newaz Kazi ◽  
Hooman Yarmand

In this study an expression for soot absorption coefficient is introduced to extend the weighted-sum-of-gray gases data to the furnace medium containing gas-soot mixture in a utility boiler 150 MWe. Heat transfer and temperature distribution of walls and within the furnace space are predicted by zone method technique. Analyses have been done considering both cases of presence and absence of soot particles at 100% load. To validate the proposed soot absorption coefficient, the expression is coupled with the Taylor and Foster's data as well as Truelove's data for CO2-H2O mixture and the total emissivities are calculated and compared with the Truelove's parameters for 3-term and 4-term gray gases plus two soot absorption coefficients. In addition, some experiments were conducted at 100% and 75% loads to measure furnace exit gas temperature as well as the rate of steam production. The predicted results show good agreement with the measured data at the power plant site.


2012 ◽  
Vol 516-517 ◽  
pp. 3-8
Author(s):  
Zhao Ying Zhang ◽  
Jian Guo Yang ◽  
Hai Zhen Zhang

An experimental study was performed on wavy-finned-tube used in forced draft direct air-cooled steam condenser (DACSC) under actual working conditions of the power generating unit. Tests were carried out to study the air side heat transfer characteristics of wavy-finned-tube in actual operating conditions of DACSC, such as: air temperature, air face velocity, environmental temperature, exhaust pressure of steam turbine and temperature of exhaust steam. The air-side heat transfer characteristics of wavy-finned-tube heat exchangers were tested and analyzed by varying air face velocity .One empirical correlations for predicting the h-factor was developed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lianfu Dai ◽  
Huiying Wu ◽  
Jun Tang

Abstract The unified gas kinetic scheme (UGKS) is introduced to simulate the near transition regime gas flow and heat transfer in microchannel confined between isothermal and nonisothermal parallel plates. The argon gas is used and its inlet Knudsen number (Knin) ranges from 0.0154 to 0.0715. It is found that: (1) both microchannel gas flows under isothermal and nonisothermal parallel plates display a trend of speed acceleration and temperature decrease along flow direction, for which the microscopic mechanism explanation is first proposed; (2) inlet gas streamlines under nonisothermal plates condition deviate from the parallel distributions under isothermal plates condition due to the dual driving effects of pressure drop along flow direction and temperature difference along cross section; (3) gas temperature, pressure, density and viscosity distributions along cross section under nonisothermal plates condition deviate from the parabolic distributions under isothermal plates condition, while the gas velocity keeps the parabolic distribution due to the effect of Knudsen layer; (4) as channel height increases or channel length and gas molecular mean free path decrease, the gas temperature distribution along cross section under nonisothermal plates condition tends to transition from linear to curve one due to the decreasing effect of heat transfer along cross section and increasing effect of gas acceleration along flow direction, this transition from linear to curve one becomes more obvious along flow direction. (5) the gas velocity under nonisothermal plates condition decreases with the increase of inlet gas temperature (Tin), lower plate temperature (Tl) and Knin, while the gas temperature increases with the increase of Tin, Tl and Knin.


Author(s):  
Ayoola T. Brimmo ◽  
Mohamed I. Hassan Ali

Abstract In the aluminum production industry, metal furnaces are operated by diffusion flame over the metal surface to maintain the aluminum metal at the set point temperature for alloying and casting. Heat is transferred from the flame and its exhaust gases to the metal surface via radiation and convection. The exhaust gases leaves through the furnace’s chimney carrying a significant amount of waste heat to the atmosphere. Furnace efficiency could be improved by enhancing the heat transfer inside the furnace. In this study, a validated full-scale 3-D CFD model of a natural gas fired aluminum furnace is developed to investigate the effect of flue gas ventilation configurations and burner operating conditions on the heat transfer inside the furnace. Onsite measurements are carried out for the fuel and airflow rates as well as flue gas temperature. Four flue ventilation configurations are considered with eight furnace’s operation modes. The flue-gas’s waste-heat varies from 49–58%, with the highest value occurring at the high-fire operating mode. This indicates a significant room for improvement in the furnace performance. Results suggest that a symmetrical positioning of the exhaust duct favors effective exhaust gas circulation within the furnace and hence, increases hot-gases’ heat-transfer effectiveness inside the furnace. These results provide some guidelines for optimal aluminum reverberatory furnace designs and operation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grant L. Hawkes

Abstract The AGR-5/6/7 experiment is currently being irradiated in the Advanced Test Reactor (ATR) at the Idaho National Laboratory and is approximately 70% complete. Several fuel and material irradiation experiments have been planned for the U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Gas Reactor Fuel Development and Qualification Program, which supports the development and qualification of tristructural isotropic (TRISO)-coated particle fuel for use in high-temperature gas-cooled reactors. The goals of these experiments are to provide irradiation performance data to support fuel process development, qualify fuel for normal operating conditions, support development of fuel performance models and codes, and provide irradiated fuel and materials for post-irradiation examination and safety testing. Originally planned and named as separate fuel experiments, but subsequently combined into a single test train, AGR-5/6/7 is testing low-enriched uranium oxycarbide TRISO fuel. The AGR-5/6/7 test train has five capsules with thermocouples and independent gas control mixtures. Unique to this paper is a sensitivity study concerning the cylindricity of the graphite holders containing the fuel compacts and their eccentricity in relation to the stainless-steel capsule walls. Each capsule has small nubs on the outside used for centering the graphite holder inside the stainless-steel capsule with a small gas gap used to control temperature. Due to machining tolerances of these nubs, and vibration wearing the nubs down when the experiment is running in the reactor, the possibility exists that the holder may move around radially. Each capsule is equipped with several thermocouples placed at various radii and depths within each graphite holder. This paper will show the sensitivity of offsetting the graphite holder for various radii in 45-degree increments around the circle with the objective of minimizing the difference between the measured thermocouples and the modeled thermocouple temperatures. Separate gas mixtures of helium/neon are introduced into this gas gap between the holder and capsule wall and changed as necessary to maintain the desired thermocouple temperatures to keep the fuel compacts at a constant temperature as the nuclear reactor conditions change. The goal of the sensitivity study is to find a radius and an angle to offset the holder from perfectly centered for each of the five capsules separately. The complex thermal model includes fission heating, gamma heating, radiation heat transfer, and heat transfer via conduction and radiation across the control gaps. Subroutines linked to the thermal model offer an easy method to offset the graphite holder from the capsule walls without remeshing the entire model.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 932-938
Author(s):  
S. Venkateswaran ◽  
S. T. Thynell ◽  
C. L. Merkle

Combined convective and radiative heat transfer in an axisymmetric solar thruster is analyzed. In a solar thruster, focused solar energy is converted into thermal energy by volumetric absorption, resulting in a significant increase in the temperature of the propellant gas. The heated gas is then expanded through a propulsive nozzle in order to generate thrust. In the present theoretical analysis, submicron size particles are employed for providing the mechanism of solar energy absorption. The two-dimensional radiation problem is solved using both an exact integral method and the P1-approximation. The overall energy transfer is solved iteratively by numerical means. The computational model is used to perform parametric studies of the effects of Boltzmann number, optical dimensions of the medium, and wall emissivity. The overall performance of the solar thruster is assessed by determining the thrust levels and the specific impulses of the device under different operating conditions.


Author(s):  
Xingyun Jia ◽  
Qun Zheng ◽  
Hai Zhang ◽  
Yuting Jiang

Under actual operating conditions of gas turbine, centrifugal and thermal growth of disc in radial direction result in dislocation of inflow boundary at the disc mid-radius height, and a radial step of platform at high radius height. In this paper, flow and heat transfer characteristics in dislocated rim seal region are analyzed by the conjugate and thermal mechanical numerical methods. The calculated radial growths of turbine discs reach approximately 14–20 % of turbine platform structure thickness. Dislocation of rim seal structure directly affects the flow characteristic of externally-induced (EI) ingress and rotationally-induced (RI) ingress, and aggravates overheat of stator disc due to induced hot gas ingestion, further affects the loss of mixture of mainstream gas and cooling sealant air flow in rim-seal and wheelspace regions. Radial step between rotor and stator platforms exacerbates the area and depth of hot gas ingestion in seal clearance, along with a 2–7 % decrease in seal efficiency.


Author(s):  
Riccardo Da Soghe ◽  
Cosimo Bianchini

Abstract The present paper deals with the characterization of heat transfer on blade tip Active Clearance Control manifolds. Real engine geometries and operating conditions were considered in validated CFD computations to understand the impacts of both manifold surfaces convective and radiative heat transfer on the aero-thermal performance of the system. Different manifold geometries were accounted for also. The study sorted out that both the radiation and the convective heat transfer on the manifold surfaces are responsible of performance deteriorations as the impingement heat transfer on the casing is considered. The last evidence is motivated by the fresh fluid heat up along the feeding pipe. Radiative heat transfer from the casing to the manifold is found to be relevant, especially in case of high casing temperature or low undercowl flow rates. As a result of the study, is remarked that ACC manifold radiative and convective heat transfer should be considered for a proper system design.


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