Radiation Heat Transfer to the Leeward Side of a Massive Object Suspended Over a Pool Fire

Author(s):  
M. Alex Kramer ◽  
Miles Greiner ◽  
J. A. Koski

Abstract A series of large-scale experiments were recently performed to measure heat transfer to a massive cylindrical calorimeter engulfed in a 30-minute circular-pool fire [1]. The calorimeter inner surface temperature was measured at several locations and an inverse conduction technique was used to determine the net heat flux. The flame emissive heat flux was measured at several locations around the calorimeter. Light winds of around 2 m/s blew across the calorimeter axis at the beginning of the test but diminished and stopped as the test continued. The winds tilted the fire so that the windward side of the calorimeter was only intermittently engulfed. As a result, the measured flame emissive power near the windward side was substantially less than the leeward surface. The variation of calorimeter temperature and heat flux was closely correlated with the measured flame emissive power.

2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 110-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Alex Kramer ◽  
Miles Greiner ◽  
J. A. Koski ◽  
Carlos Lopez ◽  
Ahti Suo-Anttila

A large-scale experiment was performed to measure heat transfer to a massive cylindrical calorimeter engulfed in a 30 minute circular-pool fire. This test simulated the conditions of a truck-sized nuclear waste transport package in a severe fire. The calorimeter inner surface temperature and the flame environment emissive power were measured at several locations as functions of time. An inverse heat conduction technique was used to estimate the net heat flux to the calorimeter. Tall porous fences surrounded the test facility to reduce the effect of wind on the fire. Outside the fences, 2.9 m/s winds blew across the calorimeter axis at the beginning of the test but decreased with time. The wind tilted and moved the fire so that the initial flame environment emissive power was substantially less on the windward side than the leeward side. The calorimeter became more uniformly engulfed as the winds decreased. The maximum heat flux to the calorimeter was 150 MW/m2 on the leeward side at the beginning of the fire, and generally decreased with time. The local variations of calorimeter temperature and heat flux were closely related to the local flame environment emissive power.


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyunghan Kim ◽  
Zhixiong Guo

The Discrete Ordinates Method (DOM) for solving transient radiation transfer equation in cylindrical coordinates is developed for radiation heat transfer in participating turbid media in pico-scale time domain. The application problems addressed here are laser tissue welding and soldering. The novelty of this study lies with the use of ultrashort laser pulses as the irradiation source. The characteristics of transient radiation heat transfer in ultrafast laser tissue welding and soldering are studied with the DOM developed. The temporal distribution of radiative energy inside the tissue cylinder as well as the radiative heat flux on the tissue surface is obtained. Comparisons are performed between laser welding without use of solder and laser soldering with use of solder. The use of solder is found to have highly concentrated radiation energy deposition in the solder-stained region and reduce the surface radiative heat flux accordingly. Comparisons of transient radiation heat transfer between the spatially square-variance and Gaussian-variance laser inputs and between the temporally Gaussian and skewed input profiles are also conducted.


Author(s):  
Miles Greiner ◽  
Ahti Suo-Anttila

The Isis-3D computational fluid dynamics/radiation heat transfer computer code was developed to simulate heat transfer from large fires to engulfed packages for transportation risk studies. These studies require accurate estimates of the total heat transfer to an object and the general characteris tics of the object temperature distribution for a variety of fire environments. Since risk studies require multiple simulations, analysis tools must be rapid as well as accurate. In order to meet these needs Isis-3d employs reaction rate and radiation heat transfer models that allow it to accurately model large-fire heat transfer even when relatively coarse computational grids are employed. In the current work, parameters for the reaction rate model were selected based on comparison with soot volume fraction and temperature measurements acquired in a recent 6 m square pool fire under light wind conditions. The soot volume fraction Isis-3D uses to define the edge of the optically thick fire was determined using temperature measurements of a pipe engulfed 20-m-diameter pool fire with a steady 9.5 m/s crosswind. Accelerated simulations, in which the specific heat of the engulfed pipe was reduced by a factor of twelve below the measured values, reproduce the temperature data in the 11-minute crosswind fire using only 3.5 hours on a standard desktop workstation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 168781402095497
Author(s):  
Evgenij Strokach ◽  
Igor Borovik ◽  
Fang Chen

A methodology for combustion modeling with complex mixing and thermodynamic conditions, especially in thrusters, is still under development. The resulting flow and propulsion parameters strongly depend on the models used, especially on the turbulence model as it determines the mixing efficiency. In this paper, the effect of the sigma-type turbulent diffusion coefficients arriving in the diffusion term of the turbulence model is studied. This study was performed using complex modeling, considering the conjugate effect of several physical phenomena such as turbulence, chemical reactions, and radiation heat transfer. To consider the varying turbulent Prandtl, an algebraic model was implemented. An adiabatic steady diffusion Flamelet approach was used to model chemical reactions. The P1 differential model with a WSGG spectral model was used for radiation heat transfer. The gaseous oxygen (GOX) and methane (GCH4) operating thruster developed at the Chair of turbomachinery and Flight propulsion of the Technical University of Munich (TUM) is taken as a test case. The studies use the 3D RANS approach using the 60° sector as the modeling domain. The normalized and absolute pressures, the integral and segment averaged heat flux are compared to numerical results. The wall heat fluxes and pressure distributions show good agreement with the experimental data, while the turbulent diffusion coefficients mostly influence the heat flux.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen-Zhao Fu ◽  
Wen-Rong Si ◽  
Lei Quan ◽  
Jian Yang

Pipe cable is considered as an important form for underground transmission line. The maximum electrical current (ampacity) of power cable system mostly depends on the cable conductor temperature. Therefore, accurate calculation of temperature distribution in the power cable system is quite important to extract the cable ampacity. In the present paper, the fluid flow and heat transfer characteristics in the pipe cable with alternating current were numerically studied by using commercial code COMSOL MULTIPHYSICS based on finite element method (FEM). The cable core loss and eddy current loss in the cable were coupled for the heat transfer simulation, and the difference of heat transfer performances with pure natural convection model and radiation-convection model was compared and analysed in detail. Meanwhile, for the radiation-convection model, the effects caused by radiant emissivity of cable surface and pipe inner surface, as well as the cable location in the pipe, were also discussed. Firstly, it is revealed that the radiation and natural convection heat flux on the cable surface would be of the same order of magnitude, and the radiation heat transfer on the cable surface should not be ignored. Otherwise, the cable ampacity would be underestimated. Secondly, it is found that the overall heat transfer rate on the cable surface increases as the cable surface emissivity increases, and this is more remarkable to the upper cable. While the effect caused by the radiant emissivity on the pipe inner surface would be relatively small. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that, as cable location in the pipe falls, the natural convection heat transfer would be enhanced. These results would be meaningful for the ampacity prediction and optimum design for the pipe cable.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (20) ◽  
pp. 3986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Ettaleb ◽  
Mohamed Abbassi ◽  
Habib Farhat ◽  
Kamel Guedri ◽  
Ahmed Omri ◽  
...  

This study aims to numerically investigate the radiation heat transfer in a complex, 3-D biomass pyrolysis reactor which is consisted of two pyrolysis chambers and a heat recuperator. The medium assumes to be gray, absorbs, emits, and Mie-anisotropically scatters the radiation energy. The finite volume method (FVM) is applied to solve the radiation transfer equation (RTE) using the step scheme. To treat the complex geometry, the blocked-off-region procedure is employed. Mie equations (ME) are applied to evaluate the scattering phase function and analyze the angular distribution of the anisotropically scattered radiation by particles. In this study, three different states are considered to test the anisotropic scattering impacts on the temperature and radiation heat flux distribution. These states are as: (i) Isotropic scattering, (ii) forward and backward scattering and (iii) scattering with solid particles of different coals and fly ash. The outcomes demonstrate that the radiation heat flux enhances by an increment of the albedo and absorption coefficients for the coals and fly ash, unlike the isotropic case and the forward and backward scattering functions. Moreover, the particle size parameter does not have an important influence on the radiation heat flux, when the medium is thin optical. Its effect is more noticeable for higher extinction coefficients.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 1815-1837
Author(s):  
Mehdi Zare ◽  
Sadegh Sadeghi

Purpose This study aims to perform a comprehensive investigation to model the thermal characteristics of a coupled conduction-radiation heat transfer in a two-dimensional irregular enclosure including a triangular-shaped heat source. Design/methodology/approach For this purpose, a promising hybrid technique based on the concepts of blocked-off method, FVM and DOM is developed. The enclosure consists of several horizontal, vertical and oblique walls, and thermal conductivity within the enclosure varies directly with temperature and indirectly with position. To simplify the complex geometry, a promising mathematical model is introduced using blocked-off method. Emitting, absorbing and non-isotropic scattering gray are assumed as the main radiative characteristics of the steady medium. Findings DOM and FVM are, respectively, applied for solving radiative transfer equation (RTE) and the energy equation, which includes conduction, radiation and heat source terms. The temperature and heat flux distributions are calculated inside the enclosure. For validation, results are compared with previous data reported in the literature under the same conditions. Results and comparisons show that this approach is highly efficient and reliable for complex geometries with coupled conduction-radiation heat transfer. Finally, the effects of thermo-radiative parameters including surface emissivity, extinction coefficient, scattering albedo, asymmetry factor and conduction-radiation parameter on temperature and heat flux distributions are studied. Originality/value In this paper, a hybrid numerical method is used to analyze coupled conduction-radiation heat transfer in an irregular geometry. Varying thermal conductivity is included in this analysis. By applying the method, results obtained for temperature and heat flux distributions are presented and also validated by the data provided by several previous papers.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason M. Porter ◽  
Marvin E. Larsen ◽  
John R. Howell

The simulated annealing algorithm is used to seek optimal radiant heater configurations that provide a desired distribution of incident radiant energy onto a surface. The problem is motivated by a need to create well-understood boundary conditions that simulate fire environments. A bank of halogen lamps irradiates the back of a thin black plate (called a shroud), which simulates the fire environment. For such fire simulations, shroud temperatures routinely exceed 1000 °C and thermal radiation is the dominant mode of heat transfer. The test specimen is then heated by placing it in front of the shroud. The panel, accommodating the radiant heaters (lamps), provides equally spaced slots all of which are powered at the same voltage. Lamp positioning is crucial to obtaining a uniform temperature on the shroud, but determining the best positioning of the lamps experimentally through trial and error has proven difficult. The discrete optimization problem searches possible lamp configurations by simulating adding or removing lamps from the panel. Inverse heat transfer methods have been successfully applied to similar problems. Applying inverse heat transfer methods to this problem, the desired boundary conditions on the shroud are used to solve for the required heater settings. Two boundary conditions are needed: the temperature profile and the heat flux profile on the shroud. The heat flux profile is determined by calculating the radiation heat transfer between the shroud and the test object. However, because the heaters used in the design can only assume discrete positions and are all maintained at the same power level, traditional inverse methods fail. A discrete inverse radiation heat transfer solution method is needed. In this study, a simulated annealing optimization routine is used to determine optimal heater positions given desired boundary conditions on the shroud. Computational characteristics of simulated annealing are presented as well as results of the optimization.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document