On Numerical Investigation of Water Injection to Screw Compressors

Author(s):  
Sham Rane ◽  
Ahmed Kovačević ◽  
Nikola Stošić ◽  
Graham Stupple

Oil injection is widely used in screw compressors for lubrication, sealing and cooling purposes. More recently other, mainly lower viscosity fluids are used for the purpose, for example water. Water introduces new phenomena into the screw compressor process, one among them is evaporation. 3D numerical modelling is employed and presented in this paper for the detailed analysis of flow and thermodynamics process during injection of water in screw compressors. The advantage of such simulations is that realistic geometry of the rotors and the ports can be captured. In addition, the physical effects of fluid thermal interactions and leakage are directly taken into account by these models. Recent studies have shown that for oil free and oil injected air compressors a good agreement is achieved with measurements, in prediction of performance parameters. In these simulations the Eulerian-Eulerian multiphase modelling has been applied. To implement the same model for water injected compressors presents an additional challenge as the liquid water injected into the compression chamber changes phase and evaporates depending on the local saturation and thermodynamic conditions. Water also forms liquid film on the rotors and housing and thereby influences thermal changes. In this paper a numerical model for water injected screw compressor that accounts for evaporation effects has been presented. Empirical form of the Lee (9) evaporation-condensation model for phase change has been applied in the compression chamber using the phase specific mass and energy sources. Calculation of the amount of water required to just saturate the compressed air at delivery pressure is used to set the mass flow rate of water at two operating speeds. The effect of the suction air temperature and relative humidity is studied. Evaporation inside compression chamber has two important physical effects, one is that the latent heat of evaporating water lowers the gas temperature and the other is the change of state from water to vapour. Including vapour as a third phase adds complexity to already challenging deforming grids required for screw domains. Hence a mass and energy source formulation is proposed in the presented study to account for the vapour phase change and evaporation effects, thus limiting the number of phases to be modelled. Local drop in gas temperature, distribution of water and regions of evaporation were identified by the simulations. Thermal hot spots on the rotor were located. Reduction in the leakage of gas and its exit temperature was well predicted by the model. Such simplified evaporation model can be further used in the design of water injected screw compressors and extended to predict thermal deformation of the rotors and the housing.

2019 ◽  
Vol 112 ◽  
pp. 01012
Author(s):  
Iulian Vlăducă ◽  
Ramona Stanciuc ◽  
Răzvan Bimbaşa ◽  
Sorin Gabriel Tomescu

During compression, a gas heats up, almost in all cases this heat being wasted, either by cooling the gas because it is too hot for the application, or by storing the gas and letting the compressed gas cool naturally in the storage tank. This paper presents a waste-energy (heat) recovery system from the gases compressed by an oil-free screw compressor. The gases compressed by this compressor have a very high temperature compared to an oil injected screw compressor, due to the fact that the oil used to lubricate the rotors also acts as a heat sink, the oil free variant which is used when you want a very high purity of the gas, has higher tolerances and more friction between the rotors which result in a higher gas temperature. The recovery system uses a heat exchanger to extract the waste energy from the gas and at the same time it will cool it for immediate use. Depending on the requirements, the energy recovered may be used immediately to produce useful work or stored for a later use. It may be used for heating a building, to produce steam for a turbine driving electrical generator, or in other forms.


Steady oscillations in the recorded gas temperature have been observed in a series of experiments in which the vapour-phase chlorination of methyl chloride was carried out. The instability was reproducible and persisted within a sharply defined range of reaction temperatures. A mathematical analysis of the dynamics of the reacting system is found to predict closely the nature and frequency of the oscillations and the range of experimental conditions within which they occur.


Author(s):  
Koki Yoshimura ◽  
Kohei Hisamochi

Newly designed plants, e.g., next-generation light water reactor or ESBWR, employ a passive containment cooling system and have an enhanced safety with RHRs (Residual Heat Removal system) including active components. Passive containment cooling systems have the advantage of a simple mechanism, while materials used for the systems are too large to employ these systems to existing plants. Combination of passive system and active system is considered to decrease amount of material for existing plants. In this study, alternatives of applying containment outer pool as a passive system have been developed for existing BWRs, and effects of outer pool on BDBA (Beyond Design Basis Accident) have been evaluated. For the evaluation of containment outer pool, it is assumed that there would be no on-site power at the loss of off-site power event, so called “SBO (Station BlackOut)”. Then, the core of this plant would be uncovered, heated up, and damaged. Finally, the reactor pressure vessel would be breached. Containment gas temperature reached the containment failure temperature criteria without water injection. With water injection, containment pressure reached the failure pressure criteria. With this situation, using outer pool is one of the candidates to mitigate the accident. Several case studies for the outer pool have been carried out considering several parts of containment surface area, which are PCV (Pressure Containment vessel) head, W/W (Wet Well), and PCV shell. As a result of these studies, the characteristics of each containment outer pool strategies have become clear. Cooling PCV head can protect it from over-temperature, although its effect is limited and W/W venting can not be delayed. Cooling suppression pool has an effect of pressure suppressing effect when RPV is intact. Cooling PCV shell has both effect of decreasing gas temperature and suppressing pressure.


Author(s):  
T. Lakshmanan ◽  
A. Khadeer Ahmed ◽  
G. Nagarajan

Gaseous fuels are good alternative fuels to improve the energy crisis of today’s situation due to its clean burning characteristics. However, the incidence of backfire and knock remains a significant barrier in commercialization. With the invention of latest technology, the above barriers are eliminated. One such technique is timed injection of water into the intake port. In the present investigation, acetylene was aspirated in the intake manifold of a single cylinder diesel engine, with a gas flow rate of 390 g/h, along with water injected in the intake port, to overcome the backfire and knock problems in gaseous dual fuel engine. The brake thermal efficiency and emissions such as NOx, smoke, CO, HC, CO2 and exhaust gas temperature were studied. Dual fuel operation of acetylene induction with injection of water results in lowered NOx emissions with complete elimination of backfire and knock at the expense of brake thermal efficiency.


Author(s):  
Nikola Stosic

Common use of screw compressors is in compression of air. However, application of screw compressors in refrigeration and air conditioning, as well as in process gas compression is increasing rapidly in recent years. The existing experimental data basis for air compressors may conveniently serve as a source for performance estimation of these compressors. A procedure was derived in this work to find scale factors which connect compressors operating with different fluids and it was applied for performance estimation of refrigeration and process gas screw compressors on the basis of measurements obtained for air compressors. Refprop 8 by NIST was used for calculation of thermodynamic properties of real fluids and ideal gas relation was used for air.


2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 64-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magali Barthes ◽  
Christelle Reynard ◽  
Robert Santini ◽  
Lounès Tadrist

Impact ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (6) ◽  
pp. 76-78
Author(s):  
Tzu-Chen Hung ◽  
Yong-Qiang Feng

Thermodynamic cycles consist of a sequence of thermodynamic processes involving the transfer of heat and work into and then out of a system. Variables, such as pressure and temperature, eventually return the system to its initial state. During the process of passing through the system, the working fluid converts heat and disposes of any remaining heat, making the cycle act as a heat engine, where heat or thermal energy is converted into mechanical energy. Thermodynamic cycles are an efficient means of producing energy and one of the most well-known examples is a Rankine cycle. From there, scientists have developed the organic Rankine cycle (ORC), which uses fluid with a liquid to vapour phase change that occurs at a lower temperature than the water to steam phase change. Dr Tzu-Chen Hung and Dr Yong-Qiang Feng, who are based at both the Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Taipei University in Taiwan, and the School of Energy and Power Engineering, Jiangsu University in China, are carrying out work that seeks to design and build improved ORC systems which can be used for low-grade heat to power conversion.


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