PRESSURE-DRIVEN PETROLEUM MIGRATION AND HEAT TRANSFER: UNDERSTANDING THE ORIGIN OF NATURAL GAS CHARGE OF THE HAYNESVILLE FORMATION IN THE SABINE UPLIFT AREA OF TEXAS AND LOUISIANA, USA

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauri A. Burke ◽  
Author(s):  
Stewart Xu Cheng ◽  
James S. Wallace

Glow plugs are a possible ignition source for direct injected natural gas engines. This ignition assistance application is much different than the cold start assist function for which most glow plugs have been designed. In the cold start application, the glow plug is simply heating the air in the cylinder. In the cycle-by-cycle ignition assist application, the glow plug needs to achieve high surface temperatures at specific times in the engine cycle to provide a localized source of ignition. Whereas a simple lumped heat capacitance model is a satisfactory representation of the glow plug for the air heating situation, a much more complex situation exists for hot surface ignition. Simple measurements and theoretical analysis show that the thickness of the heat penetration layer is small within the time scale of the ignition preparation period (1–2 ms). The experiments and analysis were used to develop a discretized representation of the glow plug domain. A simplified heat transfer model, incorporating both convection and radiation losses, was developed for the discretized representation to compute heat transfer to and from the surrounding gas. A scheme for coupling the glow plug model to the surrounding gas computational domain in the KIVA-3V engine simulation code was also developed. The glow plug model successfully simulates the natural gas ignition process for a direct-injection natural gas engine. As well, it can provide detailed information on the local glow plug surface temperature distribution, which can aid in the design of more reliable glow plugs.


2018 ◽  
Vol 167 ◽  
pp. 890-899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaiming Su ◽  
Jungang Lu ◽  
Guangwu Zhang ◽  
Shijia Chen ◽  
Yong Li ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ainul Haque ◽  
Ameeya Kumar Nayak

In this paper, a mathematical model has been developed to analyze the combined electroosmotic and pressure driven flow of power law fluids in a micro channel in the presence of Joule heating effects. The effects of Navier slip boundary condition and thermal radiation is examined for effective heat transfer in a hydrophobic microchannel. The analytical treatment has been performed for fluid flow and heat transfer effects in terms of flow governing parameters. This study highlights the effect of channel height to the electric double layer thickness and observed the flow variation due to heat transfer effect with the available scientific data. For a pure EOF, velocity slip have more significant role to get a maximum flow rate as expected. For both pseudo-plastic and dilatent fluids Nusselt number is decreased with the increment of the hydrophobic parameter and dimensionless pressure gradient where as increment in Joule heating effect enhance the heat transfer rate.


Author(s):  
Nataliia Fialko ◽  
◽  
Julii Sherenkovskiy ◽  
Nataliia Meranova ◽  
Serhii Aloshko ◽  
...  

For microjet burners of the stabilizer type, a study of the regularities of the natural gas flow in the inner cavity of the flame stabilizer has been carried out. A comparative analysis of the features of heat transfer from the inner surfaces of the stabilizer walls is carried out for two variants of its configuration: flat and in the presence of trapezoidal niches on its lateral surfaces.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document