ESTIMATION OF THE WATER-MASS-FLOW THROUGH A CENTRAL HEATING BOILER

2002 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-192
Author(s):  
Karsten Spreitzer ◽  
Dörte Rückbrodt ◽  
Harald Straky
Author(s):  
Nicolás García Rosa ◽  
Adrien Thacker ◽  
Guillaume Dufour

In a fan stage under windmilling conditions, the stator operates under negative incidence, leading to flow separation, which may present an unsteady behaviour due to rotor/stator interactions. An experimental study of the unsteady flow through the fan stage of a bypass turbofan in windmilling is proposed, using hot-wire anemometry. Windmilling conditions are reproduced in a ground engine test bed by blowing a variable mass flow through a bypass turbofan in ambient conditions. Time-averaged profiles of flow coefficient are independent of the mass flow, demonstrating the similarity of velocity triangle. Turbulence intensity profiles reveal that the high levels of turbulence production due to local shear are also independent of the inlet flow. A spectral analysis confirms that the flow is dominated by the blade passing frequency, and that the separated regions downstream of the stator amplify the fluctuations locked to the BPF without adding any new frequency. Phase-locked averaging is used to capture the periodic wakes of the rotor blades at the rotor/stator interface. A spanwise behaviour typical of flows through windmilling fans is evidenced. Through the inner sections of the fan, rotor wakes are thin and weakly turbulent, and the turbulence level remains constant through the stage. The rotor wakes thicken and become more turbulent towards the fan tip, where flow separation occurs. Downstream of the stator, maximum levels of turbulence intensity are measured in the separated flow. Large periodical zones of low velocity and high turbulence intensity are observed in the outer parts of the separated stator wake, confirming the pulsating motion of the stator flow separation, locked at the blade passing frequency. Space-time diagrams show that the flow is chorochronic, and a 2 D non-linear harmonic simulation is able to capture the main interaction modes, however, the stator incidence distribution could be affected by 3 D effects.


2019 ◽  
Vol 91 (8) ◽  
pp. 1077-1085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filip Wasilczuk ◽  
Pawel Flaszynski ◽  
Piotr Kaczynski ◽  
Ryszard Szwaba ◽  
Piotr Doerffer ◽  
...  

Purpose The purpose of the study is to measure the mass flow in the flow through the labyrinth seal of the gas turbine and compare it to the results of numerical simulation. Moreover the capability of two turbulence models to reflect the phenomenon will be assessed. The studied case will later be used as a reference case for the new, original design of flow control method to limit the leakage flow through the labyrinth seal. Design/methodology/approach Experimental measurements were conducted, measuring the mass flow and the pressure in the model of the labyrinth seal. It was compared to the results of numerical simulation performed in ANSYS/Fluent commercial code for the same geometry. Findings The precise machining of parts was identified as crucial for obtaining correct results in the experiment. The model characteristics were documented, allowing for its future use as the reference case for testing the new labyrinth seal geometry. Experimentally validated numerical model of the flow in the labyrinth seal was developed. Research limitations/implications The research studies the basic case, future research on the case with a new labyrinth seal geometry is planned. Research is conducted on simplified case without rotation and the impact of the turbine main channel. Practical implications Importance of machining accuracy up to 0.01 mm was found to be important for measuring leakage in small gaps and decision making on the optimal configuration selection. Originality/value The research is an important step in the development of original modification of the labyrinth seal, resulting in leakage reduction, by serving as a reference case.


Author(s):  
M. Fatouh

This paper reports the results of an experimental investigation on a pilot compression chiller (4 kW cooling capacity) working with R401a and R134a as R12 alternatives. Experiments are conducted on a single-stage vapor compression refrigeration system using water as a secondary working fluid through both evaporator and condenser. Influences of cooling water mass flow rate (170–1900 kg/h), cooling water inlet temperature (27–43°C) and chilled water mass flow rate (240–1150 kg/h) on performance characteristics of chillers are evaluated for R401a, R134a and R12. Increasing cooling water mass flow rate or decreasing its inlet temperature causes the operating pressures and electric input power to reduce while the cooling capacity and coefficient of performance (COP) to increase. Pressure ratio is inversely proportional while actual loads and COP are directly proportional to chilled water mass flow rate. The effect of cooling water inlet temperature, on the system performance, is more significant than the effects of cooling and chilled water mass flow rates. Comparison between R12, R134a and R401a under identical operating conditions revealed that R401a can be used as a drop-in refrigerant to replace R12 in water-cooled chillers.


Author(s):  
Magnus Langenstein ◽  
Bernd Laipple

The large quantities of measurement information gathered throughout a plant process make the closing of the mass and energy balance nearly impossible without the help of additional tools. For this reason, a variety of plant monitoring tools for closing plant balances was developed. A major problem with the current tools lies in the non-consideration of redundant measurements which are available throughout the entire plant process. The online monitoring reconciliation system is based on the process data reconciliation according to VDI 2048 standard and is using all redundant measurements within the process to close mass and energy balances. As a result, the most realistic process with the lowest uncertainty can be monitored. This system is installed in more than 35 NPPs worldwide and is used ○ as a basis for correction of feed water mass flow and feed water temperature measurements (recover of lost Megawatts). ○ as a basis for correction of Taverage (Tav) (recover of steam generator outlet pressure in PWRs). ○ for maintaining the thermal core power and the feed water mass flow under continuous operation conditions. ○ for automatic detection of erroneous measurements and measurement drift. ○ for detection of inner leakages, non-condensable gases and system losses. ○ for calculating non measured values (e.g. heat transfer coefficients, ΔT, preheater loads,…). ○ as a monitoring system for the main thermodynamic process. ○ for verifying warranty tests more accurate. ○ as a application of condition-based maintenance and component monitoring. ○ for What-if scenarios (simulation, not PDR) This paper describes the methodology according to VDI 2048 (use of Gaussian correction principle and quality criterias). The benefits gained from the use of the online monitoring system are demonstrated.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Anna Avramenko ◽  
Alexey Frolov ◽  
Jari Hämäläinen

The presented research demonstrates the results of a series of numerical simulations of gas flow through a single-stage centrifugal compressor with a vaneless diffuser. Numerical results were validated with experiments consisting of eight regimes with different mass flow rates. The steady-state and unsteady simulations were done in ANSYS FLUENT 13.0 and NUMECA FINE/TURBO 8.9.1 for one-period geometry due to periodicity of the problem. First-order discretization is insufficient due to strong dissipation effects. Results obtained with second-order discretization agree with the experiments for the steady-state case in the region of high mass flow rates. In the area of low mass flow rates, nonstationary effects significantly influence the flow leading stationary model to poor prediction. Therefore, the unsteady simulations were performed in the region of low mass flow rates. Results of calculation were compared with experimental data. The numerical simulation method in this paper can be used to predict compressor performance.


1963 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 275-278
Author(s):  
M. Cloutier

The influence of slot opening and of suction pressure upon the mass flow through the slot and the subsequent development of the boundary layer has been studied for the case of a single transverse slot opening into a boundary layer with a displacement thickness of 0.168 in. at a free-stream Mach number of 2.92. The results show that as much as 85 percent of the mass flow in the boundary layer between the wall and the position of the slot lip enters the slot, and that this result is independent of the slot reservoir pressure, providing the latter is less than approximately twice the tunnel static pressure.


Energy ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 725-733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafał Laskowski ◽  
Adam Smyk ◽  
Janusz Lewandowski ◽  
Artur Rusowicz ◽  
Andrzej Grzebielec

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