Research Status of Numerical Simulation on LF Furnace Refining Ladle

2014 ◽  
Vol 678 ◽  
pp. 620-623
Author(s):  
Xiao Lei Zhou ◽  
Zhe Shi ◽  
Gui Fang Zhang ◽  
Zhong Ning Du

The research status of numerical simulation on LF furnace refining ladle is introduced in this paper.Since 1970, the research on the gas-liquid two-phase region has begun.Szekely began to be simulated by mathematical model and physical experiment method of flow phenomena in ladle in early 1975. It is the first time that the numerical model is introduced to study the refining process of steel. The plume model is presented by Xiao Zeqiang in 1980, then the numerical simulation began to develop rapidly.

Author(s):  
W E Lear ◽  
G M Parker ◽  
S A Sherif

A one-dimensional mathematical model was developed using the equations governing the flow and thermodynamics within a jet pump with a mixing region of constant cross-sectional area. The analysis is capable of handling two-phase flows and the resulting flow phenomena such as condensation shocks and the Fabri limit on the secondary mass flowrate. This work presents a technique for quickly achieving first-approximation solutions for two-phase ejectors. The thermodynamic state of the working fluid, R-134a for this analysis, is determined at key locations within the ejector. From these results, performance parameters are calculated and presented for varying inlet conditions. The Fabri limit was found to limit the operational regime of the two-phase ejector because, in the two-phase region, the speed of sound may be orders of magnitude smaller than in a single-phase fluid.


2014 ◽  
Vol 678 ◽  
pp. 616-619
Author(s):  
Xiao Lei Zhou ◽  
Zhe Shi ◽  
Gui Fang Zhang ◽  
Zhong Ning Du

The research status of physical simulation on LF furnace refining ladle is introduced in this paper.Since 1970, the research on the gas-liquid two-phase region has begun. The ladle of blowing argon can be roughly divided into three important flow region has been introduced. Two-phase region, the top horizontal flow zone and recirculation zone exists in the ladle.The establishment of physical model should include similarity principle and flow field measurement technique


1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (03) ◽  
pp. 175-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hossein Kazemi ◽  
L.S. Merrill

Original manuscript received in Society f Petroleum Engineers office Sept. 15, 1977. Paper accepted for publication June 9, 1978. Revised manuscript received Feb. 19, 1979. Paper (SPE 6890) first presented at the SPE-AIME 52nd Annual Fall Technical Conference and Exhibition, held in Denver, Oct. 9-12, 1977. Abstract A two-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit, numerical simulator was used to simulate water imbibition and oil recovery in artificially fractured and unfractured cores. Experimental results were matched satisfactorily by the numerical simulator. These results provide evidence of the reliability of the concepts underlying an earlier numerical simulator, which was tailored specifically for field applications. We show that the flow equations used to match the laboratory data reduce to the equations used in the field simulator. In addition, the experiments themselves were conducted quite differently from those commonly used in imbibition experiments and provide added insight into oil recovery from fractured reservoirs. Introduction Previously, we reported on the development of a Previously, we reported on the development of a numerical reservoir simulator for use in field applications. In this paper, we examine the reliability of the concepts underlying the numerical simulation by matching experimental results of fractured and unfractured cores with a simulator that accounts for the fracture and the matrix components. The simulator is a conventional two-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit simulator, but we show that it reduces to the formulation used in the field simulator. Several studies have reported on water imbibition in fractured media. These studies were concerned primarily with the imbibition aspects of the flow primarily with the imbibition aspects of the flow mechanism in the matrix rather than the total flow problem in the fracture-matrix system. Mattax and problem in the fracture-matrix system. Mattax and Kyte developed equations for scaling up imbibition effects. Parsons and Chaney used these equations to study imbibition effects in carbonate rocks. Iffly et al., in addition to experimental work, used a one-dimensional, two-phase, semi-implicit mathematical model to match oil recoveries from the matrix. A similar mathematical model in two dimensions was used by Kleppe and Morse to match the results of their imbibition experiments. While the last two papers show that imbibition oil recovery can be simulated numerically, the total concept of fluid flow in fracture-matrix systems has not been investigated adequately either numerically or experimentally. Mathematical Model The porous media used here were cylindrical cores or rectangular blocks cut along the long axis. The flow experiments were conducted so that the fracture plane and the entire core were horizontal. Therefore, the fractured cores were simulated by a layered two-dimensional simulator. The core halves were simulated as two matrix layers having the properties of the original core. The fracture was simulated as a very thin, high-permeability, and high-flow-capacity layer, where capillary pressure was essentially zero. The basic flow equations, assuming imcompressible flow, are w w----- wx ------ + ----- wz --------x x x zax az Sw+ qw Bw (X - Xo) = -------................(1)at t o o------ ox------ + ------ oz -------qoBo (X-Xo)x x z z So= ---------..................................(2)t Sw + So = 1.....................................(3) Pc(Sw) = po - pw....................................(4) kxkrwwx = 0.006328 -----------,......................(5)w SPEJ P. 175


Author(s):  
Vladimir Viktorovich Pekunov

This article examines the problem of numerical simulation of interaction between the gaseous sulfur dioxide emitted by road transport and fog in the conditions of high humidity. For this purpose, the author applies a multi-factor two-phase mathematical model, which takes into account the dynamics of turbulent main phase, dynamics and kinetics of the multi-sectional droplet phase, presence of thermal inconsistencies formed as a result of direct and diffused solar radiation in various ranges, diffusion of sulfur dioxide, and its absorption by the fog droplets. The article carries out a numerical calculation of the corresponding task within the modeling system of environmental processes AirEcology-P, which allows generating the optimal calculation code for a particular mathematical model. The proposed complex mathematical model that descries interaction between the emitted sulfur dioxide gas and the fog droplets is new; it specifies the calculation of the kinetics of droplet phase based on consideration of the additional factor of droplet fusion characteristic to fog. The submodel of the droplet phase was tested in the numerical simulation (the results were compared with the data of direct Lagrangian modeling of the composite of 1,000 droplets), indicating decent accuracy results. The article obtains the results of numerical simulation of interaction between the emitted SO2 and the droplets. The author demonstrates the self-cleaning ability of the atmosphere, the degree of which correlates with the initial concentration of the smallest droplets and the height from the surface.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 4-7
Author(s):  
Gaisin А.А.

This work is devoted to carrying out commissioning experiments to verify the acceptability of the mathematical model, computational grid and boundary conditions for numerical modeling of fluid flow in the hydrodynamic flow regulators. Verification of a numerical experiment was conducted using laboratory studies. The physical experiment was constructed in a reversed hydraulic tray. Measurements of local velocities in the outlet section of the diffuser was performed in the control points using utrirovannoe tube Prandtl-Pitot. Numerical simulation was performed in STAR-CMM+. The model is based on threedimensional unsteady Reynolds equations. Turbulence was modelled with standard k-ε model. The calculation method is implicit. Modeling free-surface flow was carried out with the use VOF two-phase interaction with the gravitational component. Boundary conditions were taken as the hydrostatic pressure for the input and the output section of the experimental model, the velocity on the inner walls of the model, which was assumed to be zero, and the absolute roughness of all surfaces. The results of the value of local velocities showed good agreement with experimental values. The studies confirmed the effectiveness of joint physical and numerical experiment, which allows to reduce the number of model studies. Analysis of the values obtained in numerical and physical experiments, allowed us to conclude that numerical simulation agrees well with experimental data with an error of less than 5 %. As a result of the physical experiment proved the correctness of the simulation of fluid flow in diffusers at the exit of the flow in the downstream in the software package STAR-CCM+.


2012 ◽  
Vol 516-517 ◽  
pp. 906-909
Author(s):  
Sheng Dian Wang ◽  
Xue Yao Wang ◽  
Xiang Xu ◽  
Yun Han Xiao

Numerical simulation of gas-solid two-phase flows in circulating fluidized bed is proved to be a low-cost and high-efficient method to research the instability essence of flow character. In this work, numerical simulation based on the discrete element (DEM) method is applied to analyze behaviors in a rectangular cross-section fluidized bed. The models of physical and mathematical models are introduced in detail, and the schematic of DEM method also described clearly. It indicates that the DEM method may be used as a powerful tool for the simulation of the gas-solid flow.


2012 ◽  
Vol 256-259 ◽  
pp. 2700-2703
Author(s):  
Ji Hong Bi ◽  
Jian Wang ◽  
Peng Lu ◽  
Chun Bao

Rain-wind induced vibration (RWIV) is a large amplitude and low frequency vibration of stay cables under wind and rain. The formation and oscillation of rivulets on stay cable surface plays an important role in RWIV, and it is also the symbolic characteristics of RWIV. In this paper, a numerical simulation approach of the formation process of rivulets around stay cable is presented by combining gas-liquid two-phase theory and volume of fluid method (VOF method) for the first time. The effect of gravity and air flow on morphology of rivulets is analysed by numerical simulation using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software-CFX. The veracity and rationality of this approach is verifed by comparing with existing experimental data.


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