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Published bySheryl Lamb Modified over 6 years ago
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Modelling the convective zone of a utility boiler Norberto Fueyo Antonio Gómez Fluid Mechanics Group University of Zaragoza
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Contents Motivation 2D example Geometrical modelling
Mathematical modelling 2D validation Application to a 350 MW(e) boiler Conclusions Further work
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Motivation
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Furnace modelling Aim: Modelling Simulation Validation of
Multiphase flow (including turbulence), Heat transfer (including radiation) Pollutant (NOx) formation in Furnace of power-production utilities
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Strategy (‘divide and conquer’)
+ = (Model coupling through boundary conditions) Convective zone Furnace
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Convective-zone modelling
Aim: Modelling Simulation Validation of Fluid flow (including turbulence) and Thermal fields (gas and tube sides) Heat transfer in Convective zone of boiler In Out
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Model input Geometrical data (tubes, banks, etc)
Fluid (shell-side and tube-side) and solid (tube) properties Operating conditions (inlet mass-flow rates, inlet temperatures, etc)
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Model output Detailed fields of:- Velocity Pressure Turbulence
Shell fluid, tube fluid and wall temperature Shell-to-wall and tube-to-wall heat-transfer coefficients Heat-transfer rate (W/m3) Overall heat-transfer rate, per tube-bank (W)
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A 2D example
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Complex 2D case Hotter gas in Colder gas out Manifold Vapour in/out
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2D: pressure contours
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2D: shell-side temperature
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2D: Tube-side temperature
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2D: Wall (tube) temperature
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2D: Shell-side heat-transf coef
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2D: Tube-side heat-transf coef
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Geometrical modelling
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The problem Geometrically complex problem Tubes Tube-banks
Interconnections Tubes representented as distributed, sub-grid features Specify geometry in ASCII file Subordinate mesh to geometry
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Strategy (schematic) Convective-zone database Parser program (ASCII)
(in-house made) Geometrical data, mesh, etc Simulation parameters (Q1) Simulation (Earth) Numerical results Graphical results: (PHOTON, TECPLOT)
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Element types General data 2D tubebanks (tube wall) 3D tube banks
Bank arrays (2D, usually) Manifolds (virtual) Internal Inlets Outlets
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Data required for each element
Feature name Position and dimensions Tube orientation Internal and external tube diameter Tube pitch Tube material Fluid velocity Fluid Cp, Prandtl number, density, viscosity Tube-bank conectivity Some others ...
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Typical database entry
[tubebank] type = 3D long_name = Lower_Economizer_1 short_name = Ecoinf1 [[descrip]] posi = (14.323,1,22.61) dime = (6.34,8.24,2.3) alig = +2 diam = 50.8 pich = (146.26,0,83.3) poro dint = 46 velo dens enul pran mate = SA.210.A1 [[connect]] From_bank = ent1 In_face = South Out_face Link
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Mathematical modelling
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Main physical models - shell side
Full Navier-Stokes equations, plus enthalpy equation, plus turbulence statistics (typically, k-epsilon model) Full account of volume porosity due to tube-bank presence Shell-side pressure-loss via friction factors in momentum equations Shell-side modification of turbulent flowfield due to presence of tubes Empirical heat-transfer correlations, based on tube-bank geometry (diameters, pitch, etc) Simple (but flexible) account of shell-side fouling
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Main physical models - tube side
One-directional enthalpy equation (along the tube direction) Mass-flow rates in the tubes obtained from mass balance Empirical heat-transfer correlations, based on tube geometry (diameter)
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Results
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Applications 2-D, multiple tube-bank configuration (functional validation) 2-D, single tube-bank configuration (numerical validation) 3-D convective zone (validation in real-case application)
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2D validation Validation with single-bank configuration: Air V T1 ST
SL D NL Tw NT T2
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Single-bank: Test cases
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Single-bank: thermal results
Theory: Log Mean Temp Difference method (1-4) and Number of Transfer Units method (5)
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Single-bank: pressure loss
Theor 1: Grimison correlation Theor 2: Gunter and Shaw correlation
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350 Mw boiler NB: still not fully converged, but nevertheless ...
Physically plausible Results follow
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Boiler layout 1SH Primary Superheater 2SH Secondary superheater
Turbine V L Turbine Final reheater Dividing walls 2SH Reheater 1SH Vapour UE 1SH Primary Superheater 2SH Secondary superheater UE Upper economizer LE Lower economizer Gases LE Flue gas Vapour Gases
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Typical geometry As interpreted by the graphics program from database
Some bounding walls not plotted for the sake of clarity
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Computational mesh 75x64x142 Approx 680,000 cells
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Shell-side temperature
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Flow field (velocity vectors)
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Pressure field
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Shell temperature
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Tube-side temperature
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Tube-wall temperature
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Heat-transfer rate NB per cell
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Tube-side heat-transfer coeff
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Comparison with measurements
Results not fully converged Effect of fouling to be studied Geometry not 100% accurate
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Computational details
Finite-volume formulation of equations Number of cells: approx 670,000 (75x64x142) Number of dependent variables: 8 (pressure correction, 3 shell-side velocity components, k, epsilon, tube-side and shell-side enthalpy) Running time: Around 12 minutes CPU time per sweep (PENTIUM 300) Around 1500 iterations to convergence
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