CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > Software User Forums > ANSYS > FLUENT

In-cylinder Steam Generator - Please Help (Interesting Case)!

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   September 10, 2012, 09:55
Default In-cylinder Steam Generator - Please Help (Interesting Case)!
  #1
New Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 3
Rep Power: 13
P Daniel is on a distinguished road
Problem Definition
The problem faced is to simulate an in-cylinder steam generator. The cylinder has been drilled in a heated block of aluminum with initial temperature of 523K. The cylinder can be assumed to only contain steam prior to liquid water injection. Water at a flowrate of 0.003 kg/s is injected into the cylinder as in the picture below. All injected water is evaporated and the generated steam exits at the outlet. Thus, there is no gaseous inlet. The internal walls have been treated with a calcium hydroxide solution so as to improve heat transfer (no boiling in the film-boiling regime but the nucleate/transition-boiling regime). Initially, a satisfactory steady-state solution is desired.

Geometry and Data
See attached jpeg!

Previous Attempts
The problem has been simulated using the discrete particle method (DPM) in FLUENT. The built-in hollow cone spray injector with a Rosin-Ramler size distribution injector has been applied. The wall temperature has been fixed to 523 K for steady-state simulations and a pressure-outlet of 1 bar. For particle-wall interaction the Lagrangian Wall-Film has been applied (various number of splashed particles have been tested). Also a fixed heat-flux boundary condition has been applied in order to transfer sufficient heat, however FLUENT raises the wall temperature to more than 10 000 K in this case which gives exceptionally unrealistic results.

Problems During Previous Attempts
The heat needed to be transferred from the wall in order to heat and evaporate the water has been estimated to 7.5 kW or an average surface heat flux of 600 kW/m2. The heat transfer has been the real challenge here as the total surface heat flux from the walls in simulations only reaches approximately one tenth of the required heat flux. The reason for this has been investigated and it is believed that it is caused by the Lagrangian Wall-Film physics which only considers heat transfer from the wall through conduction and the enthalpy required for vaporization is instead taken from the cell into which the vapor is added and not from the wall. During nucleate-boiling the heat transfer is governed by more mechanisms than just wall-liquid conduction. Because of the short-comings of the Lagrangian Wall-Film model, the FLUENT built-in Eularian Boiling model (RPI) is now being considered. Or possibly writing a UDF.

Questions
It seems as though the RPI-model is developed for sub-cooled boiling with a liquid bulk but in this case we have a dispersed flow situation with droplets injected into a gaseous bulk, is the RPI-model applicable in this case?

Does the RPI-model describe the physics of this problem better than the Lagrangian Wall-Film?

Is it possible to use the Eularian Wall-Film with DPM particles? Any experience here?
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Problem Description.jpg (56.1 KB, 32 views)
P Daniel is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply

Tags
boiling, evaporation, spray, steam generator, wall-film


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Incorrect Drag and Drag Coefficient for flow over a cylinder ozzythewise Main CFD Forum 8 June 13, 2012 06:24
a case of flow past a cylinder zhangqin200000 Main CFD Forum 0 May 3, 2012 08:14
Interesting result from oscillating cylinder Wee Main CFD Forum 4 October 13, 2006 09:31
Flow over a cylinder Anna Main CFD Forum 9 March 24, 2006 14:32
moving cylinder blur boy Main CFD Forum 4 October 12, 2001 05:32


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 21:33.