INFLUENCE OF FLUE GAS PATTERN FLOW IN BOILER RADIANT SECTION ON HEAT TRANSFER

Author(s):  
Branislav Jacimovic ◽  
Srbislav Genic ◽  
Nikola Jacimovic

Abstract During the sizing of the radiant zone in boilers and furnaces, the most often used method is the Lobo-Evans model. This method is based on the perfect mixing model for flue gas flow inside the fire box, which represents a conservative or pessimistic flow pattern. This paper presents a different, optimistic model which is based on the plug flow for flue gas flow which results in the largest possible heat duty. The proposed model is given in two distinct forms – integral and numerical. As shown in the paper, the integral model results in small deviations with respect to the numerical model and, as such, is well suited for the engineering practice. Paper also presents an engineering approach to the calculation of the conductive heat transfer through the membrane wall, which is shown to be sufficiently accurate and simple for engineering calculations.

Author(s):  
Assaad Al Sahlani ◽  
Kelvin Randhir ◽  
Nesrin Ozalp ◽  
James Klausner

Abstract Concentrated solar thermochemical storage in the form of a zero-emission fuel is a promising option to produce long-duration energy storage. The production of solar fuel can occur within a cylindrical cavity chemical reactor that captures concentrated solar radiation from a solar field. A heat transfer model of a tubular plug-flow reactor is presented. Experimental data from a fixed bed tubular reactor are used for model comparison. The system consists of an externally heated tube with counter-current flowing gas and moving solid particles as the heated media. The proposed model simulates the dynamic behavior of temperature profiles of the tube wall, gas, and particles under various gas flow rates and residence times. The heat transfer between gas-wall, solid particle-wall, gas-solid particle, are numerically studied. The model is compared with experiments using a 4 kW furnace with a 150 mm heating zone surrounding a horizontal alumina tube (reactor) with 50.8 mm OD and a thickness of 3.175 mm. Solid fixed particles of magnesium manganese oxide (MgMn2O4) with the size of 1 mm are packed within the length of 250 mm at the center of the tube length. Simulation results are assessed with respect to fixed bed experimental data for four different gas flow rates, namely 5, 10, 15, 20 standard liters per minute of air, and furnace temperatures in the range of 200 to 1200 °C. The simulation results showed good agreement with maximum steady state error that is less than 6% of those obtained from the experiments among all runs. The proposed model can be implemented as a low-order physical model for the control of temperature inside plug-flow reactors for thermochemical energy storage (TCES) applications.


Author(s):  
Assaad Alsahlani ◽  
Kelvin Randhir ◽  
Nesrin Ozalp ◽  
James Klausner

Abstract In this paper, heat transfer model of a tubular plug-flow reactor designed and manufactured for a solar fuel production is presented. Experimental data collected from a fixed bed tubular reactor testing are used for model comparison. The system consists of an externally heated tube with counter-current flowing gas and moving solid particles as the heated media. The proposed model simulates the dynamic behavior of temperature profiles of the tube wall, gas, and particles under various gas flow rates and residence times. The heat transfer between gas-wall, solid particle-wall, and gas-solid particle are numerically studied. The model results are compared with the results of experiments done using a 4 kW furnace with a 150 mm heating zone surrounding a horizontal alumina tube (reactor) with 50.8 mm outer diameter and thickness of 3.175 mm. Solid fixed particles of MgMn2O4 with the size of 1 mm are packed within length of 250 mm at the center of the tube length. Simulation results are assessed with respect to fixed bed experimental data for four different gas flow rates, namely 5, 10, 15, 20 standard liters per minute of air, and furnace temperatures in the range of 200 to 1200 °C. The simulation results showed good agreement with maximum steady state error that is less than 6% of those obtained from the experiments for all runs. The proposed model can be implemented as a low-order physical model for the control of temperature inside plug-flow reactors.


2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 6657-6662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Xiao Feng ◽  
Qi Bo Cheng ◽  
Si Jing Yu

Based on the analysis of structural characteristic superiority, the process of combustion, flue gas flow and heat transfer in the upright magnesium reducing furnace, the three dimensional mathematical model is devoloped. And numerical simulation is performed further with the commercial software FLUENT. Finally, the flow and temperature field in furnace and temperature field in reducing pot have been obtained. The results indicate that the upright magnesium reducing furnace has perfect flue gas flow field and temperature field to meet the challenge of the magnesium reducing process; the major factors that affect the magnesium reducing reaction are the low thermal conductivity of slag and the high chemical reaction heat absorption.


Author(s):  
A. D. Patil ◽  
P. R. Baviskar ◽  
M. J. Sable ◽  
S. B. Barve

Energy saving and efficiency are the key issues in power generation system not only from the view point of fuel consumption, but also for the protection of global environment. Flue gas ducts are the major parts of oil-fired power plant, which are used to exhaust flue gases from boiler. This paper presents an approach for the optimization of economiser design. The aim of this work is to develop methodology which finds optimization of economiser design. CFD analysis is used to compare the new economiser design with traditional strategies. The most economical solution of this problem seems to distribute gas flow uniformly at inlet of economiser by using vanes. So that effective heat transfer can be obtained to reduce the number of tubes of existing model. In the present work commercial software Fluent is used for the 3D simulation using its inbuilt K-􀁈 Reliable model. Optimization of economiser is done for effective heat transfer with reducing number of tubes required.


Volume 1 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. Gao ◽  
L. X. Kong ◽  
P. D. Hodgson ◽  
B. Wang

To analyze the heat transfer mechanism between fluidised beds and surfaces of an immersed object, the heat transfer and gas flow was numerically simulated for different particle systems based on a double particle-layer and porous medium model. It is fund that the conductive heat transfer occurs in the stifling regions between particle and the immersed surface, which have different temperature. The diameter of the circular conduction region, dc, is a function of particle diameter, dp, and can be given by dc/dp = 0.245dp−0.3. In other areas, the heat transfer between the dense gas-solid phase and the immersed object surface is dominated by convection from the moving gas in the tunnel formed by the first-layer particles and the immersed surfaces. The average dimensionless gas velocity, εmfU/Umf, in the tunnel is a constant of about 4.6. The virtual gas temperature at the free stream conditions can be given by the surface temperature of the first-layer particles. The heat transfer coefficient on the conductive region is about 6∼10 times of that on the convection region. The Nusselt numbers for calculating the instantaneous conductive and convective heat-transfer coefficients were theoretically analysed respectively.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 330-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hari Bhaskaran Anangapal

Purpose – The purpose of this study is to carry out energy and exergy analysis of fuels. Production of power and heat in industrialized countries is almost entirely based on combustion of fuels. Usually, combustion takes place in boilers or furnace; well-designed boilers have high thermal efficiencies of > 90 per cent. Even very high efficiencies, close to 100 per cent can be achieved depending on the applied fuel and boiler type. These high thermal efficiencies do suggest that combustion processes are highly optimized and do not need further improvements with regard to their thermodynamic performance. Second law (entropy or exergy) evaluations, however, shows that thermodynamic losses of boiler and furnaces are much larger than the thermal efficiencies do suggest. During combustion, air is predominantly used. When using air, the adiabatic combustion temperature depends only on the properties of fuel and air. The determining parameters for optimal fuel utilization are the fuel type, their composition and moisture content, the air temperature and air factor at combustion inlet. Design/methodology/approach – Following assumptions are made for the analysis: calculation on the basis of 100 kg of dry and ash free fuel entering the control volume; fuel entering the control volume at T0, P0 and reacting completely with air entering separately at T0, P0 to form CO2, SO2, N2 and H2O, which exit separately at T0, P0 (T0 = 298 K; P0 = 1 atm); all heat transfer occurs at temperature T0; and the chemical exergy of the ash has been ignored The availability change and the irreversibility for chemical reactions of hydrocarbon fuels were studied because fuel and dry air composed of O2 and N2 react to form products of combustion in the restricted dead state, and fuel and dry air composed of O2 and N2 react to form products of combustion which end up in the environmental (unrestricted) dead state. The difference between the above two statement, is the chemical availability of the product gases as they proceed from the restricted to the unrestricted dead state. These evaluations were made in terms of enthalpy and entropy values of the reacting species. T0 extend these concepts to the most general situation, it is considered a steady-state control volume where the fuels enters at the restricted dead state, the air (oxidant) is drawn from the environment, and the products are returned to the unrestricted dead state. Findings – It is evident from the analysis that an air factor of 1.10-1.20 is sufficient for liquid fuels, whereas solid fuels will require air factors of 1.15–1.3. When the temperatures of the products of combustion (Tp) are cooled down to that of T0, the maximum reversible work occurs. From the analysis, it is clear that the rather low combustion temperature and the need for cooling down the flue gases to extract the required heat are the main causes of the large exergy losses. The maximum second law efficiency also occurs when Tp is set equal to T0. The maximum second law efficiency per kilo mole of fuel is found to be 73 per cent, i.e. 73 per cent of the energy released by the cooling process could theoretically be converted into useful work. It is evident that reducing exergy losses of combustion is only useful if the heat transferred from the flue gas is used at high temperatures. Otherwise, a reduction of exergy loss of combustion will only increase the exergy loss of heat transfer to the power cycle or heat-absorbing process. The exergy loss of combustion can be reduced considerable by preheating combustion air. Higher preheat temperatures can be obtained by using the flue gas flow only for preheating air. The remainder of the flue gas flow can be used for heat transfer to a power cycle or heat-absorbing process. Even with very high air preheat temperatures, exergy losses of combustion are still > 20 per cent. The application of electrochemical conversion of fuel, as is realized in fuel cells, allows for much lower exergy loses for the reaction between fuel and air than thermal conversion. For industrial applications, electrochemical conversion is not yet available, but will be an interesting option for the future. Originality/value – The outcome of the study would certainly be an eye-opener for all the stakeholders in thermal power plants for considering the second law efficiency and to mitigate the irreversibilities.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 1310
Author(s):  
Robertas Poškas ◽  
Arūnas Sirvydas ◽  
Vladislavas Kulkovas ◽  
Hussam Jouhara ◽  
Povilas Poškas ◽  
...  

In order for the operation of the condensing heat exchanger to be efficient, the flue gas temperature at the inlet to the heat exchanger should be reduced so that condensation can start from the very beginning of the exchanger. A possible way to reduce the flue gas temperature is the injection of water into the flue gas flow. Injected water additionally moistens the flue gas and increases its level of humidity. Therefore, more favorable conditions are created for condensation and heat transfer. The results presented in the second paper of the series on condensation heat transfer indicate that water injection into the flue gas flow drastically changes the distribution of temperatures along the heat exchanger and enhances local total heat transfer. The injected water causes an increase in the local total heat transfer by at least two times in comparison with the case when no water is injected. Different temperatures of injected water mainly have a major impact on the local total heat transfer until almost the middle of the model of the condensing heat exchanger. From the middle part until the end, the heat transfer is almost the same at different injected water temperatures.


Author(s):  
Christoph Kren ◽  
Christian Schweigler ◽  
Felix Ziegler

It has already been shown that efficiency of direct-fired absorption chillers or tri-generation systems (CCHP) can be increased if the hot flue gas - from internal gas burner or from motor engines or gas turbines - is successively utilized in the absorption cycle at several temperature levels. For successful realization of such concepts, however, efficient heat exchanger designs are required. An increase in complexity on the flue gas side of the chiller must not introduce a proportional increase in size, cost, and pressure drop. Thus, the development of a compact and efficient flue gas fired regenerator design with low flue gas pressure drop is a major step towards COP increase in direct-fired and exhaust-fired absorption chillers. The potential of different regenerator concepts including common smoke tube design and alternative boiling tube designs with natural circulation of the lithium bromide solution and flue gas flow across bundles of plain or finned tubes is discussed. Promising designs are identified on basis of numerical calculations. A semi-industrial sized prototype of a direct-fired regenerator with consecutive sections of plain and finned vertical boiling tubes has been tested in laboratory over a range of thermal inputs up to 256 kW (net. CV). Experimental results of heat transfer and combustion side pressure drop investigations at the novel regenerator are presented. Accordance of experimental results with theoretical predictions is shown.


2013 ◽  
Vol 805-806 ◽  
pp. 1836-1842
Author(s):  
Qing Feng Zhang ◽  
Zhen Xin Wu ◽  
Zhen Ning Zhao

Based on the heat-transfer principle of air pre-heater, the influence mode of the changes of the air flow, the flue gas flow, the air leakage in different locations, to the temperature of the hot air and the exhausting gas was researched. The problem of a pulverized coal fired boiler, No.2, of a Thermal Power Plant, which the deviation of exhausting flue gas temperature increased to an abnormal extend when the boiler load rise up quickly was analyzed, the fault position and fault reason were located exactly, and the fault was eradicated by equipment maintenance at last. The results of this study have a certain significance to solve similar problems.


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