Detail publikace

What the Combustion Engineer Gains from CFD Modeling: Gas Furnace

HÁJEK, J. VONDÁL, J. JUŘENA, T. SLÁMA, J.

Originální název

What the Combustion Engineer Gains from CFD Modeling: Gas Furnace

Typ

článek v časopise ve Web of Science, Jimp

Jazyk

angličtina

Originální abstrakt

Combustion engineers require correct predictions of trends, especially in cases when computational fluid dynamics is applied for troubleshooting, scale-up, or decision support in the design phase. Validation of models by parametric studies and in a large-scale furnace is rare and much needed. This is the primary objective of this work. Similarly, combustion engineers require the prediction of heat loads in specific parts of a boiler or furnace. The second objective of this work is to provide exactly such type of validation for a megawatt-scale burner. Both cases use natural gas fuel. The models applied to perform the predictions are typical of practicing combustion engineers, providing fast turnaround times. The results provide a perspective on the performance of models serving as workhorses in engineering companies.

Klíčová slova

Combustion engineering, Natural gas, Non-premixed combustion, Model validation

Autoři

HÁJEK, J.; VONDÁL, J.; JUŘENA, T.; SLÁMA, J.

Vydáno

25. 2. 2019

Nakladatel

WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

Místo

Weinheim

ISSN

1521-4125

Periodikum

Chemical Engineering and Technology

Ročník

42

Číslo

4

Stát

Spolková republika Německo

Strany od

835

Strany do

842

Strany počet

8

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT155917,
  author="Jiří {Hájek} and Jiří {Vondál} and Tomáš {Juřena} and Jaroslav {Sláma}",
  title="What the Combustion Engineer Gains from CFD Modeling: Gas Furnace",
  journal="Chemical Engineering and Technology",
  year="2019",
  volume="42",
  number="4",
  pages="835--842",
  doi="10.1002/ceat.201800612",
  issn="1521-4125",
  url="https://doi.org/10.1002/ceat.201800612"
}