Radiation gas2Wall advanced L2

Created Tuesday 18 June 2013

A heat transfer model to calculate the radiative heat transfer from a furnace gas volume to the surrounding walls.

1. Purpose of Model


The model is used to calculate the radiative heat transfer between a furnace volume and the surrounding walls with the use of view factors. This model can be used with fixed or calculated values for emissivity and absorbance of the flue gas suspension. The calculation takes gas and particle radiation into account.

2. Level of Detail, Physical Effects Considered and Physical Insight


2.1 Level of Detail


This replaceable model is compatible to models of level of detail L2 according to Brunnemann et al. [1] since no spacial resolution of the heat transfer is assumed.

2.2 Physical Effects Considered


3. Limits of Validity


4. Interfaces


4.1 Physical Connectors


Basics:Interfaces:HeatPort a heat

5. Nomenclature


6. Governing Equations


6.1 System Description and General model approach


This model calculates the radiation for the case of a wall surrounding a gas volume according to [2] chapter Kd and Ke. The heat flux is distributed with a view factor taking the furnace geometry into account. The radiation can be calculated with fixed values for absorption and emissivity, but it is recommended to use the temperature and composition dependent calculation of these values to take gas and ash, soot and coke particle radiation more detailed into account. Besides a higher accuracy in most cases, the calculation responds dynamically and more realistic according to changing loads of ash and coke particles as well as flue gas composition and temperatures.

6.2 Governing Model Equations


The calculation is subdivided into three cases:

  1. Suspension_calculation_type = "Fixed": Fixed predefined values for emissivity and absorbance of the suspension are used
  2. Suspension_calculation_type = "Gas calculated, particles fixed": Particle emissivity is considered with a fixed value and emissivity and absorbance of H2O and CO2 are calculated temperature and composition dependent. This is a good choice if the needed parameters of the used coal (Rosin-Rammler-Distribution) are unknown.
  3. Suspension_calculation_type = "Calculated": Emissivity and absorbance of particles and gasses are calculated according to the chosen parameters as well as temperature and composition dependent.

For all three cases the view factor is calculated in the same way. It is assumed, that the radiative volume with its equivalent thickness (s_gl) inside the component is lumped together into one radiating surface, which is exchanging radiation with the surrounding walls. The values x and y are calculated for two different orientation cases of the furnace geometry. If the furnace volume orientation is vertical (for example coal furnaces):

If the orientation is horizontal (for example for heat recovery steam generators of gas turbines):

With these values the view factor is calculated. The sum of all view factors for each surface in an enclosed space sums up to 1. With this information the view factor for the easy case of two flat surfaces (top and bottom of the volume) is calculated and substracted from 1 giving the sum of all view factors for the remaining surfaces (surrounding walls) which we are looking for:

The equivalent thickness of the gas volume is identical for all three cases:

The radiation is exchanged between the actual and the downstream furnace component which temperature is available inside the heat port. The direction of the heat flow is depending on the temperatures inside the connected volumes. Therefore the temperatures T_source and T_sink are introduced which are

For case 1 (Suspension_calculation_type = "Fixed") the heat transfer is calculated according to the following equation:



For case 2 (Suspension_calculation_type = "Gas calculated, particles fixed") the heat transfer is calculated as follows:

The weighting factors at suspension and wall temperature:

The suspension emissivity factors are calculated with the partial pressure of H2O and CO2 and the equivalent thickness:

The emissivity of CO2 and H2O of the suspension is calculated as follows:

The emissivity of the suspension is now given as:

The absorbance of CO2 and H2O of the suspension is calculated with wall temperature:

And the absorbance of the suspension is given as:

With these values the heat transfer for case 2 can be calculated as follows (identical to eq. 7):



For case 3 (Suspension_calculation_type = "Calculated") the heat transfer is calculated as follows:

The values for emissivity and absorbance of the H2O and CO2 gasses are identical to case 2 but here we need to calculate the influence of particle radiation too.

The soot load of the flue gas is given as:

The coke load of the flue gas is given as:

The absorbance of the coke particles is calculated as follows:

The ash load of the flue gas is given as:

The absorbance of the ash particles is calculated as follows:

The suspension emissivity factors are calculated with the partial pressure of H2O and CO2, particle emissivities and the equivalent thickness:

With these values the heat transfer for case 3 can be calculated as follows:


7. Remarks for Usage


8. Validation


9. References

[1] Johannes Brunnemann and Friedrich Gottelt, Kai Wellner, Ala Renz, André Thüring, Volker Röder, Christoph Hasenbein, Christian Schulze, Gerhard Schmitz, Jörg Eiden: "Status of ClaRaCCS: Modelling and Simulation of Coal-Fired Power Plants with CO2 capture", 9th Modelica Conference, Munich, Germany, 2012
[2] VDI Wärmeatlas, Verein Deutscher Ingenieure VDI-Gesellschaft Verfahrenstechnik und Chemieingenieurwesen (GVC), Springer Verlag, 10. Auflage, 2006

10. Authorship and Copyright Statement for original (initial) Contribution

Author:
DYNCAP/DYNSTART development team, Copyright 2011 - 2022.
Remarks:
This component was developed during DYNCAP/DYNSTART projects.
Acknowledgements:
ClaRa originated from the collaborative research projects DYNCAP and DYNSTART. Both research projects were supported by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (FKZ 03ET2009 and FKZ 03ET7060).
CLA:
The author(s) have agreed to ClaRa CLA, version 1.0. See https://claralib.com/pdf/CLA.pdf
By agreeing to ClaRa CLA, version 1.0 the author has granted the ClaRa development team a permanent right to use and modify his initial contribution as well as to publish it or its modified versions under the 3-clause BSD License.

11. Version History

25.06.2014 - v0.1 - initial implementation of the model - Lasse Nielsen, TLK-Thermo GmbH



Backlinks: ClaRa:Components:Furnace:Burner:Burner L2 Dynamic ClaRa:Components:Furnace:Burner:Burner L2 Dynamic fuelDrying ClaRa:Components:Furnace:Burner:Burner L2 Static ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoomAdditionalAir L2 Dynamic ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoomAdditionalAir L2 Static ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoomWithTubeBundle L2 Dynamic ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoomWithTubeBundle L2 Static ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoom L2 Dynamic ClaRa:Components:Furnace:FlameRoom:FlameRoom L2 Static