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HÁJEK, J. VONDÁL, J. JUŘENA, T. SLÁMA, J.
Original Title
What the Combustion Engineer Gains from CFD Modeling: Gas Furnace
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
English
Original Abstract
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.
Keywords
Combustion engineering, Natural gas, Non-premixed combustion, Model validation
Authors
HÁJEK, J.; VONDÁL, J.; JUŘENA, T.; SLÁMA, J.
Released
25. 2. 2019
Publisher
WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
Location
Weinheim
ISBN
1521-4125
Periodical
Chemical Engineering and Technology
Year of study
42
Number
4
State
Federal Republic of Germany
Pages from
835
Pages to
842
Pages count
8
URL
https://doi.org/10.1002/ceat.201800612
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" }