Comparison of spectral models in the computation of radiative heat transfer in participating media composed of gases and soot
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Date
2012Author
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Abstract
Accurate combustion models are necessary to predict, among other effects, the production of pollutant gases and the heat transfer. As an important part of the combustion modeling, thermal radiation is often the dominant heat transfer mechanism, involving absorption and emission from soot and participating gases, such as water vapor and carbon dioxides. If the radiative heat transfer is not accurately predicted, the solution can lead to poor prediction of the temperature field and of the formati ...
Accurate combustion models are necessary to predict, among other effects, the production of pollutant gases and the heat transfer. As an important part of the combustion modeling, thermal radiation is often the dominant heat transfer mechanism, involving absorption and emission from soot and participating gases, such as water vapor and carbon dioxides. If the radiative heat transfer is not accurately predicted, the solution can lead to poor prediction of the temperature field and of the formation and distribution of the gases and soot. The modeling of the absorption coefficient of the gases is a very complex task due to its highly irregular dependence on the wavenumber. On the other hand, the absorption coefficient of the soot is known to behave linearly with the wavenumber, allowing for a simpler approach. Depending on the amount of soot, the more sophisticated and expensive gas models can be replaced by simpler ones, without considerable loss of accuracy. In this study, the radiative heat transfer for a medium composed of water vapor, carbon dioxide and soot is computed with the gray gas (GG), the weighted-sum-of-gray-gases model (WSGG), and the cumulative wavenumber (CW) models. The results are compared to benchmark line-by-line (LBL) calculations. ...
In
Journal of the Brazilian Society of Mechanical Sciences and Engineering. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. vol. 34, no. 2 (Apr./June 2012), p. 112-119
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National
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