Replies: 13 comments 40 replies
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Thanks Randy for initiating the discussion. Perhaps another point regarding the comparison NIST Vs DBI (prescribed MLR) is the cell size. It seems to me that for the 1 cm cell size, the results are quite comparable for the mean temperature at the centerline of the 30 cm methanol pool fire. DBI used an even finer mesh with a 0.5 cm cell size, which appears to capture better the high temperatures near the fuel surface. |
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FYI, I just pushed up NIST results for puffing frequency. The updated plots are here and the README.md file has a table with the computation results for puffing frequency compared to the measured. |
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Hi Randy, I have a few questions about the NIST results. The questions are mainly about the predictive methanol pool fire simulations.
I have one general question about turbulence modelling. Do you think that Dynamic Smagorinsky (DS) can reduce the mesh sensitivity? That may be inferred (without compelling evidence though) from a comparative analysis of the results. I recall your reluctance however to use DS for numerical issues. Thanks! |
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Hi Ning, Some similar questions about the predictive methanol pool fire simulations:
Thanks! |
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Hi Michael, I have a few questions for you:
Thanks! |
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Hi, Few questions about the predictive methanol pool fire simulations of DBI:
Thanks! |
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Our measurements suggest that about 55% to 65% of the heat feedback to the
30cm methanol fuel pool is due to radiative heat transfer (which is not
uniform) with about 35% to 45% due to convective heat transfer. Thin film
theory applied to the 30 cm methanol pool fire indicates that convective
heat transfer would increase by a factor of 2 if the mass burning rate were
cut in half, and decrease by a factor of 2 if the mass burning rate were
increased by a factor of 1.4 - so evaporation is in a range for which
convective heat transfer appears fairly sensitive to blowing. In a
somewhat related matter, Orloff and deRis report experiments that show that
the presence of the burner lip increases the convective heat transfer
coefficient by about 30% (as compared to zero lip).
…On Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 12:03 PM tbeji ***@***.***> wrote:
@NingRen <https://github.com/NingRen> Thanks a lot for the information.
1. The integration of the heat flux is a good explanation. If you can
do the calculation and provide me with the result, I will mention that
during the presentation.
2. There is potentially a good discussion point with the
experimentalists about the blowing effect. @ahaminsgithub
<https://github.com/ahaminsgithub> Any thoughts about this?
3. @NingRen <https://github.com/NingRen> and @rmcdermo
<https://github.com/rmcdermo> During IAFSS, I will present a paper on
transient heating of liquid pool fires, including in-depth temperature
measurements with a good resolution and fine thermocouples. The experiments
are done at the University of Nancy (France).
Here are some results for 15 cm methanol and heptane square burners
with L = 15 cm.
[image: image]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/144003045/268332789-f8e42907-0755-4976-9fc1-532af83314dd.png>
I will be happy to share the data. Just need some time.
Some FDS results are here for heptane at different heights, z:
[image: image]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/144003045/268333558-1160f4b5-db52-4da9-a707-45c9b2c44984.png>
The Nusselt number is an INTERNAL Nusselt number linked to an
effective conductivity used in the 1D solution of Fourier's equation in
FDS. In the paper, we explain how to estimate Nu experimentally. FDS
confirms the validity of our experimental estimates.
In any case, I will be very happy to interact with you on this topic.
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I would like to get some additional information on the 37 cm diameter methane that you simulated.
Thanks. |
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@NingRen <https://github.com/NingRen>
There is one data point regarding in-depth radiative penetration for
methanol from an experimental study (Burgess and Hertzberg, Radiation from
Pool Flames, Chapter 27, page 425, Table 2 in Heat Transfer in Flames, Eds:
Afgan and Beers, 1974, John WIley & Sons, NY). They show that 3mm of liquid
methanol absorbs 100% of the radiative emission from a methanol flame.
We also have measurements at various liquid depths in the 100 cm methanol
fire. In this experiment, the TC (about 0.5 mm diameter type K
thermocouple) was moved every 30 sec through the liquid pool. There is an
indication of a hot layer near the pool surface (at r =35cm), which is
close to the boiling point (see data below from Sung et al, NIST report# TN
2083, page 38). These results seem to be consistent with the radiation
penetration value from Burgess and Hertzberg (mentioned above). We also
observe standing waves in the liquid pool with an amplitude on the order of
1 mm beating in sync at the puffing frequency, which one might guess ought
to enhance mixing near the fuel surface....
*Test 2 at 45 min into the 100 cm methanol pool fire experiment*
*Z(mm) T(deg_C)*
*-0.1 64*
*-1.2 66*
*-3.3 65*
*-5.2 58 *
*-10.0 46*
*-20.3 34*
*-40.4 27*
By the way, if radiative penetration is of interest, there is liquid
methanol absorption data available from NIST and others as a function of
wavelength in the IR (for example:
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/dpis/2013/329406/). One could use RADCAL2
(which includes methanol) to calculate an approximate fire emission
spectrum to the fuel surface and then apply the liquid absorption
spectrum. Ryan and I are planning measurements of radiation penetration
for various fuels sometime in the near future.
…On Wed, Sep 20, 2023 at 9:42 AM NingRen ***@***.***> wrote:
@rmcdermo <https://github.com/rmcdermo> @ahaminsgithub
<https://github.com/ahaminsgithub>
Thanks Anthony and Randy for sharing the liquid temperature data. The
0.8-cm-deep temperature keeps increasing slowly even after 10 mins.
Definitely need to run the simulation longer to reach steady state. The
0.8-cm temperature is close to the boiling point at 2400 s. Do you have any
measurement of the thickness of the boiling region? In my current
simulation, there is a 3-mm thick of fuel reaches the boiling point, which
can be increased by tuning the in-depth radiation. Any idea about the
radiation penetration depth for the methanol pool fire?
Best,
Ning
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@NingRen
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@NingRen <https://github.com/NingRen>
there's uncertainty in all the liquid temperature measurements on the order
of +/- 0.5 deg K (as well as spatially, so the temperature is really
about the same in the top liquid layer near the fuel surface (top 3 mm).
And we observe the surface temperature to slowly increase in the liquid
fuels with time for acetone, ethanol and methanol (on the order of 1500
sec), likely due to back diffusion of gaseous water vapor from the fire,
condensing on the fuel surface.
…On Fri, Sep 22, 2023 at 10:42 PM NingRen ***@***.***> wrote:
@tbeji <https://github.com/tbeji>
1. I just simply used a constant h_m. In the steady state of the
simulation, fuel surface is in boiling mode (although some measurements
show the surface T is slightly lower than boiling point). In this mode, the
evaporation rate is generally determined by the heat flux / heat of
gasification. h_m seems only affecting the transition stage.
2. I believe the Stefan's flow is resolved in the gas-phase. No need
to model it. For the convective heat transfer, I do have a blowing effect
included in a wall-model, similar to the B number theory. For higher
evaporation rates (e.g., 100 cm pool compared to 30 cm pool), the
convective component is smaller due to the blowing effect.
3. I used the Clausius-Clapeyron equation to calculate Y_s.
4. For Y_inf, I used the near-wall cell center value.
Best,
Ning
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@tbeji Please note the addition of U Waterloo results pushed up today. |
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For those who have submitted computational results for the NIST-Waterloo Pool Fires case, we have a favor to ask. Ryan Falkenstein-Smith (@rlfalken) has recently pushed up uncertainty data for some of the experimental plots. I have added the experimental uncertainty to these plots in my plot configuration file here. Look for the column titled If you do not have time to add this, we understand, but we would appreciate your help in adding the uncertainties if you can. Thanks! |
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Hi All,
I wanted to start a discussion for the pool fires cases. Please cc anyone in your organization that I may have missed. I don't know everyone's GitHub usernames.
If you are not aware, the plots for everyone's cases are posted here with the zip files in alphabetical order.
@gatw In looking at the BDI results for methanol pool fires, your FDS centerline temperatures are better than ours. I am noticing I have this issue across the board and think it is due to the EXTINCTION 2 model we are using. In fact, I did not realize until too late that Kevin had set SUPRESSION=F on these cases last time (MaCFP-2) to deal with this issue. But it is really just sweeping it under the rug. My question to you is, did you use an extinction model or did you also have SUPPRESSION=F? If you did, please note this in your README.md. Thanks!
Adding relevant users to the discussion:
@ahaminsgithub
@mameehan5
@hong27
@gmaragko82
@NingRen
@atrouve
@bradensouthern
@rlfalken
@tbeji
@ejweckman
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