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SKF Esp Gas Flow Fundamentals

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views36 pages

SKF Esp Gas Flow Fundamentals

Uploaded by

shaswattam
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 36

ESP Gas Flow Fundamentals

Robert Mudry, P.E.


Vice President – Engineering
Airflow Sciences Corporation
[email protected]
[email protected]

ESP/FF Round Table & Exposition


August 12, 2002

Airflow Sciences Corporation


1
Outline

v Introduction
v ESP Fluid Flow Basics
v Assessing Flow Characteristics
v ESP Flow Modeling
v Case Studies
v Questions

Airflow Sciences Corporation


2
Introduction

v Why Worry About Fluid Dynamics?


• Strong influence on performance of pollution control
equipment (ESP, FF, SCR, LNB, Scrubber, etc.)
• Relatively low cost performance enhancements are possible
v Example Cases
v About Your Speaker

Airflow Sciences Corporation


3
Example Cases

v How important is flow distribution?


Plant Baseline Performance After Flow Improvements
Mississippi Power Full load opacity 25% Full load opacity less than 5%
Watson Unit 5
Southern California High opacity causes 23% reduction in particulate
Edison Mohave 240 MW derate per emissions allows load
Units 1&2 unit increase of 150 MW per unit
Essroc Materials High opacity (14%) Improved dust capture
Nazareth Unit 1 and high pressure reduces opacity to 7%;
loss cause high system pressure loss reduced
operating costs by 5 inches H2O

Airflow Sciences Corporation


4
About Your Speaker
v BSE, MSE Aerospace Engineering – University of Michigan
v 13 years as fluid dynamics consultant to industry
v Involved in 300+ testing/modeling projects
v Institute of Clean Air Companies (ICAC) member
v Author of 6 power industry technical papers
v Registered Professional Engineer – MI, NC, VA

Airflow Sciences Corporation


5
Outline
v Introduction
v ESP Fluid Flow Basics
• Gas Velocity Distribution
½ Ductwork
½ Collection Region
• Gas Flow Balance
• Pressure Drop
• Gas Temperature
• Gas Conditioning
v Assessing Flow Characteristics
v ESP Flow Modeling
v Case Studies
v Questions
Airflow Sciences Corporation
6
Gas Velocity Distribution – Ductwork

v Ductwork Design Criteria


• Maintain minimum
velocity requirements
to avoid particle dropout
• Provide good flow
characteristics to ESP
v Considerations
• Horizontal surfaces
• Cross sectional area
• Bends
• Structure
Airflow Sciences Corporation
7
Gas Velocity Distribution –
Collection Region
v Uniform Flow Concept
• ESP inlet & outlet planes
v Industry Standards
• ICAC
• % RMS Deviation
v “Skewed” Flow
Concepts

ICAC: 85% of velocities ” 1.15 * Vavg


99% of velocities ” 1.40 * Vavg
Other: % RMS Deviation ” 15% of Vavg

Airflow Sciences Corporation


8
Gas Velocity Distribution –
Collection Region
v Flow Control Methods
• Vanes, baffles
• Flow straighteners
• Perforated plates

Airflow Sciences Corporation


9
Gas Flow Balance
v Industry Standards
ICAC: Flow within each chamber to be
v Control Methods within ±10% of its theoretical share

Percent of total mass


flow through each
chamber 21 %
35 %
26 %
18 %

Airflow Sciences Corporation


10
Pressure Drop
v General goal:
• Minimize DP
v Methods
• Vanes
• Duct contouring
• Area management

Ductwork redesign saves


2.1 inches H2O over baseline
Flow

Airflow Sciences Corporation


11
Gas Temperature
v Average temperature
v Temperature stratification

Resistivity
v Inleakage

Temperature

Airflow Sciences Corporation


12
Gas Conditioning
Modify ash resistivity

Resistivity
v

• SO3, ammonia, others


v Alter gas density, viscosity
• Humidification 5 ppm SO3

Low SO3 Temperature


Concentration

Humidification principle:
m= *v*A
m, A = constant
High SO3 = f (T)
Concentration If T is reduced, increases
Thus v decreases when water is added
SO3 Concentration
Airflow Sciences Corporation
13
Outline

v Introduction
v ESP Fluid Flow Basics
v Assessing Flow Characteristics
• Inspections
• Field Testing
½ Ductwork
½ Collection Region

v ESP Flow Modeling


v Case Studies
v Questions

Airflow Sciences Corporation


14
Inspections
v Ash Patterns
v Geometry Influence on
Fluid Dynamics
v Irregularities

Airflow Sciences Corporation


15
Field Testing – Ductwork

v Velocity
v Temperature
v Pressure
v Particulate
v Resistivity
v Chemical Species

Airflow Sciences Corporation


16
Field Testing – Collection Region
v Velocity Distribution
• Cold flow conditions
• Vane anemometer
½ Accuracy 1% in 33-10
-10 ft/sec range
½ Lightweight, portable
½ Sensitive to flow angularity, turbulence, dust

Airflow Sciences Corporation


17
Outline

v Introduction
v ESP Fluid Flow Basics
v Assessing Flow Characteristics
v ESP Flow Modeling
• Physical Models
• Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Models
v Case Studies
v Questions

Airflow Sciences Corporation


18
ESP Modeling – Physical Models

v Background
v Theory
v Simulation Parameters (how the model is set up)
v Results Analysis (what you get from the model)

Airflow Sciences Corporation


19
Physical Models – Background

v Utilized for fluid flow analysis for a century … or more?


v Applied to ESPs for decades
v Underlying principle is to reproduce fluid flow behavior in a
controlled, laboratory environment

Airflow Sciences Corporation


20
Physical Models – Theory
v Key criteria is to generate “Similarity” between the
scale model and the real -world object
real-world
• Geometric similarity
½ Accurate scale representation of geometry
½ Inclusion of all influencing geometry elements (typically those >4”)
½ Selection of scale can be important

• Fluid dynamic similarity


½ Precise Reynolds Number (Re) matching is not feasible
½ General practice is to match full scale velocity but ensure that Re remains
in the turbulent range throughout the model

v Dh
Re =

Airflow Sciences Corporation


21
Physical Models –
Simulation Parameters
v ESP geometry
½ 1/8th to 1/16th scale
representation
½ Include features >4” in size

v Flow conditions
½ Scaled air flow rate (ambient
temperature)
½ Reproduce velocity profile at
model inlet
½ Simulated chemical injection
½ Simulated particle tracking

Airflow Sciences Corporation


22
Physical Models – Results Analysis

v Quantitative data available at discrete measurement points


• Velocity magnitude, directionality
• Pressure (corrected to full scale)
• Chemical species concentrations

v Integrated/reduced data
• Mass balance between ESP chambers
• Comparison to ICAC conditions or
target velocity profiles
• Correlation to test data

v Qualitative data
• Flow directionality (smoke, tufts)
• Particle behavior, drop
drop-out
-out
Airflow Sciences Corporation
23
Flow Modeling –
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
v Background
v Theory
v Simulation Parameters (how the model is set up)
v Results Analysis (what you get from the model)

Airflow Sciences Corporation


24
CFD – Background

v Developed in the aerospace industry c.1970 (with the advent


of “high speed” computers)
v Applied to ESPs for 15+ years
v Underlying principle is to solve the first
first-principles
-principles
equations governing fluid flow behavior using a computer

S NASA
ource:
Airflow Sciences Corporation
25
CFD – Theory
v Control Volume Approach
• Divide the flow domain into distinct control volumes
• Solve the Navier
Navier-Stokes
-Stokes equations (Conservation of Mass,
Momentum, Energy) in each control volume

Inflow Outflow

Control Volume
or “Cell”

ESP model with


850,000 cells
Airflow Sciences Corporation
26
CFD – Simulation Parameters

v ESP geometry
½ Full scale representation
½ Include features >4” in size,
more detail if possible

v Flow conditions
½ Full scale gas flow rate
½ Reproduce velocity profile at
model inlet
½ Reproduce temperature profile
at model inlet
½ Simulated chemical injection
½ Simulated particle tracking

Airflow Sciences Corporation


27
CFD – Results Analysis

v Quantitative data available at all control volumes


• Velocity magnitude,
directionality
• Temperature
• Pressure
• Turbulence
• Chemical species
concentrations
• Particle trajectories

v Integrated/reduced data
• Mass balance between ESP chambers
• Comparison to ICAC conditions or target velocity profiles
• Correlation to test data
Airflow Sciences Corporation
28
Outline

v Introduction
v ESP Fluid Flow Basics
v Assessing Flow Characteristics
v ESP Flow Modeling
v Case Studies
• Reducing Forced Outages for Hot Side ESP Cleaning
• Improving Capture Efficiency to Avoid MW Derates
• Gas Conditioning System Design
v Questions

Airflow Sciences Corporation


29
Reducing Forced Outages for ESP Cleaning

v Hot side ESP


v Southeast U.S.
v 185 MW unit
v ESP cleaning required every 2
2-3
-3 months to operate
within opacity limits
v Unit derate and eventual forced outage as ESP
capture performance degrades

Airflow Sciences Corporation


30
Reducing Forced Outages for ESP Cleaning

v Known problem: Poor sideside-to-side


-to-side gas velocity
distribution within collection region
v Solution: Expand flow more efficiently in the ESP
inlet ductwork
v Result: ESP operates for 12 months without
cleaning; no derates due to opacity

Airflow Sciences Corporation


31
Avoiding MW Derates

v Cold side ESP


v Western U.S.
v Two 790 MW units
v Undersized ESPs
v Both units regularly derated by 240 MW to operate
within opacity limits

Airflow Sciences Corporation


32
Avoiding MW Derates

v Baseline CFD modeling indicates poor gas velocity


distribution within collection region
v Solution: Redesign flow control devices (turning
vanes, perforated plates)
v Results
• 23% reduction in
particulate emissions
• Output increased by 150
MW per unit

Airflow Sciences Corporation


33
Gas Conditioning System Design

v Cold side ESP


v Midwest U.S.
v 422 MW unit
v Humidification system injects water into ESP inlet
ductwork
v Severe buildup on internal
structure causes forced outages
and high maintenance costs

Airflow Sciences Corporation


34
Gas Conditioning System Design

v Baseline CFD modeling indicates water droplets do


not evaporate completely before impacting structure
v Solution: Redesign spray nozzles and internal
structure
v Results: Minimal material
buildup, elimination of
forced outages

Airflow Sciences Corporation


35
Questions?

If you would like an electronic copy of this


presentation, please contact Rob Mudry as follows:
[email protected]
Tel. 734-464-8900
Airflow Sciences Corporation
36

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