Contributed by:
Mohammad P. Fard, Ph.D.
Chief Scientist Simulent Inc.
Tecplot is used to visualize liquid flowing through a 32 millimeter bore
splash-plate nozzle. Flow simulations help improve nozzle design and predict
flow characteristics before actual prototyping. Better nozzle designs improve
the efficiency of spraying systems in fuel injectors, burners, printers,
sprinklers, vehicles, and many other products.
The Engineer
Dr. Mohammad P. Fard, Ph.D., is chief scientist at Simulent Inc. in Toronto,
Ontario. Simulent provides computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software
and engineering consulting with a specialization in liquid spray nozzle
design and testing.
Simulent develops a core software application for spray nozzle design,
as well as several customized, industry-specific modules. Dr. Fard explains, "Tecplot
and visualization are key in identifying nozzle design deficiencies.
We closely inspect our nozzle results using Tecplot's extensive plotting
and animation tools. The images and movies also greatly improve our presentations
to customers."
The Animation
The Flash (SWF) animation shows a liquid jet of black liquor running
into a splash-plate nozzle used in Kraft recovery boilers. Black liquor
is a recycled by-product formed during wood pulping. Kraft recovery
boilers burn black liquor for the dual purpose of energy production
and the recovery of pulping chemicals. As an alternative to oil and
gas, it represents the fifth largest source of energy in the U.S.
The energy and combustion performance of boilers is highly sensitive
to the size and distribution of the black liquor spray in the furnace.
New designs for splash-plate nozzles can improve the spray quality and
lead to enhanced boiler efficiency, reduced sulfur emissions, and increased
pulp production.
As seen in the animation, a pipe is attached to a flat surface plate
at an angle. As black liquor strikes the plate's face it is turned and
flattened into a liquid sheet. The sheet breaks up into ligaments and
droplets as it leaves the plate.
Since the black liquor jet impacts the plate at an angle, a portion
of it flows in the opposite direction of the spray. For this particular
nozzle design, the backward flow is diverted towards the front of the
nozzle by splash-plate edges known as side skirts. The diverted backward
flow creates two liquid sheets with thick rims at the sides of the nozzle.
Film breakup and spray formation in another splash-plate atomizer design
for a Kraft recovery boiler.
The Simulation
Results for this animation were generated with Simulent's Simulent-Spray
software. The simulation took approximately two days on a 2.4 GHz,
single-processor PC.
Simulent-Spray is a CFD code for simulating free-surface flows. In particular,
it models the breakup of liquid jets into sprays by solving the liquid
flow Navier-Stokes equations in combination with a volume fraction method
which tracks the free surface — the boundary between liquid and
air.
As Simulent-Spray runs it generates data files containing fluid information
such as velocity, pressure, and volume fraction function for each computational
cell. As this occurs a linked Tecplot macro automatically runs Tecplot
in Batch mode. Tecplot takes each new file, manipulates the data, then
saves the processed data (in this case solid and liquid volume fraction
iso-surfaces) in Tecplot binary format.
To make the animation, a Tecplot macro imports each iso-surface data
file and exports the next animation frame. This animation was done with
Flash (SWF) export options.
Tecplot
Dr. Fard typically uses Tecplot to make plots and animations of 3-D iso-surfaces,
slices, velocity vectors, pressure and temperature contours, as well
as streamlines of particle movements in a flow.
He believes Tecplot's three greatest strengths are:
1. Animation options and capabilities like shading, lighting, and translucency.
2. Macros that automate all his data visualization processes.
3. Easy data manipulation, especially in Batch mode.
Simulated spray image of a splash-plate atomizer.
Film and spray analysis of simulation results for a typical splash plate nozzle:
the distribution of film thickness, film velocity, mean drop size, and spray
flow against angle from the splash-plate centerline.
Comparison
between simulations and real life photos of impact and dripping of a water
drop during its impact on a solid tube. This is a spray cooling application
where a hot object is cooled by a spray of drops.
"Tecplot software has provided an incredible boost to our productivity in terms of our research output and the insights we are able to obtain." Rajat Mittal, George Washington University