Functional analysis of hydraulic systems and thermal analysis of heat exchangers cooling power are usually carried out by means of separate numerical simulation techniques, viz. lumped-parameters "1-D" modelling for the former, CFD for the latter, and the interaction between the two is limited to system-wide parameters (e.g. global oil flow outputted by the 1-D analysis and used as input for CFD; global cooling power used the opposite way). In a previous research work a discretization technique was used to decompose heat exchangers in sub-domains, which were then characterized, in terms of pressure drop and WHTC, by means of CFD; these elements became the elementary blocks to be used by a custom-made algorithm to characterize exchangers of any size. The same decomposition is now reproduced in the AMESim simulation environment as a grid-connection of sub-domains, whose lumped parameters are those given by CFD, joining a detailed model of the hydraulic system. This way the heat exchanger thermal performances can be tested in simulation, both in steady-state and dynamically, against suitable system operation scenarios, providing at the same time information on the corresponding impact on system functionalities.
Use of CFD Characterization of Discretized Heat Exchanger for Full-System Thermo-Hydraulic Analysis in Lumped-Parameters Simulation Environment
Martelli Massimo;Gessi Silvia;Zarotti Gian Luca;Bonanno Antonino
2013
Abstract
Functional analysis of hydraulic systems and thermal analysis of heat exchangers cooling power are usually carried out by means of separate numerical simulation techniques, viz. lumped-parameters "1-D" modelling for the former, CFD for the latter, and the interaction between the two is limited to system-wide parameters (e.g. global oil flow outputted by the 1-D analysis and used as input for CFD; global cooling power used the opposite way). In a previous research work a discretization technique was used to decompose heat exchangers in sub-domains, which were then characterized, in terms of pressure drop and WHTC, by means of CFD; these elements became the elementary blocks to be used by a custom-made algorithm to characterize exchangers of any size. The same decomposition is now reproduced in the AMESim simulation environment as a grid-connection of sub-domains, whose lumped parameters are those given by CFD, joining a detailed model of the hydraulic system. This way the heat exchanger thermal performances can be tested in simulation, both in steady-state and dynamically, against suitable system operation scenarios, providing at the same time information on the corresponding impact on system functionalities.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.