Abstract
ABSTRACTA network approach was used to develop a thermofluid process model of a cross-flow primary superheater heat exchanger with complex flow arrangement in the convective pass of a coal-fired boiler. The model solves the transient one-dimensional forms of the conservation equations for mass, energy, and momentum, combined with the applicable closure relations, boundary values, and initial values. The dual-tube 12-pass superheater was discretized along the flue gas flow path as well as along the steam flow path. The model accounts for the convective thermal resistance on the steam side, the conductive thermal resistances of the tube wall, and scaling or fouling on the tube walls, as well as the convective and radiative thermal resistances on the flue gas side. The model was qualitatively validated using real plant data and for reference purposes also systematically compared to conventional lumped parameter models. The ability of the model to analyze the effect of the ramp rate during load changes on the tube metal temperature was demonstrated, as well as the ability to determine the maldistribution of flow and temperature on the steam and flue gas sides. Models such as this can be employed to study complex thermofluid process phenomena that may occur during intermittent, transient, and low-load operation of power plants. This could form the basis for improving operations and for the development of advanced tools for online process condition monitoring.
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