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False diffusion in numerical simulation of combustion processes in tangential-fired furnace

Numerical simulation serves as one of the mort important tools fer analyzing coal combustion in Tangentially Fired Furnaces (TFF) with NUMERICAL FALSE DIFFUSION as one key problem that degrades the simulation accuracy, especially for complex flow patterns. False diffusion often completely compromise...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of mechanical science and technology 2007, 21(11), , pp.1828-1846
Main Authors: Xu, Xuchang, Wang, Zhigang, Zhuo, Yuqun, Zheng, Changhao
Format: Article
Language:Korean
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Summary:Numerical simulation serves as one of the mort important tools fer analyzing coal combustion in Tangentially Fired Furnaces (TFF) with NUMERICAL FALSE DIFFUSION as one key problem that degrades the simulation accuracy, especially for complex flow patterns. False diffusion often completely compromises the accuracy, leading to erroneous predictions. This paper reviews various methods to reduce the numerical diffusion. In computational fluid dynamics (CFD), false diffusion originates from a truncation error of the Taylor series approximation of the derivative and multi-dimensional discretization effects. Higher-order upwind convective schemes were designed to reduce truncation errors, while grid line adjusting methods were developed to reduce crossflow diffusion. This paper compares numerical and experimental results for isothermal flows to evaluate these methods. Results with the standard upwind scheme in a rectangular Cartesian mesh are compared with results in body-fitted meshes for comprehensive combustion processes in a TFF. Analysis of the false diffusion effect in the x, y, z directions and the artificial viscosity distribution in a rectangular mesh shows where the false diffusion overtakes the real physical diffusion and where the mesh must be refined or grid line must be adjusted to improve TFF combustion simulations.
ISSN:1738-494X
1976-3824