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Thermal radiation from cryogenic hydrogen jet fires
Affiliation:1. Department of Civil and Industrial Engineering (DICI), University of Pisa, Largo Lucio Lazzarino, 2, 56122 Pisa Italy;2. President & CEO, A.V.Tchouvelev & Associates Inc., 6591 Spinnaker Circle, Mississauga, Ontario L5W 1R2 Canada;3. Head of Hydrogen Group, IKET, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology KIT (Germany), von-Helmholtz-Platz 1, 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany;4. Head of Centre for Energy and Major Hazards Health and Safety Executive, Harpur Hill, Buxton, Derbyshire, SK179JN UK;1. FC-EV Research Division, Japan Automobile Research Institute, 1328-23, Takaheta, Osaka, Shirosato, Ibaraki, 311-4316, Japan;2. Department of Environmental Science, Toho University, 2-2-1, Miyama, Funabashi, Chiba, 274-8510, Japan;1. State Key Laboratory of Fire Science, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230027, China;2. Warwick FIRE, School of Engineering, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK;3. The Centre for Fire and Explosion Studies, Kingston University, London SW15 3DW, UK
Abstract:The thermal hazards from ignited under-expanded cryogenic releases are not yet fully understood and reliable predictive tools are missing. This study aims at validation of a CFD model to simulate flame length and radiative heat flux for cryogenic hydrogen jet fires. The simulation results are compared against the experimental data by Sandia National Laboratories on cryogenic hydrogen fires from storage with pressure up to 5 bar abs and temperature in the range 48–82 K. The release source is modelled using the Ulster's notional nozzle theory. The problem is considered as steady-state. Three turbulence models were applied, and their performance was compared. The realizable k-ε model showed the best agreement with experimental flame length and radiative heat flux. Therefore, it has been employed in the CFD model along with Eddy Dissipation Concept for combustion and Discrete Ordinates (DO) model for radiation. A parametric study has been conducted to assess the effect of selected numerical and physical parameters on the simulations capability to reproduce experimental data. DO model discretisation is shown to strongly affect simulations, indicating 10 × 10 as minimum number of angular divisions to provide a convergence. The simulations have shown sensitivity to experimental parameters such as humidity and exhaust system volumetric flow rate, highlighting the importance of accurate and extended publication of experimental data to conduct precise numerical studies. The simulations correctly reproduced the radiative heat flux from cryogenic hydrogen jet fire at different locations.
Keywords:CFD  Jet fire  Cryogenic  Hydrogen  Radiative heat transfer
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