Correlation and prediction of thermophoretic and inertial effects on particle deposition from non-isothermal turbulent boundary layers
Abstract
The problem of small particle deposition which can cause hot stage corrosion and/or fouling in combustion turbines operating on fuels containing ash or inorganic salts is investigated. Two boundary layer transport phenomena are shown to assume importance in these cases: particle thermophoresis (migration down a temperature gradient) and particle inertia. Thermophoretic and eddy transport across turbulent boundary layers without and with particle inertia effects are quantitatively analyzed. The effects of streamwise blade curvature on particle transport across turbulent boundary layers are determined. It is shown that these phenomena destroy the analogy between mass and heat transfer or mass and momentum transfer. Also studied are the effects on particle deposition of distributed or localized wall blowing, surface roughness, and mainstream turbulence.
- Publication:
-
In: Particulate laden flows in turbomachinery; Proceedings of the Joint Fluids
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982plft.proc...85R
- Keywords:
-
- Deposition;
- Fouling;
- Gas Turbines;
- Hot Corrosion;
- Particle Motion;
- Turbulent Boundary Layer;
- Asymptotes;
- Eddy Viscosity;
- Inertia;
- Stokes Flow;
- Surface Roughness;
- Temperature Gradients;
- Thermophoresis;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer