Effect of particulate thermophoresis in reducing the fouling rate advantages of effusion-cooling
Abstract
To predict small-particle diffusional mass transfer (deposition), including particle thermophoresis, transpiration cooling, and variable properties, the coupled ordinary differential equations governing self-similar laminar boundary layers are solved numerically. Under typical combustion turbine conditions, although diffusional deposition rates can be dramatically reduced by transpiration cooling (e.g., by some 5-decades for mainstream submicron particles corresponding to a Schmidt number of about 100 and a wall transpiration-cooled to Tw/Te = 0.8), actual deposition rate reductions will be smaller than previously expected (by about 1 decade for particles with Sc of about 100), owing to thermophoretic particle drift caused by the colder wall. Such microdroplets, small enough to behave like heavy molecules in combustion systems, are often important because they can cause adherence of the much larger ash particles which inertially impact on the same surface.
- Publication:
-
International Journal of Heat and Fluid Flow
- Pub Date:
- March 1984
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1984IJHFF...5...37G
- Keywords:
-
- Laminar Boundary Layer;
- Mass Flow Rate;
- Sweat Cooling;
- Thermophoresis;
- Turbomachinery;
- Inlet Flow;
- Particle Motion;
- Temperature Gradients;
- Wall Temperature;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer