Experiments for the determination of convective diffusion heat/mass transfer to burner rig test targets comparable in size to jet stream diameter
Abstract
The application of a recently formulated vapor transport theory to predict deposition rates of corrosive salts from alkali-seeded combustion gases of a small-capacity, high-velocity, atmospheric-pressure burner rig was hampered by the relatively large dimensions of the cylindrical deposit collector compared to the diameter of the combustion gas stream. The relative dimensions lead to a highly nonadiabatic combustion gas flow around the collector and necessitate two series of experiments. In the first series, mass transfer coefficients are determined by utilizing the naphthalene sublimation technique. The second series of experiments determines the dilution effect on the sodium species concentrations due to the entrainment of ambient air. This second series involves the measurement of the temperature variation along the surface of the collector under steady state conditions. Vapor deposition rates are determined exploiting this information and the results are found to compare favorably with experimentally obtained rates.
- Publication:
-
Proposed for presentation at the 1986 Winter Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers
- Pub Date:
- December 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986asme.meet.....S
- Keywords:
-
- Boundary Layers;
- Burners;
- Combustion Chambers;
- Convective Heat Transfer;
- Diffusion;
- Fouling;
- Gas Streams;
- Hot Corrosion;
- Mass Transfer;
- Transport Properties;
- Dilution;
- Naphthalene;
- Vapor Deposition;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer