Affiliation:
1. CFD, Wind and Energy Technical Discipline, SLR Consulting, 202 Submarine School, Sub Base Platypus, North Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Abstract
The potential for plumes to affect the safety of aircraft operations is often predicted using MITRE EPA Models. For many projects, key input parameters to MITER EPA are not available and conservative assumptions or models such as OHIO model are used to characterize the combustion and approximate the key input parameters to EPA plume rise model. These assumptions and conservative models lead to inaccurate results of simulations. The current study provides a novel approach to use a combination of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) tool and EPA Models to reliably predict the risk of turbulence and upset being encountered by a range of aircraft types that operate through a rising plume. The main objective of the current study is to develop a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) combustion model and a procedure to determine an improved set of flare inputs for the Air Quality (AQ) and MITER EPA models. A CFD model has been developed to determine flame plume characteristics (Effective Height, Effective Diameter, Temperature and Velocity) from two flare stacks which are part of a trailer-mounted Mobile Purge Burner (MPB) system. A subsequent experimental test of a similar trailer-mounted MPB system has validated the CFD results. Plume temperatures within the combustion zone of the flares were very much in line with the temperatures predicted by the CFD Simulation study. Plume temperatures above the MPB System appear to drop very quickly, such that the plume temperature fell from just under 500°C at 5 m above ground level to around 15-16°C (and close to the ambient temperature) at 22 m above ground. Again, this is consistent with the CFD Study results. The CFD simulations in the current study accounted for the turbulent flow with chemical species mixing and reaction and utilised an advanced radiation model to solve participating radiation in the combusted zones. This study assesses all the parameters that have impact on the accuracy of the numerical model including computational domain, mesh distribution, numerical scheme and flame plume characteristics including ambient conditions (wind speed and temperature) and combustion under various air to fuel ratio scenarios.
Publisher
World Scientific and Engineering Academy and Society (WSEAS)
Subject
General Energy,General Environmental Science,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference15 articles.
1. K. Spillane, Observations of Plume Trajectories in the Initial Momentum Influenced Phase and Parameterization of Entrainment, Atmospheric Environment, Vol.11, No7, pp 1207-1214, 1983.
2. Australian Government, Civil Aviation Safety Authority, Plume Rise Assessment”, Advisory Circular, AC 139.E-0.2 V1.0, D19/177237, May 2022.
3. TAPM (The Air Pollution Model), SCIRO, http://www.csiro.au/Outcomes/Environment /Population-Sustainability/TAPM.aspx
4. P. Hurley, P. Manins, et al, Year-long, High-Resolution Urban Airshed Modelling: Verification of TAPM Predictions of Smog and Particles in Melbourne, Australia, Atmospheric Environment, Vol.37, no.14, 2003, pp 1899-1910.
5. https://www.mitre.org