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CFD‐Modeling of Heavy Oil Injection into Blast Furnace – Atomization and Mixing in Raceway‐Tuyere Area
Author(s) -
Vuokila Ari,
Riihimäki Markus,
Muurinen Esa
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
steel research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.603
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1869-344X
pISSN - 1611-3683
DOI - 10.1002/srin.201300316
Subject(s) - raceway , tuyere , blast furnace , computational fluid dynamics , mixing (physics) , nozzle , coke , breakup , combustion , mechanics , air blast , nuclear engineering , environmental science , engineering , materials science , mechanical engineering , waste management , chemistry , metallurgy , lubrication , physics , mining engineering , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Auxiliary fuel injection into the air blast benefits blast furnace operation by reducing coke consumption and carbon dioxide emissions, stabilizes process, and increases productivity. Heavy oil is a side stream product of petrochemical industry and it is used to replace part of the coke. Atomization of the heavy oil and mixing it with the air blast is one of the main challenges that limit high injection rates. The aim of this work is to develop CFD model of the raceway‐tuyere area of the blast furnace that provides knowledge about droplet sizes and mixing behavior of the heavy oil with air blast. Atomization of the heavy oil is modeled with Wave Breakup Model, where breakup time and droplet size constants have been adjusted and validated using experimental results from physical set‐up. CFD models based on the physical set‐up and the actual blast furnace were made. Wave Breakup Model coupled with the CFD has good agreement with the experimental study in physical set‐up. Further, CFD model is applied to study the actual blast furnace with heavy oil injection. The droplet volume median diameters in a function of the dimensionless air blast velocity are consistent in both cases having valid dynamic similarity. Mixing between the air blast and the heavy oil is poor without nozzle and most of the liquid mass is concentrated in the center of the air blast. With increasing the air blast velocity mixing gets poorer. According to modeling work, improved mixing and atomization was achieved with alternative nozzle geometries used in the tip of the oil lance.

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