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Assessment of heating and evaporation modelling based on single suspended water droplet experiments

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© 2019 Elsevier Ltd The work described in this paper is undertaken with the purpose of providing a detailed assessment of the current modelling capabilities of the effects of fire suppression systems (e.g., sprinklers)in fire-driven flows. Such assessment will allow identifying key modelling issues and, ultimately, improving the reliability of the numerical tools in fire safety design studies. More specifically, we studied herein the heating and evaporation of a single water droplet. This rather ‘simple’ configuration represents the first step in a tedious and rigorous verification and validation process, as advocated in the MaCFP (Measurement and Computation of Fire Phenomena)working group (see https://iafss.org/macfp/). Such a process starts ideally with single-physics ‘unit tests’ and then more elaborate benchmark cases and sub-systems, before addressing ‘real-life’ application tests. In this paper, we are considering the recently published comprehensive and well-documented experimental data of Volkov and Strizhak (Applied Thermal Engineering, 2017)where a single suspended water droplet of initial diameter between 2.6 and 3.4 mm is heated up by a convective hot air flow with a velocity between 3 and 4.5 m/s and a temperature between 100 and 800 °C. In the present numerical study, 36 experimental tests have been simulated with the Fire Dynamics Simulator (FDS 6.7.0)as well as with an in-house code. The results show that the droplet lifetime is overpredicted with an overall deviation between 26 and 31%. The deviation in the range 300–800 °C is even better, i.e., 5–8%, whilst the cases of 200 and, more so 100 °C, showed much stronger deviations. The measured droplet saturation temperatures did not exceed 70 °C, even for high air temperatures of around 800 °C, whereas the predicted values approached 100 °C. A detailed analysis shows that the standard Ranz & Marshall modelling of the non-dimensional Nusselt and Sherwood numbers may not be appropriate in order to obtain a simultaneous good agreement for both the droplet lifetime and temperature. More specifically, the heat-mass transfer analogy (i.e., Nu = Sh)appears to be not always valid.
Tijdschrift: Fire Safety Journal
ISSN: 0379-7112
Volume: 106
Pagina's: 124 - 135
Jaar van publicatie:2019