The reactor network is a computational environment that accommodates realistic chemical reaction mechanisms; indeed, mechanisms with several hundred elementary chemical reactions can now be simulated in minutes on ordinary PCs, provided that the flow structures are restricted to the limiting cases of plug flow or series of continuously stirred tank reactors (CSTRs). The network is “equivalent” to the CFD flowfield in so far as it represents the bulk flow patterns in the flow. Such equivalence is actually implemented in terms of the following set of operating conditions: The RTDs in the major flow structures are the same in the CFD flowfield and in the section of the reactor network that represents the flow region under consideration. Mean gas temperature histories and the effective ambient temperature for radiant heat transfer are also the same. The entrainment rates of surrounding fluid into a particular flow region are evaluated directly from the CFD simulation. To the extent that the RTD, thermal history, and entrainment rates are similar in the CFD flowfield and reactor network, the chemical kinetics evaluated in the network represents the chemistry in the CFD flowfield.
Coal gasification in two pilot units has been simulated with ChemNet™. In one instance, the goal was to predict the levels of residual CH4 in the syngas from their moderate temperature gasifier for a variety of solid fuels. Whereas virtually all the leading simulation teams in the USA were given opportunities to accurately interpret the reported syngas compositions, NEA’s ChemNet™ simulations were the only ones that accurately predicted the residual CH4 levels over a broad domain of gasifier conditions, scales, and fuel quality. ChemNet™ has also been implemented for moderate-temperature, transport, and entrained-flow gasifiers at commercial scale.
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J.-P. Lim, D. Steele, D. del Rio Diaz-Jara, D. J. Eckstrom, R. B. Wilson, S. Niksa, and R. Malhotra, ”A zero CO2-emitting process for transportation fuels from coal and natural gas resources,” J. Sustainable Energy Eng., 1(3):202-219 (2013).
G.-S. Liu and S. Niksa, “Pulverized coal flame structures at elevated pressures. Part 1. Detailed operating conditions,” Fuel, 84(12/13), 1563-74 (2005).
S. Niksa and G.-S. Liu, “Pulverized coal flame structures at elevated pressures. Part 2. Interpreting NOX production with detailed reaction mechanisms,” Fuel, 84(12/13): 1575-85 (2005).
S. Niksa, G.-S. Liu, L. G. Felix, P. V. Bush, and D. M. Boylan, “Predicting NOX Emissions from Biomass Cofiring,” EPRI-DOE-EPA-A&WMA Combined Utility Air Pollution Control Symposium: The MEGA Symp. 2003, EPRI.
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S. Niksa and G.-S. Liu, “Advanced CFD Post-Processing for P. F. Flame Structure and Emissions,” 28th Int. Technical Conf. on Coal Utilization and Fuel Systems, Coal Technology Assoc., Clearwater, Fl, March, 2003.
S. Niksa, G. Liu, L. G. Felix, and P. V. Bush, “Advanced CFD Post-Processing for Pulverized Fuel Flame Structure and Emissions,” Paper No. IJPGC2002-26136, Int. Joint Power Gen. Conf., ASME, Phoenix, AZ, June 25, 2002.
S. Niksa and G. Liu, “Detailed reaction mechanisms for coal-nitrogen conversion in p. f. flames,” Proc. Comb. Inst. 29:2259-2265 (2002).
S. Niksa and G. Liu, “Incorporating detailed reaction mechanisms into simulations of coal-nitrogen conversion in p. f. flames,” Fuel, 81(18):2371-85 (2002).