robot6
Chemical
- Apr 3, 2012
- 27
What's the best way to model a desuperheater?
Difficulty arises if...
1) you try to control against "dew temperature," because you can add slightly more water and the temperature doesn't change -> solver doesn't solve
2) you send the outlet of the mixer into a phase separator and look for a small amount of water, again solver does not act robustly
3) it seems the best solution I can find is mixing the superheated steam and water first, and then looking for a vapor phase fraction of 0.99 (0.999 is not robust)... But this really has the same problem as #2, and this solution to me only "seems" more robust that #2, (I can rationalize a few reasons why it might be this way)
The inherent problems is, of course, the discontinuous derivative (phase change) that is part of this physical process.
The _motivation_ of solving this problem is that I need to compare various regimes of operation with the goal of maximizing system efficiency. If I use too much water, I'm carrying energy away by heating the water, but if I use too little, then of course, downstream processes don't act as efficiently.
Thanks for whatever insight you might have, be it in HYSYS or PRO/II or BRE or whatever.
Difficulty arises if...
1) you try to control against "dew temperature," because you can add slightly more water and the temperature doesn't change -> solver doesn't solve
2) you send the outlet of the mixer into a phase separator and look for a small amount of water, again solver does not act robustly
3) it seems the best solution I can find is mixing the superheated steam and water first, and then looking for a vapor phase fraction of 0.99 (0.999 is not robust)... But this really has the same problem as #2, and this solution to me only "seems" more robust that #2, (I can rationalize a few reasons why it might be this way)
The inherent problems is, of course, the discontinuous derivative (phase change) that is part of this physical process.
The _motivation_ of solving this problem is that I need to compare various regimes of operation with the goal of maximizing system efficiency. If I use too much water, I'm carrying energy away by heating the water, but if I use too little, then of course, downstream processes don't act as efficiently.
Thanks for whatever insight you might have, be it in HYSYS or PRO/II or BRE or whatever.