ASHRAE LO-09-083-2009 Large Eddy Simulation of Airflows in a Full Scale Room at Different Ventilation Rates《不同换气量的全尺度房间内气流的大涡模拟》.pdf
《ASHRAE LO-09-083-2009 Large Eddy Simulation of Airflows in a Full Scale Room at Different Ventilation Rates《不同换气量的全尺度房间内气流的大涡模拟》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE LO-09-083-2009 Large Eddy Simulation of Airflows in a Full Scale Room at Different Ventilation Rates《不同换气量的全尺度房间内气流的大涡模拟》.pdf(17页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、2009 ASHRAE 850ABSTRACT Airflows in confined spaces such as airplane cabins, animal enclosures, human occupied rooms, etc. are always characterized by low velocity and high turbulent intensity. The flow regime (laminar, transitional, and turbulent) is difficult to predict as it depends on many facto
2、rs such as the room geom-etry, ventilation rate, temperature, and humidity, etc. In this paper, large eddy simulation (LES) was applied to investigate the airflows in a full-scale room at different ventilation rates ranging from 0.1 ACH to 27.9 ACH (Air Change Per Hour), with the focus on the underl
3、ying flow physics such as flow regime, development of vortices, etc. It was found that, at the present room configuration, airflows were fully developed at ventilation rates equal to or higher than 19.5 ACH, which was supported by the investigation of mean velocity, spanwise vorticity, sub-grid cons
4、tant, and viscosity ratio distributions. Close examinations of the vortex structures inside the room showed that they were three-dimensional in most regions of the room except near the inlet. The sidewall effects were limited to wall regions and did not affect the flow patterns in the middle plane,
5、as shown by the vortex cores distributions and limiting streamlines on the ceiling and floor. Finally, the counter gradi-ent transport phenomena (CGT) were observed when the venti-lation rate was higher than 1 ACH. The existence of CGT partly explained the difficulties of some commonly used two-equa
6、tion Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) turbulence models, which are based on gradient transport assumption, in the prediction of indoor room airflows. INTRODUCTIONThe health and comfort of building occupants are largely determined by the thermal conditions and the indoor air qual-ity. There are
7、 many factors that can compromise the indoor air quality, such as microbial contaminants (mold, bacteria), chemicals (such as carbon monoxide, radon), allergens, ther-mal and humidity discomfort. Airflow patterns and/or turbu-lent intensity distributions inside the building strongly affect the trans
8、port and deposition of harmful particulate matter and gases, and thermal conditions. Investigation of velocity and turbulence profiles inside the building provide important information necessary to characterize all indoor transport process. Airflow pattern and turbulence distributions strongly depen
9、d on the ventilation rates, as has been observed in smoke visualization (Timmons 1984a, 1984b), Laser Doppler Velo-cimetry measurements (LDV, Nielsen 1974), Hotwire measurements (Zhang 1991), Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) measurements (Zhao 2000), and Volumetric Particle Streak-Tracking Velocimet
10、ry (VPSTV) measurements (Sun 2007; Jiang 2007). As the ventilation rate reaches a threshold value, which depends on room dimensions, location and size of inlet and outlet, temperature, etc., the normalized velocities and turbulent quantities of room airflows are independent of ventilation rates (Nie
11、lsen 1998). At this time, the room airflows are fully developed turbulence. However, airflows in confined spaces such as airplane cabins, animal enclosures, human occupied rooms, etc., are seldom fully developed and always characterized by low velocity and high turbulent inten-sity due to the low ve
12、ntilation rate. The widely used Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stoke (RANS) turbulence models in the study of indoor airflows are mainly developed based on the assumption of fully developed turbulence and their applica-bilities to indoor airflows at low ventilation rates need more specific validation. Dav
13、idson et al. (2000) conducted Large Eddy Simulation of Airflows in a Full Scale Room at Different Ventilation RatesJianbo Jiang, PhD Xinlei Wang, PhDAssociate Member ASHRAE Member ASHRAEJianbo Jiang is a postdoctoral fellow at Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, PA. Xinlei Wang is an associ
14、ate professor in the Depart-ment of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, Urbana, IL.LO-09-083 2009, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in ASHRAE Transactions 2009, vol. 115, part 2
15、. For personal use only. Additional reproduction, distribution, or transmission in either print or digital form is not permitted without ASHRAEs prior written permission.ASHRAE Transactions 851numerical simulations in a ventilated room where inlet flows were laminar while airflows inside the room we
16、re turbulent. Laminar model and the k- model were found to generate totally unreliable results. As k- models are superior to most of the other RANS turbulence models in dealing with flows that are close to being laminar (Wilcox 1998; Davidson et al. 2000), it was expected that other RANS turbulence
17、models would also fail in the prediction of these flows. Davidson et al. (2000) found the LES based on one equation dynamic model proved to give reasonable results. Jiang (2007) evaluated different RANS turbulence models and the Large Eddy Simu-lation (LES) with a dynamic sub-grid model (Germano et
18、al. 1991; Lilly 1992) using the experimental data from the VPSTV measurements at three ventilation rates. It was found that the LES provided the best predictions while the Reynolds stress model (RSM, Launder et al. 1975) predictions were closest to the measurements among the RANS models. The main ob
19、jective of this paper was to investigate the underlying flow physics in a full scale room at different venti-lation rates using the LES with the dynamic sub-grid model. The maximum velocity decay, airflow boundary layer growth, velocity and turbulent quantity distribution, vortex dynamics, etc., wer
20、e investigated and analyzed. PROBLEM FORMATIONGeometryThe dimensions of the full-scale room are 5.5 2.4 3.7 m (or 18 8 12 ft, LHW). The room geometry is shown in Figure 1. The inlet width (h) is 0.05 m (or 0.16 ft), and the outlet width (t) is 0.2 m (or 0.66 ft). The ratio of inlet length to height
21、is more than 20; thus, the flow within the room is practically two-dimensional, according to Forthmanns suggestions (Forthmann 1934). Experimental data were collected at the middle symmetry plane (Figure 1) by using VPSTV to measure the air velocity distributions (Jiang 2007).Large Eddy SimulationAs
22、sume the flow is isothermal and incompressible. Appling a spatial filter to the Navier-Stokes equations gener-ates the governing equations of LES:(1)(2)whereQ = velocity (u) or pressure (P) G = the filter. The variables were non-dimensionalized by the maximum inlet velocity U0and the inlet height (h
23、). ijis the sub-grid stress (SGS) and needs to be modeled.The sub-grid model used in this study was the dynamic Smagorinsky model (Germano et al. 1991; Lilly 1992) and implemented in the homemade code (RVS-solver). In this code, the governing equations were discretized in an orthog-onal coordinate s
24、ystem with a staggered grid. For spatial discretization, a central second-order finite-difference was Figure 1 Schematic drawing of the full scale room (H = 2.4 m, W = 3.7 m, L = 5.5 m, h = 0.05 m, h1=2.05 m, t = 0.2 m, t1=1.29 m or H = 8ft, W = 12ft, L = 18ft, h = 0.16ft, h1=6.725ft, t = 0.66ft, t1
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