Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques

The use of the open cycle cooling process for thermal power plants requires significant effluent discharges into aquatic environments. Both engineering and environmental considerations require accurate prediction of resulting temperature distribution in the receiving waters. Most predictive models h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kaufman, John T., Adams, E. Eric
Other Authors: Northeast Utilities Service Company.
Published: Cambridge, Mass. : Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Energy Laboratory, 1981 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/60484
_version_ 1811087072353583104
author Kaufman, John T.
Adams, E. Eric
author2 Northeast Utilities Service Company.
author_facet Northeast Utilities Service Company.
Kaufman, John T.
Adams, E. Eric
author_sort Kaufman, John T.
collection MIT
description The use of the open cycle cooling process for thermal power plants requires significant effluent discharges into aquatic environments. Both engineering and environmental considerations require accurate prediction of resulting temperature distribution in the receiving waters. Most predictive models have looked at one of two distinct regions of the discharge--the near or the far field--to the neglect of the other.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T13:39:20Z
id mit-1721.1/60484
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T13:39:20Z
publishDate 2011
publisher Cambridge, Mass. : Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Energy Laboratory, 1981
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/604842019-04-10T12:59:10Z Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques Kaufman, John T. Adams, E. Eric Northeast Utilities Service Company. Thermal pollution of rivers, lakes, etc. Finite element method. Fluid dynamics. The use of the open cycle cooling process for thermal power plants requires significant effluent discharges into aquatic environments. Both engineering and environmental considerations require accurate prediction of resulting temperature distribution in the receiving waters. Most predictive models have looked at one of two distinct regions of the discharge--the near or the far field--to the neglect of the other. A methodology is developed in this work to combine the attributes of both near and far field models. A finite element far field code is utilized which calculates both the circulation and heat distribution over a large area of the domain. From the far field coarse grid, a semi-circular area is removed which corresponds to the near field region of the discharge. At the new edge of the domain, which represents the near-far field boundary, mass flux and temperature boundary conditions are specified which simulate both the discharge into and entrainment out of the domain resulting from the surface discharge jet. Initial verification and testing of the model's characteristics is carried out in a hypothetical idealized domain. A more realistic verification is done at two prototype sites by comparing calculated results to previously acquired field data. The two sites are Millstone Nuclear Power Station (on Long Island Sound near Waterford, Connecticut) operating with two units and Brayton Point Generating Station (in Mt. Hope Bay near Somerset, Massachusetts) operating with three units on open cycle (existing conditions) and with four units on open cycle (proposed future condition). These comparisons suggest that the model can realistically describe the far field flow patterns associated with near field mixing thus making the model a useful tool in evaluating induced circulations, the source of entrained organisms, etc. These flow patterns are a direct function of the near field entrainment and discharge distributions which are specified as model boundary conditions and are thus easily calibrated and, if necessary, modified. Comparison between measured and predicted temperatures indicates that the predicted lengths and areas of isotherms are similar to measured lengths and areas. Predicted temperatures generally indicate greater dispersion than measured temperatures thus leading to overprediction of intake recirculation. Also, because boundary conditions on the near-far boundary have been assumed constant, the shape of predicted isotherms is not as responsive to changes in ambient current direction (e.g., tidal variations) as the measurements indicate. Future efforts should emphasize grid and program coding refinement to improve computational efficiency, use of methods to reduce numerical dispersion and incorporation of time-varying near-far field boundary conditions. 2011-01-11T05:40:28Z 2011-01-11T05:40:28Z 1981 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/60484 09555137 Energy Laboratory report (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Energy Laboratory) no. MIT-EL 81-036. 123 p application/pdf Cambridge, Mass. : Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Energy Laboratory, 1981
spellingShingle Thermal pollution of rivers, lakes, etc.
Finite element method.
Fluid dynamics.
Kaufman, John T.
Adams, E. Eric
Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title_full Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title_fullStr Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title_full_unstemmed Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title_short Coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
title_sort coupled near and far field thermal plume analysis using finite element techniques
topic Thermal pollution of rivers, lakes, etc.
Finite element method.
Fluid dynamics.
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/60484
work_keys_str_mv AT kaufmanjohnt couplednearandfarfieldthermalplumeanalysisusingfiniteelementtechniques
AT adamseeric couplednearandfarfieldthermalplumeanalysisusingfiniteelementtechniques