Dear Kevin,
I am modelling ground flares and low vents for sour gas (natural gas with H2S) and have used FDS5 with a good deal of success. Thank you very much to the FDS team. It has been possible to validate the calculations by comparison with photographs and with hand held gas detectors. I adress the questions I have to you Kevin, because of your earlier publications in modelling large pool fires, but please correct as necessary.
In order to make the calculations reflect actual atmospheric conditions it is necessary to establish a wind speed profile. To do this I set the initial wind speed in the &MISC line, and a VEL and PROFILE in a wind source &SURF line. This works well. However it takes some time for the simulation to establish a wind speed profile accross the complete set of meshes (I use a field of about 2 km with varying and well matched meshes to allow for finer modelling of the flare). Question 1: Is there any way of establishing the wind speed profile accross all meshes, in the same way that average wind speeds can? This is a time saver in the simulations only, so is not critical, but would be a great convenience for all simulations of outdoor fires.
In order to make the calculations reasonable, I have assumed that the atmospheric turbulence field should also be well establiehed and "stable" to the extent that the background turbulence does not change in statistics accross the area of the flare and smoke plume. I have tried this in two ways. The first is to use a long upwind reach, in which turbulence due to ground friction is generated. It is also possible to account for unstable atmospheric conditions by providing convective heat release at a ground &SURF, matched to the measured heat release due to ground temperature from solar radiation. Trying to establish stable atmospheric conditions by using negative heat release does not work - unsurprising, and it would probably take a very long upwind reach to establish a good atmospheric temperature profile anyway - in nature establishment of a stable atmospheric layer often reqires many kilometeres to establish a stable layer.
The other way which I have tried is to establish a turbulence and temperature profile at the "wind source" &SURF, with a ramp to change wind speeds with time, using variations derived from a preliminary simulation using FDS. This is like simulating a long upwind reach, then storing it and reusing it. It has been possible to match the ramp to publications of wind speed statistics and to meteorological mast measurements. However, This is quite clumsy, and establishing a vertical profile is quite difficult (requires many small vents). So question 2: Is there any simpler way of specifying vertical turbulence and temperature profiles for wind?
With kind regards,
Robert Taylor
Please mind LAPSE_RATE.
FDS 6 lets you use a synthetic turbulence inflow condition (N_EDDY, L_EDDY, VEL_RMS).
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But be aware that FDS 6 is 'work in progress' and not officially released yet......
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