Abstract Condensation process in high velocity flowing steam inside jet-pumps and ejectors significantly affect the performance of these devices. The formation of droplets in the steam passed through the primary… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Condensation process in high velocity flowing steam inside jet-pumps and ejectors significantly affect the performance of these devices. The formation of droplets in the steam passed through the primary nozzle of a jet-pump, releases an amount of latent heat and numerous tiny particles which change the flow properties. Conventional CFD approaches of investigating ejectors consider steam as an ideal gas with a single-phase flow. In the present study, a robust mathematical model was developed to take into account the droplet formation phenomena in the flowing steam, wherein a large number of droplets are formed in the subcooled vapor through a non-equilibrium supersaturation phenomenon. Separately, the mathematical method was used to model the operating performance of a pilot-scale ejector and to investigate the deviation of the entrainment ratio and the compression ratio from the corresponding ideal-gas values. It was found that the error of the entrainment ratio substantially reduced from 10.0% for a single-phase steam to 1.69% for a two-phase steam, and the error of the compression ratio reduced from 7.3% to 3.52%, respectively. Moreover, effects of variations of the suction flow pressure and temperature on the two-phase steam flow velocity, density, pressure and temperature was investigated and thoroughly discussed. In addition, flow Mach number was introduced as a major characteristic to compare shock-wave patterns of supersonic flow in both steam assumptions. Finally, it was shown that the pressure-rise through the normal shock-wave in the two-phase flow simulation is considerably higher than that of the single-phase flow simulation.
               
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