A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component

Societal and environmental pressures are forcing thermal power plant operators to deviate greatly from the generation strategies of the past. The application of high frequency start up/shut down/partial load cycles to components that may well be outside their design life makes research into the long...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rouse, J.P., Zacharzewski, Piotr, Hyde, C.J., Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J., Morris, A., Kyaw, S.T.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/
_version_ 1848798401341161472
author Rouse, J.P.
Zacharzewski, Piotr
Hyde, C.J.
Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J.
Morris, A.
Kyaw, S.T.
author_facet Rouse, J.P.
Zacharzewski, Piotr
Hyde, C.J.
Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J.
Morris, A.
Kyaw, S.T.
author_sort Rouse, J.P.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Societal and environmental pressures are forcing thermal power plant operators to deviate greatly from the generation strategies of the past. The application of high frequency start up/shut down/partial load cycles to components that may well be outside their design life makes research into the long-term integrity of at risk assets paramount. Decoupled thermal/mechanical analyses have been used in the literature to estimate anisothermal fatigue in header components, with convective boundary conditions typically assumed for internal surfaces in order to determine heat fluxes and hence a temperature field. In reality, convective coefficients are heavily dependent upon local velocity profiles. In the present work, computational fluid dynamics is used in order to better approximate the steam flow in a real power plant header, leading to a convection coefficient field that is used to solve the thermal problem. Anisothermal fatigue analysis is finally conducted using a Chaboche type model. The results of computational fluid dynamics have illustrated that heat transfer coefficient values can vary (spatially) by a factor of 5.495.49 over the internal header wall, with noticeable hot spots in the wake of the stub penetrations. Peak differences of 6.47%6.47% in accumulated plastic strain levels have been observed between simulations conducted with constant (simplified) and variable (computational fluid dynamics derived) thermal boundary conditions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:19:11Z
format Article
id nottingham-51049
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:19:11Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Elsevier
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-510492019-04-06T04:30:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/ A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component Rouse, J.P. Zacharzewski, Piotr Hyde, C.J. Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J. Morris, A. Kyaw, S.T. Societal and environmental pressures are forcing thermal power plant operators to deviate greatly from the generation strategies of the past. The application of high frequency start up/shut down/partial load cycles to components that may well be outside their design life makes research into the long-term integrity of at risk assets paramount. Decoupled thermal/mechanical analyses have been used in the literature to estimate anisothermal fatigue in header components, with convective boundary conditions typically assumed for internal surfaces in order to determine heat fluxes and hence a temperature field. In reality, convective coefficients are heavily dependent upon local velocity profiles. In the present work, computational fluid dynamics is used in order to better approximate the steam flow in a real power plant header, leading to a convection coefficient field that is used to solve the thermal problem. Anisothermal fatigue analysis is finally conducted using a Chaboche type model. The results of computational fluid dynamics have illustrated that heat transfer coefficient values can vary (spatially) by a factor of 5.495.49 over the internal header wall, with noticeable hot spots in the wake of the stub penetrations. Peak differences of 6.47%6.47% in accumulated plastic strain levels have been observed between simulations conducted with constant (simplified) and variable (computational fluid dynamics derived) thermal boundary conditions. Elsevier 2018-04-06 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by_nc_nd https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/1/Rouse_IJF_final_submission.pdf Rouse, J.P., Zacharzewski, Piotr, Hyde, C.J., Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J., Morris, A. and Kyaw, S.T. (2018) A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component. International Journal of Fatigue, 113 . pp. 137-148. ISSN 0142-1123 Heat transfer coefficient; Power plant; Header; Cyclic-plasticity; Computational fluid dynamics https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2018.03.032 doi:10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2018.03.032 doi:10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2018.03.032
spellingShingle Heat transfer coefficient; Power plant; Header; Cyclic-plasticity; Computational fluid dynamics
Rouse, J.P.
Zacharzewski, Piotr
Hyde, C.J.
Jefferson-Loveday, Richard J.
Morris, A.
Kyaw, S.T.
A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title_full A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title_fullStr A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title_full_unstemmed A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title_short A case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
title_sort case study investigation into the effects of spatially dependent convection coefficients on the fatigue response of a power plant header component
topic Heat transfer coefficient; Power plant; Header; Cyclic-plasticity; Computational fluid dynamics
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51049/