Publication detail
Assessment of URANS-Type Turbulent Flow Modeling of a Single Port Submerged Entry Nozzle (SEN) for Thin Slab Continuous Casting (TSC) Process
VAKHRUSHEV, A. KARIMI-SIBAKI, E. WU, M. LUDWIG, A. NITZL, G. TANG, Y. HACKL, G. WATZINGER, J. BOHÁČEK, J. KHARICHA, A.
English title
Assessment of URANS-Type Turbulent Flow Modeling of a Single Port Submerged Entry Nozzle (SEN) for Thin Slab Continuous Casting (TSC) Process
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
en
Original abstract
The numerical methods based on the unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (URANS) equations are robust tools to model the turbulent flow for the industrial processes. They allow an acceptable grid resolution along with reasonable calculation time. Herein, the URANS approach is validated against a water model experiment for the special single port submerged entry nozzle (SEN) design used in the thin slab casting (TSC) process. A 1-to-2 under-scaled water model was constructed, including the SEN, mold, and strand Plexiglas segments. Paddle-type sensors were instrumented to measure the submeniscus velocity supported by videorecording of the dye injections to provide both qualitative and quantitative verification of the SEN flow simulations. Two advanced URANS-type models (realizable k–ε and shear stress transport k–ω) were applied to calculate velocity pattern on meshes with various resolutions. An oscillating single jet flow was detected in the experiment, which the URANS simulations initially struggled to reflect. The dimensionless analysis of the mesh properties and corresponding adjustment of the boundary layers inside the SEN allowed to resolve the flow pattern. The performed fast Fourier transform (FFT) verified a good numerical prediction of the flow frequency spectrum. The corresponding simulation strategy is proposed for the industrial CC process using the URANS approach.
English abstract
The numerical methods based on the unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes (URANS) equations are robust tools to model the turbulent flow for the industrial processes. They allow an acceptable grid resolution along with reasonable calculation time. Herein, the URANS approach is validated against a water model experiment for the special single port submerged entry nozzle (SEN) design used in the thin slab casting (TSC) process. A 1-to-2 under-scaled water model was constructed, including the SEN, mold, and strand Plexiglas segments. Paddle-type sensors were instrumented to measure the submeniscus velocity supported by videorecording of the dye injections to provide both qualitative and quantitative verification of the SEN flow simulations. Two advanced URANS-type models (realizable k–ε and shear stress transport k–ω) were applied to calculate velocity pattern on meshes with various resolutions. An oscillating single jet flow was detected in the experiment, which the URANS simulations initially struggled to reflect. The dimensionless analysis of the mesh properties and corresponding adjustment of the boundary layers inside the SEN allowed to resolve the flow pattern. The performed fast Fourier transform (FFT) verified a good numerical prediction of the flow frequency spectrum. The corresponding simulation strategy is proposed for the industrial CC process using the URANS approach.
Keywords in English
Thin slab casting; submerged entry nozzle; OpenFOAM; water model; URANS; submeniscus velocity
Released
16.02.2024
Publisher
Springer Nature
ISSN
1073-5615
Volume
55
Number
2
Pages from–to
891–904
Pages count
14
BIBTEX
@article{BUT188155,
author="Petr {Dyntera} and Alexander {Vakhrushev} and Ebrahim {Karimi-Sibaki} and Menghuai {Wu} and Andreas {Ludwig} and Gerald {Nitzl} and Yong {Tang} and Gernot {Hackl} and Josef {Watzinger} and Jan {Boháček} and Abdellah {Kharicha},
title="Assessment of URANS-Type Turbulent Flow Modeling of a Single Port Submerged Entry Nozzle (SEN) for Thin Slab Continuous Casting (TSC) Process",
year="2024",
volume="55",
number="2",
month="February",
pages="891--904",
publisher="Springer Nature",
issn="1073-5615"
}