Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
225072 Journal of Food Engineering 2009 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper reports the implementation of the “mean age of air” (MAA) concept into the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code Fluent through user-defined functions to assess ventilation efficiency inside forced-ventilation food plants. Two transient methods and a steady-state method based on the resolution of an additional scalar transport equation were implemented and compared with experimental and numerical data obtained by Bartak et al. [Bartak, M., Cermak, M., Clarke, J.A., Denev, J., Drkal, F., Lain, M., Macdonald, I.A., Majer, M., Stankov, P., 2001. Experimental and numerical study of local mean age of air. In: Proceedings of the 7th International Building Performance Simulation Association (IBPSA) Conference, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Bartak, M., Beausoleil-Morrison, I., Clarke, J.A., Denev, J., Drkal, F., Lain, M., Macdonald, I.A., Melikov, A., Popiolek, Z., Stankov, P., 2002. Integrating CFD and building simulation. Building and Environment, 37, 865–871] for a 45 m3 test room. As the steady-state method led to the best compromise between accuracy of results and computation time, this method was then used to characterize ventilation efficiency inside a pilot cheese ripening room and two modern sausage dryers of large height. In light of the results presented, local MAA is a better and a more sensitive parameter than mean air velocity for highlighting areas with inadequate ventilation, and thus for assessing ventilation efficiency in industrial food plants.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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