Numerical simulations of a novel electrical heated brick firing kiln

Manuel Schieder (Autor, Keynote), Julian Unterluggauer, Stefan Puskas, Stefan Vogt

Research output: Chapter in Book or Conference ProceedingsConference Proceedings with Oral Presentationpeer-review

Abstract

To achieve the goal of a sustainable and CO2-neutral future, it is crucial for industries with high carbon footprints, such as the brick manufacturing industry, to utilize sustainable alternatives to natural gas. One of the available options is the use of carbon-free electricity. In Austria world leading brick manufacturer Wienerberger AG is currently building a kiln, which produces all its heat by electricity.The use of electricity fundamentally alters the firing process and therefore a novel approach to the kiln design is applied. The electrically heated kiln uses several heating elements on top, on the sides, and on the floor in each kiln zone to heat the bricks. Additionally, TOREtech nozzles are used to increase turbulence and enhance heat transfer. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD), using the commercial software Ansys Fluent, is used to analyze the heat distribution in the kiln zone, as well as to shed light on the fatigue life of the heating elements.
The results show that even in the most critical zone of the kiln, the applied heating elements are sufficient to heat the brick in the specified time, while also staying within their operating limits. The heat distribution of the kiln and the bricks is comparable and even better than in a state-of-the-art gasfired kiln.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of ECOS 2024
Subtitle of host publication37th International Conference on Efficiency, Cost, Optimization, Simulation and Environmental Impact of Energy Systems
Place of PublicationRhodes
Number of pages11
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Research Field

  • Efficiency in Industrial Processes and Systems

Keywords

  • brick firing kiln
  • high temperature process
  • CFD
  • numerical simulation
  • decarbonization

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