Power Industry Webinar Production & Promotion
Flow Modeling - Why Should I Care?
As an energy industry marketing firm Krishnan & Associates offer complete production and promotion of webinars through our Webcast Experts division. Our team of experienced technical writers and graphic designers create the registration page, invitation material, and a branded live console for every event. Here is an excerpt from a registration page created for our client:
This informative webinar showcases how flow modeling techniques including CFD and physical (laboratory) modeling are used to make the world a better place. Whether it is to make golf balls go further, reduce the amount of mercury in our water, or make the bread we eat tasty and nutritious, modeling is a tool that can help.
Presented by ASC's Dr. Kevin Linfield, P.Eng., P.E. and Robert Mudry, P.E., topics and case studies will touch on:
Sports
US Olympic Bobsledding Team
Golf balls and golf clubs
Formula 1 cars and helmets
Gas turbines and HRSGs
Optimizing the thermal performance of gas turbine systems including heat exchangers, flow-induced vibration, and duct burners
Designing and improving SCR deNOx performance, ammonia injection systems, static mixers, and CO catalysts
Interference of neighboring sources on turbine intake systems
Cooling towers and air cooled condenser optimization
Coal fired energy
Particulate injection and capture systems including Dry Sorbent Injection, electrostatic precipitators, and baghouses
Pressure loss, fans, erosion, pluggage, ductwork, and stack issues
SCR, FGD, SDA improvements
Boiler combustion improvements, primary/secondary systems, coal pipe balancing
Cooling towers and condensers
Oil & gas facilities
SCR design optimization for FCCUs, waste heat recovery, methane reformers, and more
Flow and thermal improvements for fired heaters and boilers
Plume dispersion, gas emissions tracking within a plant site and beyond
Transportation
Aerodynamic drag reduction and rail tip-over prevention
Aircraft comfort
Marine industry including wet scrubbers, SCR, and plume dispersion