Analysis of heat transfer and frost layer formation on a cryogenic tank wall exposed to the humid atmospheric air

2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 2072-2079 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoung-Hoon Kim ◽  
Hyung-Jong Ko ◽  
Kyoungjin Kim ◽  
Yong-Wook Kim ◽  
Kie-Joo Cho
Author(s):  
Michael A. Langerman

Research was conducted to investigate potential structural design configurations for aerospace cryogenic tank wall applications. The primary design considerations included the vibration damping characteristics under various flight loading conditions and the panel wall thermal resistance under different heat loads. The discussion herein is with regards to the thermal issue, specifically the heat transfer rates across two different panel wall designs that have attractive vibration damping characteristics. The heat transfer rates were evaluated analytically and verified with experimental data. One panel is a corrugated, serpentine-layered design fabricated using friction stir welding. The other panel is an “egg-carton” design fabricated using friction stir spot welding. An important thermal consideration for the cryogenic tank wall design is the minimum outer wall temperature attained during ambient storage or prior to launch. Of the two designs considered herein, neither wall provided sufficient thermal resistance to maintain outer wall temperatures above freezing under ambient conditions. One of the wall designs, however, performed somewhat better. It is shown that when configured with an outer layer of thermal plastic coating both designs could maintain an outer wall temperature within design constraints.


Cryogenics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 103115
Author(s):  
Lemei Ren ◽  
Wenling Jiao ◽  
Xinghao Tian ◽  
Tianjie Liu

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019.29 (0) ◽  
pp. J404
Author(s):  
Takayuki MOROKUMA ◽  
Hidetoshi OHKUBO ◽  
Yoshio UTAKA ◽  
Toshiki HIROTANI ◽  
Taiyo SUGINO

2010 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. F. Xie ◽  
X. D. Li ◽  
R. S. Wang

2012 ◽  
Vol 614-615 ◽  
pp. 20-24
Author(s):  
Kai Ma ◽  
Wei Ping Yan ◽  
Fei Jin ◽  
Hai Xin Li

Based on the thermal calculation, the paper makes a contrastive analysis on the parameters of flue gas, and convection heat properties of the coal-fired boiler under atmospheric air combustion, atmospheric oxy-fuel combustion and pressurized (6MPa) oxy-fuel combustion conditions. It takes a 300MW pressurized(6MPa) oxy-fuel combustion boiler as research object, the result indicates that: compared to the coal-fired boiler atmospheric air combustion, the flue gas volume flow in the pressurized oxy-fuel combustion has a decrease of 98.79%; convective heat output has a decrease of 24.69% with the same difference in temperature. In the pressurized oxy-fuel combustion, both the flue gas convective heat transfer coefficient and the pressure drop are greater than the atmospheric oxy-fuel combustion, flue cross-sectional area is smaller than conventional boiler, and heating surface area is less than atmospheric oxy-fuel combustion. With a method named dynamic minimization of costs the best flue gas velocity in this paper is 1.07m/s


2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 961-969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sung-Jool Kim ◽  
Ho-Jin Choi ◽  
Man-Yeong Ha ◽  
Seok-Ro Kim ◽  
Seon-Wook Bang

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Adrienne Parsons ◽  
M. Keith Sharp

This study evaluated the building cooling capacity of sky radiation, which was previously identified to have the greatest cooling potential among common ambient sources for climates across the U.S. A heat pipe augmented sky radiator system was simulated by a thermal network with nine nodes, including a thin polyethylene cover with and without condensation, white (zinc oxide) painted radiator plate, condenser and evaporator ends of the heat pipe, thermal storage fluid (water), tank wall, room, sky and ambient air. Heat transfer between nodes included solar flux and sky radiation to cover and plate, wind convection and radiation from cover to ambient, radiation from plate to ambient, natural convection and radiation from plate to cover, conduction from plate to condenser, two-phase heat transfer from evaporator to condenser, natural convection from evaporator to water and from water to tank wall, natural convection and radiation from tank wall to room, and overall heat loss from room to ambient. A thin layer of water was applied to simulate condensation on the cover. Nodal temperatures were simultaneously solved as functions of time using typical meteorological year (TMY3) weather data. Auxiliary cooling was added as needed to limit room temperature to a maximum of 23.9 °C. For this initial investigation, a moderate climate (Louisville, KY) was used to evaluate the effects of radiator orientation, thermal storage capacity, and cooling load to radiator area ratio (LRR). Results were compared to a Louisville baseline with LRR = 10 W/m2 K, horizontal radiator and one cover, which provided an annual sky fraction (fraction of cooling load provided by sky radiation) of 0.855. A decrease to 0.852 was found for an increase in radiator slope to 20 deg, and a drop to 0.832 for 53 deg slope (latitude + 15 deg, a typical slope for solar heating). These drops were associated with increases in average radiator temperature by 0.73 °C for 20 deg and 1.99 °C for 53 deg. A 30% decrease in storage capacity caused a decrease in sky fraction to 0.843. Sky fractions were 0.720 and 0.959 for LRR of 20 and 5, respectively. LRR and thermal storage capacity had strong effects on performance. Radiator slope had a surprisingly small impact, considering that the view factor to the sky at 53 deg tilt is less than 0.5.


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