Heat transfer correlations for single-phase flow in plate heat exchangers based on experimental data

2017 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. 1547-1557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Yang ◽  
Anthony Jacobi ◽  
Wei Liu
Volume 3 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Jokar ◽  
Steven J. Eckels ◽  
Mohammad H. Hosni

The evaporation of refrigerant R134a in three different sizes of Brazed Plate Heat Exchangers (BPHE) is analyzed in this article. The BPHEs are a type of compact plate heat exchanger with parallel corrugated plates which are brazed together in series. In this study, these heat exchangers are utilized as the evaporator of an automotive refrigeration system, and their heat transfer coefficients and pressure drops are obtained experimentally. The refrigerant flows on one side and a 50% glycol-water mixture on the other side of the BPHEs, in a counter flow configuration. The heat transfer coefficient for the single-phase glycol-water mixture flow through the BPHEs is obtained using the Wilson plot technique. The single-phase Fanning friction factor correlation is also obtained using experimental results from the hydrodynamic parameters of glycol-water mixture. The results from the single-phase flow analysis are then extended to the two-phase flow analysis to correlate the evaporation heat transfer and pressure drop for the refrigerant R134a in the BPHEs. In summary, the thermo-hydrodynamic behavior of the evaporation of R143a in brazed plate heat exchangers is analyzed and compared with previous studies.


Author(s):  
Fabio Battaglia ◽  
Raphael Mandel ◽  
Amir Shooshtari ◽  
Michael M. Ohadi

Abstract Manifold Microchannels have been proven to enhance thermal management in different fields, such as electronic cooling, dry cooling, and high temperature heat exchangers. Manifold-microchannels use a system of manifolds to divide a microgrooved surface into a system of manifolds, thereby reducing pressure drop and increasing heat transfer by utilizing the developing flow regime. Because of this, design of a manifold-microchannel heat exchanger requires the design of the manifold and microchannel. In some situations, a sequential design approach, where one first designs the microchannel and then the manifold — is sufficient to meet the requirements of the problem statements. The more demanding requirements of contemporary applications require manifold microchannel design to evolve and become more complex. In particular, reducing the volume and pitch of the manifold has become necessary. Reducing the volume of the manifold results in a higher flow maldistribution, and the ability to predict how maldistribution affects heat transfer rate is critical. Similarly, reducing the pitch of the manifold increases the effect of axial conduction in the solid, and understanding the effect on heat transfer is important. To those ends, this work shows a porous medium approach for single-phase flow in manifold microchannel, which allows to predict pressure drop, maldistribution, axial conduction, and heat transfer rate with a much smaller computational demand when compared to a full 3D simulation, while guaranteeing very similar results.


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