Numerical and experimental analysis on air/water direct contact heat and mass transfer in the humidifier

2019 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 310-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tingfen Ke ◽  
Xin Huang ◽  
Xiang Ling
Author(s):  
Joshua L. Hensley ◽  
James E. Bryan

An air conditioning system based on a direct contact heat and mass transfer process between water and air may offer benefits such as increased energy efficiency, temperature and humidity control, and improved indoor air quality. To investigate the feasibility of this type of technology, a numeric model is used to study the heat and mass transfer between a single droplet and moist air to gain fundamental insight into the heat and mass transfer process. Further, preliminary experiments are performed in a low speed temperature and humidity controlled wind tunnel to validate some of the models findings, e.g. the effect of droplet size on heat and mass transfer. A case study is presented to investigate how such a system would operate in a hot, dry climate as well as a hot and humid climate.


Author(s):  
A. Porteous

The design of cooling and dehumidification towers is important for many process industries. This paper reports the results of a theoretical and experimental investigation on the direct contact heat and mass transfer characteristics of water droplets in counter-current flow through a water vapour-air mixture which simulates the stream to be dehumidified. The range of temperatures and dew points studied was 250–410°F and 85–112°F respectively. The effect of parameters such as contact path length, water droplet to water vapour-air mass ratios, droplet diameter, and entrainment are studied. The experimental information is then utilized in the design of a dehumidification tower.


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto A. Lemus-Mondaca ◽  
Antonio Vega-Gálvez ◽  
Carlos E. Zambra ◽  
Nelson O. Moraga

Author(s):  
Yuhao Zhang ◽  
Li Feng ◽  
Zhimin Qiu ◽  
Jingpin Fu ◽  
Daogang Lu

Abstract In the third generation pressurized water reactor AP1000 plant, the Automatic Depressurization System (ADS) is one of the most important passive safety system. However, the steam Direct Contact Condensation (DCC) microscopic mechanisms are very complicated, which are not very clear yet. Moreover, the high-pressure and high-temperature experiment is very expensive to be conducted for many different test conditions. So in the present work, both the experimental and numerical methods are employed to investigate the steam DCC behavior. The steam DCC experimental bench has been built up, and the key parameters including the flow patterns and steam core temperature distributions are measured to provide validation data for the numerical results. In aspect of the numerical work, CFD simulation on the steam condensation is conducted. The heat and mass transfer process is simulated through the three-dimension commercial software FLUENT 16.0. Some of the key heat and mass transfer correlations are added by User Defined Function (UDF). The key parameters including the condensation steam fraction, temperature, and pressure, etc. are analyzed, which reflect the major heat transfer characteristics. According to the results, the expansion-compression-steam tail could be observed in both the numerical and experimental results. In essential, the steam fraction, temperature, and pressure distributions are determined by the equilibrium and transformation between the thermal dynamic energy and kinetic energy. The results provide working references for the practical ADS steam spraying condensation process in AP1000 reactor.


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