scholarly journals Corrigendum to ‘Experimental investigation on convective heat transfer and pressure drop of supercritical CO2 and water in microtube heat exchangers’ [International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 163 (2020) 120443]

Author(s):  
Hao-fei Cai ◽  
Yu-yan Jiang ◽  
Tao Wang ◽  
Shi-qiang Liang ◽  
Yu-ming Zhu
1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 348-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Hoke ◽  
A. M. Clausing ◽  
T. D. Swofford

An experimental investigation of the air-side convective heat transfer from wire-on-tube heat exchangers is described. The study is motivated by the desire to predict the performance, in a forced flow, of the steel wire-on-tube condensers used in most refrigerators. Previous investigations of wire-on-tube heat exchangers in a forced flow have not been reported in the literature. The many geometrical parameters (wire diameter, tube diameter, wire pitch, tube pitch, etc.), the complex conductive paths in the heat exchanger, and the importance of buoyant forces in a portion of the velocity regime of interest make the study a formidable one. A key to the successful correlation of the experimental results is a definition of the convective heat transfer coefficient, hw, that accounts for the temperature gradients in the wires as well as the vast difference in the two key characteristic lengths—the tube and wire diameters. Although this definition results in the need to solve a transcendental equation in order to obtain hw from the experimental data, the use of the resulting empirical correlation is straightforward. The complex influence of the mixed convection regime on the heat transfer from wire-on-tube heat exchangers is shown, as well as the effects of air velocity and the angle of attack. The study covers a velocity range of 0 to 2 m/s (the Reynolds number based on wire diameter extends to 200) and angles of attack varying from 0 deg (horizontal coils) to ±90 deg. Heat transfer data from seven different wire-on-tube heat exchangers are correlated so that 95 percent of the data below a Richardson number of 0.004, based on the wire diameter, lie within ±16.7 percent of the proposed correlation.


Author(s):  
Manfred Groll ◽  
Rainer Mertz

An overview will be given about investigations on heat and mass transfer in narrow channels and narrow cavities, from work carried out in the last years up to the current status of research of some relevant scientific groups in Europe. The major topics of this report are evaporation heat transfer and the flow boiling pressure drop in narrow channels; microscale heat and mass transfer phenomena in pool boiling from enhanced evaporator tubes with sub-surface channels are also addressed. In the last years a challenging topic has been the enhancement of the efficiency of heat exchangers by employing micro-structured heat transfer surfaces. The need for smaller heat exchangers with higher heat transfer rates and/or smaller thermal approaches is caused by the ongoing miniaturisation of mechanical and electronic components, leading to higher heat fluxes which can damage or even destroy the components. On the other hand, enhanced heat transfer in big equipment, e.g. heat exchangers for the petrochemical and chemical industries, can lead to significant materials and energy savings and thus reduce environmental pollution. Therefore the European Union, European industries and national organisations have supported various projects to develop and to investigate a new generation of heat transfer surfaces, to better understand the related heat transfer phenomena and to model the heat transfer from these micro heat exchanger elements. There is a very extensive research in this scientific field, comprising both flow boiling and pool boiling. The present paper deals with heat transfer in narrow channels and/or cavities and with the flow boiling pressure drop occurring during heat and mass transfer in narrow channels. Investigations of major European institutions, carried out in the past and at the moment will be presented as a contribution to the overview on the current state-of-the-art in Europe, without claim of completeness. Some recent results on microscale pool boiling and flow boiling obtained in our institute will also be presented (Shuai et al., 2002; Kulenovic et al., 2002; Chen et al., 2002a, b).


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (3) ◽  
pp. 647-652 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Y. San ◽  
W. M. Worek ◽  
Z. Lavan

The irreversible generation of entropy for two limiting cases of combined forced-convection heat and mass transfer in a two-dimensional channel are investigated. First, convective heat transfer in a channel with either constant heat flux or constant surface temperature boundary conditions are considered for laminar and turbulent flow. The entropy generation is minimized to yield expressions for optimum plate spacing and optimum Reynolds numbers for both boundary conditions and flow regimes. Second, isothermal convective mass transfer in a channel is considered, assuming the diffusing substance to be an ideal gas with Lewis number equal to unity. The flow is considered to be either laminar or turbulent with boundary conditions at the channel walls of either constant concentration or constant mass flux. The analogy between heat and mass transfer is used to determine the entropy generation and the relations for optimum plate spacing and Reynolds number. The applicable range of the results for both limiting cases are then investigated by non-dimensionalizing the entropy generation equation.


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