scholarly journals Heat Loss Analysis of Outdoor Piping

2020 ◽  
Vol 328 ◽  
pp. 03006
Author(s):  
Miroslav Příhoda ◽  
Mária Čarnogurská ◽  
René Pyszko ◽  
Emil Hlisnikowski ◽  
Jiří Burda

Although the heat losses of the outdoor piping are minimised by thermal insulation, the distribution of heat from the heating plant to individual consumers of the technological heating media is always accompanied by losses. In the case of large transported volumes of the flowing media, the loss values are negligible. The mathematical and physical analysis of the heat loss of the outdoor heat distribution systems, insulated and non-insulated, has been carried out while using the parameters measured on the real piping system.

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 2104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorota Anna Krawczyk ◽  
Tomasz Janusz Teleszewski

This paper presents possible variants of reducing the heat loss in an existing heating network made from single pre-insulated pipes located in central Europe. In order to achieve this aim, simulations were carried out for five different variants related to the modification of the network operation temperature, replacement of a single network with a double pre-insulated one, and changes in the cross-section geometry of the thermal insulation of the double heating network from circular to egg-shaped. The proposed egg-shaped thermal insulation was obtained by modifying the shape of the Cassini oval, in that the supply pipe has a greater insulation thickness compared to the return pipe. The larger insulation field in the supply pipe contributed to reducing the heat flux density around the supply line and, as a result, to significantly reducing heat loss. The egg-shaped thermal insulation described in the publication in a mathematical formula can be used in practice. This work compares the heat losses for the presented variants and determines the ecological effect. Heat losses were determined using the boundary element method (BEM), using a proprietary computer program written as part of the VIPSKILLS 2016-1-PL01-KA203-026152 project Erasmus+.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Vance ◽  
Indrek S. Wichman

Abstract The profile of a spreading flamelet is analyzed by examining the heat losses to surrounding surfaces. The study addresses the reasons why flamelets have shapes ranging from round hemispherical “caps” to flat “coin-like” discs. A parabolic shape profile is used for the thin flame sheet, which provides both flame length and flame curvature. A third parameter specifies the height of the flame from the surface beneath it. Radiation and conduction heat losses from the flame sheet are calculated for various flame shapes. Overall heat losses as well as heat losses to the surface beneath the flamelet are examined. Some of the heat “losses” are misnamed because they produce the necessary surface decomposition for subsequent gaseous flame fuel vapors. Strictly, then, “losses” do not contribute appreciably to the maintenance of the flame. Physical arguments are made to explain observed flame spread behavior and flame shapes in response to prevailing flow and environmental conditions.


Energy ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 850-860 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julio Efrain Vaillant Rebollar ◽  
Eline Himpe ◽  
Jelle Laverge ◽  
Arnold Janssens

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 4699
Author(s):  
Tomasz Janusz Teleszewski ◽  
Dorota Anna Krawczyk ◽  
Antonio Rodero

The paper presents an analysis of heat loss and reductions of annual emissions of air pollutants of a quadruple pre-insulated heating network by comparing this solution with the existing pre-insulated network consisting of four pre-insulated single pipes and the variant consisting of two twin pipe pre-insulated. For calculations, an existing heating network located in central Poland was adopted, where heat is transported for heating purposes of buildings and domestic hot water with circulation of domestic hot water through four separate pre-insulated underground pipes. The idea of the construction of four pre-insulated pipes presented in the paper consists in the location of four steel pipes in a common round thermal insulation, which perform the role of heat transport for heating purposes in multi-family buildings (supply and return) and two pipes transporting hot water (a pipe with domestic hot water with circulation). In Poland, heating pipes used in multi-family housing have a larger diameter compared to domestic hot water pipes, which is why standard twin pipe heating pipes have been used in the construction of four pre-insulated networks, in which the domestic hot water pipe has been added to the thermal insulation and circulation of domestic hot water. In order to determine heat losses, a simplified two-dimensional model of conductive heat transfer was developed using Fortran to create a computer program. The results of numerical simulations show that the use of twin pipes for the construction of pre-insulated quadruple networks has contributed to a significant reduction in heat loss in relation to the existing single pre-insulated network (up to 57.1%), while reducing the thermal insulation field of the cross-section of the pre-insulated pipe by 21.4%.


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