Analysis on the Influence of the Exchange Area on the Heat Exchange Efficiency during Far-Infrared Convection Combination Grain Drying Process

Author(s):  
Liu Chunshan ◽  
Shang Tao ◽  
Yang Shaoqi ◽  
Wu Wenfu ◽  
Chen Siyu
2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
T. Y. Chen ◽  
H. P. Cho ◽  
C. S. Jwo ◽  
M. H. Hung ◽  
W. S. Lee

The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the 100 nm ZrO2far infrared material on the heat exchange efficiency of smooth tube heat exchangers. In the experiments designed for this purpose, the ZrO2powder and water based acrylic paint were mixed separately using a two-step mixing method and the mixture samples were sprayed, respectively, onto heat exchangers for testing their heat exchange efficiency under stable ambient conditions. Results from the experiments showed 31.8% and 21.5% increases in heat transfer in the heat exchanger sprayed with 7.5 wt.% ZrO2powder and with inlet water temperatures at 45°C and 55°C relative to the heat exchanger sprayed with 0 wt.% acrylic paint and 26.4% and 18.9% increases in heat transfer relative to the heat exchanger not sprayed with acrylic paint. The experiments also verified that heat could be transferred through radiation. The additive ZrO2nanopowder in these experiments is proven to be able to improve the efficiency of heat exchangers through radiation, thereby increasing the feasibility of its application in practice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2(50) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Korobka ◽  
◽  
Sergey Syrotyuk ◽  
Dmitry Zhuravel ◽  
Boris Boltianskyi ◽  
...  

The work is devoted to the issue of the rational use of the solar energy in the technological process of fruit drying based on the use of solar drying devices, which are applied in various sections of the agro-industrial centers of Ukraine. The aim of this research was intensification of the fruits drying process using the solar energy by combining an air collector and drying chamber into a single power unit. To achieve the aim the heat exchange diagnostic techniques with alternative potentials of diffusion and moisture transfer was developed. This technique differs from those existing for the heat exchange research in that it allows the intensity of the moisture evaporation from a unit of the material surface to be calculated, based on the synthesis of the moisture content and the irreversible major laws of processes of the heat exchange characteristics of the fruits drying using the solar dryer. The above model makes it possible to diagnose the heat exchange processes and analyze the mathematical model of the heat exchange processes. It also allows modeling the changeable diffusion and moisture transfer potentials based on the dependences obtained and for the purpose of a further application in the methods and devices development to control the strain-deformed state of the fruits during the drying process. The method is offered for the calculation of diffusion and moisture transfer during drying fruits in the solar dryer.


Author(s):  
Naret Meeso ◽  
Adisak Nathakaranakule ◽  
Thanid Madhiyanon ◽  
Somchart Soponronnarit

The applied strategy of far-infrared radiation in paddy drying is divided into two main processes with some overlapping, namely, series and combined drying processes. The first comprises fluidized-bed drying, far-infrared radiation, tempering and ambient air ventilation as well as transport of paddy, and the latter is the combination of far-infrared radiation and hot-air convection in fluidization technique. The changes of average moisture content, grain temperature and milling quality in each paddy drying process are presented together with mathematical models. The experiments showed that series drying process was more effective to apply in the aspects of paddy drying and milling qualities than combined drying process. Due to less effectiveness in combined drying process, heat and mass transfer models, only series drying process were developed. The simulation results indicated that the models were capable of satisfactorily predicting the simultaneous average moisture contents and grain temperatures of a paddy grain as compared with the experimental results.


1974 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. K. Moore ◽  
T. Hsieh

A procedure is outlined to meet simultaneous requirements to reduce overall size of a dry cooling tower for a large power plant, and to reduce the size (surface area) of the associated air-water heat exchanger. First, tower exit dimensions (or fan power) are specified as attainable fractions of their theoretical minima as found from a draft equation. Then a heat-exchanger type is chosen, having as small an air hydraulic diameter as feasible. Appropriate equations and assumptions dealing with air side and water side heat exchange and water pumping power then yield a full description of tower and heat-exchanger characteristics for a given tower duty. A specific example is worked out and compared with the tower at Rugeley, England. We find that a very open heat exchanger, of shallow depth (one in or less) results from our analysis, and in a proposed configuration of acceptable header loss gives a 1/3 height reduction and a four-fold reduction of heat-exchanger area.


2019 ◽  
Vol 797 ◽  
pp. 196-201
Author(s):  
Habsah Alwi ◽  
Nurul Shazana Mohd Zain ◽  
Hanafiah Zainal Abidin ◽  
Jefri Jaafar ◽  
Ku Halim Ku Hamid

Drying also known as dehydration is commonly used as a unit operation in herbs manufacturing industry to preserve the food product by removing the moisture content in the herbs. Unfortunately, most drying process degraded the product quality because the feedstock is exposed to a very high temperature within a long period of time by using conventional oven Therefore this research has focused on the alternatives technique in overcoming the degradation of nutrients by applying the irradiation concepts. The objectives of this research were to investigate the effect of drying onto the physical properties of Aquilaria Malaccensis leaves by using fabricated far-infrared dryer. The experiments were conducted at various temperature ranging from 40, 50 and 60°C. The color difference and the moisture content of the leaves before and after drying were examined. The color measurements data shows that at 60°C, the brightness and the chroma were the highest. On the other hand, the hue angles were the highest for 60°C when the time was reached 100 minutes.


Perfusion ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 343-347
Author(s):  
David S Hundley ◽  
Roger A Vertrees ◽  
Louis Brownstein ◽  
Michael Clancy ◽  
Alexander P Garwood ◽  
...  

An in vitro comparison of the heat exchange properties of the Electromedics D1081A, Sarns MP-4 'Conducer Coil' 165720, Bentley HE-1 00 and the Shiley BCD Plus 4:1 blood cardioplegia sets was performed. The efficiency was calculated for each heat exchanger and post-heat exchange blood path temperatures were compared. The calculated efficiency for each heat exchanger is as follows: Electromedics D1081A at 18 I/minute coil water flow (0.95); Sarns MP-4 165720 at 9 I/minute coil water flow (0.93); Bentley HE-100 at 10 I/minute coil water flow (0.91); Shiley BCD Plus at 15 I/minute coil water flow (0.90). Blood path, precoil temperatures for each unit were compared statistically with no differences found ( p > 0.05). Blood side, postcoil temperatures were then compared. The average postcoil blood path temperature of the Electromedics D1081A was 1.6° ± 0.1 °C, of the Sarns MP-4 165720 it was 2.1 ± 0.1°C, of the Bentley HE-100 it was 2.7° ± 0.3°C, and the Shiley BCD Plus 3.0° ± 0.4°C. The results of this experiment indicate that the average postcoil temperature of the Electromedics D1081 A was lower than the Sarns MP-4 165720 ( p < 0.05) which was lower than that of the Bentley HE-100 ( p < 0.05) and Shiley BCD Plus ( p < 0.05). No statistical difference was found between the average postcoil temperature of the Bentley HE-1 00 and the Shiley BDC Plus.


Author(s):  
John Crepeau

Since the 1700s, natural philosophers understood that heat exchange between two bodies was not precisely linearly dependent on the temperature difference, and that at high temperatures the discrepancy became greater. Over the years, many models were developed with varying degrees of success. The lack of success was due to the difficulty obtaining accurate experimental data, and a lack of knowledge of the fundamental mechanisms underlying radiation heat exchange. Josef Stefan, of the University of Vienna, compiled data taken by a number of researchers who used various methods to obtain their data, and in 1879 proposed a unique relation to model the dependence of radiative heat exchange on the temperature: the T4 law. Stefan’s model was met with some skepticism and was not widely accepted by his colleagues. His former student, Ludwig Boltzmann, who by then had taken a position at the University of Graz in Austria, felt that there was some truth to the empirical model proposed by his mentor. Boltzmann proceeded to show in 1884, treating electromagnetic radiation as the working fluid in a Carnot cycle, that in fact the T4 law was correct. By the time that Boltzmann published his thermodynamic derivation of the radiation law, physicists became interested in the fundamental nature of electromagnetic radiation and its relation to energy, specifically determining the frequency distribution of blackbody radiation. Among this group of investigators was Wilhelm Wien, working at Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt in Charlottenburg, Berlin. He proposed a relation stating that the wavelength at which the maximum amount of radiation was emitted occurred when the product of the wavelength and the temperature was equal to a constant. This became known as Wien’s Displacement Law, which he deduced this by imagining an expanding and contracting cavity, filled with radiation. Later, he combined his Displacement Law with the T4 law to give a blackbody spectrum which was accurate over some ranges, but diverged in the far infrared. Max Planck, at the University of Berlin, built on Wien’s model but, as Planck himself stated, “the energy of radiation is distributed in a completely irregular manner among the individual partial vibrations...” This “irregular” or discrete treatment of the radiation became the basis for quantum mechanics and a revolution in physics. This paper will present brief biographies of the four pillars of the T4 radiation law, Stefan, Boltzmann, Wien and Planck, and outline the methodologies used to obtain their results.


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