The Effect of Longitudinal Heat Conduction on Periodic-Flow Heat Exchanger Performance

1964 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D. Bahnke ◽  
C. P. Howard

A numerical finite-difference method of calculating the effectiveness for the periodic-flow type heat exchanger accounting for the effect of longitudinal heat conduction in the direction of fluid flow is presented. The method considers the metal stream in crossflow with each of the gas streams as two separate but dependent heat exchangers. To accommodate the large number of divisions necessary for accuracy and extrapolation to zero element area, use was made of a general purpose digital computer. The values of the effectiveness thus obtained are good to four significant figures while those values for the conduction effect are good to three significant figures. The exchanger effectiveness and conduction effect have been evaluated over the following range of dimensionless parameters. 1.0⩾Cmin/Cmax⩾0.901.0⩽Cr/Cmin⩽∞1.0⩽NTU0⩽1001.0⩾(hA)*⩾0.251.0⩾As*⩾0.250.01⩽λ⩽0.32

1964 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Mondt

Design, fabrication, and operation experience with periodic-flow heat exchangers used in General Motors regenerative vehicular gas turbines has indicated that analysis techniques available in published reports are too restrictive for accurate performance and thermal distortion calculations. The design usefulness of previously published analyses is somewhat limited because fluid and metal temperature distributions are not part of the calculated results. These distributions are required for primary seal matching and core and structural thermal stress calculations. A nodal analysis has been accomplished at the General Motors Research Laboratories and a type of finite difference solution obtained for the periodic-flow heat exchanger. This solution can be used to study the effects of longitudinal thermal conduction, variable heat-transfer coefficients, finite rotation, and provides temperature distributions as functions of time and space for transient as well as “steady-state.” This has been checked both with available solutions for more simplified cases and some experimental measured results for periodic flow heat exchangers designed and built as part of the General Motors vehicular regenerative gas turbine program. A brief outline of the calculation procedures, program capabilities, and some calculated results is presented. This includes temperature distributions for periodic-flow heat-exchanger parameters encountered in the vehicular regenerator application.


Author(s):  
James R. Mondt

Design, fabrication and operation experience with periodic-flow heat exchangers used in General Motors regenerative vehicular gas turbines has indicated that analysis techniques available in published reports are too restrictive for accurate performance and thermal-distortion calculations. The design usefulness of previously published anaylses is somewhat limited because fluid and metal-temperature distributions are not part of the calculated results. These distributions are required for primary seal matching and core and structural thermal-stress calculations. A nodal analysis has been accomplished at the General Motors Research Laboratories and a type of finite-difference solution obtained for the periodic-flow heat exchanger. This solution can be used to study the effects of longitudinal thermal conduction, variable heat-transfer coefficients, finite rotation, and provides temperature distributions as functions of time and space for transient as well as “steady state.” This has been checked both with available solutions for more simplified cases and some experimental measured results for periodic-flow heat exchangers designed and built as part of the General Motors vehicular regenerative gas-turbine program. A brief outline of the calculation procedures, program capabilities, and some calculated results are presented. This includes temperature distributions for periodic-flow heat exchanger parameters encountered in the vehicular regenerator application.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim Choon Ng ◽  
Jinbao Wang ◽  
Hong Xue

Abstract To develop effective heat exchangers for miniature and micro Joule-Thomson (J-T) cooling system, the performance of a recuperative heat exchanger is analyzed and evaluated. The evaluation is based on a theoretical model of the Hampson-type counter-flow heat exchanger. The effect of the pressure and temperature-dependent properties and longitudinal heat conduction are considered. The results of the numerical simulation are validated with the corresponding experimental measurements. The performance of the heat exchanger on effectiveness, flow and various heat conduction losses as well as liquefied yield fraction are analyzed and discussed. The simulation model provides a useful tool for miniature J-T cooler design.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 241-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. E. M. Saboya ◽  
C. E. S. M. da Costa

From the second law of thermodynamics, the concepts of irreversibility, entropy generation, and availability are applied to counterflow, parallel-flow, and cross-flow heat exchangers. In the case of the Cross-flow configuration, there are four types of heat exchangers: I) both fluids unmixed, 2) both fluids mixed, 3) fluid of maximum heat capacity rate mixed and the other unmixed, 4) fluid of minimum heat capacity rate mixed and the other unmixed. In the analysis, the heat exchangers are assumed to have a negligible pressure drop irreversibility. The Counterflow heat exchanger is compared with the other five heat exchanger types and the comparison will indicate which one has the minimum irreversibility rate. In this comparison, only the exit temperatures and the heat transfer rates of the heat exchangers are different. The other conditions (inlet temperatures, mass flow rates, number of transfer units) and the working fluids are the same in the heat exchangers.


2015 ◽  
Vol 799-800 ◽  
pp. 665-670
Author(s):  
Karthik Silaipillayarputhur

This paper compares the transient thermal performance between counter and parallel cross flow heat exchangers subjected to time varying inlet mass flow rates and inlet temperatures that hasn’t been previously discussed in the available literature. Specifically the transient performance of 2 pass and 3 pass cross flow heat exchangers is discussed in this paper. In the present study the energy balance equations for the hot and cold fluids and the heat exchanger wall were solved using an implicit central finite difference method. Representative values of NTU were considered, and the NTU’s of the heat exchanger were assumed to be uniformly distributed among the heat exchanger passes. Other physically significant parameters such as the capacity rate ratio and the convection heat transfer resistance ratio were systematically varied. A detailed summary based on the observations has been presented.


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