Hydrogen Fast Fill Modeling and Optimization of Cylinders Lined With Phase Change Material

Author(s):  
Miroslaw Liszka ◽  
Aleksandr Fridlyand ◽  
Ambalavanan Jayaraman ◽  
Michael Bonnema ◽  
Chakravarthy Sishtla

Abstract This work is a continuation of a previous study (IMECE2019-11449) which sought to explore the feasibility and means of successfully modeling the hydrogen fast filling process of cylinders lined with phase change material (PCM) entirely in CFD software. The first focus of this work was to address the simplistic approach of how the liner temperature was modelled in the previous study. Previously, the entire liner was assigned a single temperature which was obtained and updated through the lumped heat capacity method. This meant that the hotter gas at the end of the cylinder opposite the inlet was in contact with a liner at a temperature lower than could realistically be expected. This was remedied by splitting the liner into four sections. Two sections were used for the curved portions at each end of the cylinder, and the straight wall section was split into two. Each section had its temperature independently calculated through the lumped heat capacity method. A temperature difference on the order of a ten degrees Celsius was observed between the different sections of the liner prior to latent heating beginning. The mass averaged temperature of the hydrogen inside the cylinder obtained with the sectioned wall case matched that obtained with the single wall temperature almost exactly, less than a degree difference. Despite the unexpected findings of the average hydrogen temperature not changing much when the wall is split into sections, this approach was still taken with all the cases completed in this study. The liner could be split into a greater amount of sections than four, but this was considered unnecessary due to the findings regarding the overall hydrogen temperature. Four sections were considered adequate and used to model the temperature gradient along the wall or liner. The effect of gravity on the filling process was also explored based on the orientation of the cylinder. This required completing three-dimensional simulations to accurately simulate buoyancy driven flow in horizontally mounted cylinders. All the simulations were completed with ANSYS Fluent 2019 R1 without the use of additional software to handle the heat transfer involving the PCM. All simulations were completed with the coupled pressure-based solver and K-Omega SST turbulence model. The gas properties were obtained from tables generated from NIST properties (REFPROP) available within ANSYS Fluent to limit the amount of error in the accumulated mass within the cylinder due to inaccurate gas properties. The initial conditions for the gas and liner temperatures were 25°C and 100 bar for the gas pressure. A constant mass flow rate of 0.02174 kg/s at a temperature 0°C were used as the initial conditions for the inlet hydrogen gas.

2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hessam Taherian ◽  
Jorge L. Alvarado ◽  
Kalpana Tumuluri ◽  
Curt Thies ◽  
Chan-Hyun Park

Microencapsulated phase change material (MPCM) slurry is consisted of a base fluid in which MPCM is dispersed. Due to apparent high heat capacity associated with phase change process, MPCM slurry can be used as a viable heat transfer fluid (HTF) for turbulent flow conditions. Heat transfer and fluid flow properties of the slurry in turbulent flow (3000 < Re < 6000) were determined experimentally. Dynamic viscosity of the MPCM slurry was measured at different temperatures close to the melting point of the material (20–30 °C). Pressure drop measurements under turbulent flow conditions were recorded for 6 MPCM samples at various concentrations. The pressure drop of the MPCM slurry was comparable to that of water despite the higher viscosity of the slurry. The effect of heat flux, MPCM mass concentration, flow rate and the type of phase change material was investigated. The effective heat capacity of slurry at the location where phase change occurs was found to be considerably higher than that of water. A nondimensional Nusselt number correlation was proposed in order to facilitate design of heat transfer loops with MPCM slurries as working fluid.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.5) ◽  
pp. 587
Author(s):  
Jay R. Patel ◽  
Manish K. Rathod

Latent heat energy storage using macro encapsulated phase change material is an emerging technique for thermal energy storage applica- tions. The main aim of the present investigation is to investigate the melting process of phase change material filled in different shaped configurations. The selected different cavities are square, circular and triangular. A mathematical model based on convection dominated melting is required to be developed, especially in view of the complex flow geometries encountered in such problems. Thus, an attempt has been made to develop a model using ANSYS Fluent 16.2 to investigate the heat transfer rate and solid-liquid interface visualization of PCM filled in different shapes of cavity. It is found that triangular shaped macro encapsulated PCM melts faster than square and circu- lar shaped encapsulated PCM.   


Volume 3 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Cassidy ◽  
Richard D. Gould

A microPCM fluid is a suspension of particles of microencapsulated phase-change-material (PCM) in a carrier heat transfer fluid. Such fluids have potential as pumped loop cooling media for applications in aerospace electronics cooling, terrestrial energy systems, and recently in electric vehicle cooling. The melting process of the phase change material does not occur at a single temperature but rather occurs over a temperature range. In the past, numerical solutions to microPCM fluids have assumed a linear release of latent heat over the phase change region. In this paper four analytic curve fits to differential scanning calorimeter measurements are made to better model the actual melting/solidification behavior. The numerical scheme models hydrodynamically fully developed laminar flow in a circular tube using the enthalpy method. The microPCM fluid contains 23% by weight microencapsulated octacosane particles in a 50/50% by volume ethylene glycol/water carrier fluid. A prescribed uniform heat flux at the tube wall is used. The solutions for these four cases include mixed mean exit temperature, axial tube wall temperature and local heat transfer coefficient.


Author(s):  
Zeng-Bo Ke ◽  
You-Ying Di ◽  
Xin-Hui Fan ◽  
Feng-Ying Chen ◽  
Zhen-Fei Gao ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Devendra Dandotiya ◽  
Nitin D. Banker

Abstract Energy consumption of a household refrigerator majorly depends on the ambient temperature and is highest at the noontime and lowest at the night. To mitigate the impact of higher ambient temperature, condenser of the refrigerator is modified by incorporating phase change material (PCM) in it. This article presents the development of numerical model of the PCM-based condenser and its comparison with the experimental model. A 3D numerical model for a PCM, namely, FS21-based condenser has been developed in commercial software ansys fluent 16.2, and the simulation outcomes are compared with the experimental test results. A correlation of a coefficient of performance (COP) which is a function of PCM temperature has been proposed. Based on the developed numerical model and the correlation, two other PCM-based heat exchangers, RT25 and RT25HC, are also analyzed numerically and their PCM temperatures are predicted. At the end, COP of the refrigerator with each PCM is compared.


2011 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 662-667
Author(s):  
Yan Lai Zhang ◽  
Zhong Hao Rao ◽  
Jie Fei Xie ◽  
Shuang Feng Wang

Heat storage experiment by natural convection in rectangular tanks heated from below has been conducted with fluidity slurry composed of microencapsulated phase change material (PCM). The slurry shows a peak value in the specific heat capacity with latent heat at the temperature of about T = 31 °C. The effects of the heating wall temperature TH, the PCM mass concentration Cm of the PCM slurry and the height H of the tank on heat storage are revealed, respectively.


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