Investigation of Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Non-Newtonian Nanofluid Performance Through Micro Channels Heat Exchanger (MCHE) in Cross-Flow Configuration

2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 631-639 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Anvari ◽  
K. Javaherdeh ◽  
M. Emami-Meibodi
2013 ◽  
Vol 388 ◽  
pp. 149-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mazlan Abdul Wahid ◽  
Ahmad Ali Gholami ◽  
H.A. Mohammed

In the present work, laminar cross flow forced convective heat transfer of nanofluid over tube banks with various geometry under constant wall temperature condition is investigated numerically. We used nanofluid instead of pure fluid ,as external cross flow, because of its potential to increase heat transfer of system. The effect of the nanofluid on the compact heat exchanger performance was studied and compared to that of a conventional fluid.The two-dimensional steady state Navier-Stokes equations and the energy equation governing laminar incompressible flow are solved using a Finite volume method for the case of flow across an in-line bundle of tube banks as commercial compact heat exchanger. The nanofluid used was alumina-water 4% and the performance was compared with water. In this paper, the effect of parameters such as various tube shapes ( flat, circle, elliptic), and heat transfer comparison between nanofluid and pure fluid is studied. Temperature profile, heat transfer coefficient and pressure profile were obtained from the simulations and the performance was discussed in terms of heat transfer rate and performance index. Results indicated enhanced performance in the use of a nanofluid, and slight penalty in pressure drop. The increase in Reynolds number caused an increase in the heat transfer rate and a decrease in the overall bulk temperature of the cold fluid. The results show that, for a given heat duty, a mas flow rate required of the nanofluid is lower than that of water causing lower pressure drop. Consequently, smaller equipment and less pumping power are required.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (57) ◽  
pp. 1057-1068
Author(s):  
Eslam Usama ◽  
Nabil Abd el Aziz ◽  
Walid aboelsoud ◽  
Ahmed Mohammed

Author(s):  
Mesbah G. Khan ◽  
Amir Fartaj

In past few years, narrow diameter flow passages (≤3 mm) have attracted huge research attentions due to their several advantageous features over conventional tubes (≥6 mm) especially from the view points of higher heat transfer, lesser weight, and smaller device size. Several classifications of narrow channels, based on sizes, are proposed in the open literature from mini to meso and micro (3 mm to 100 μm). The meso- and micro-channels have not yet entered into the HVAC and automotive heat exchanger industries to the expected potentials to take the above-mentioned advantages. The reasons may be the limited availability of experimental data on pressure drop and heat transfer and the lack of consolidated design correlations as compared to what is established for compact heat exchangers. While a number of studies available on standalone single straight channels, works on multi-channel slab similar to those used as typical thermal heat exchanger core elements are inadequate, especially the research on multichannel serpentine slab are limited in the open literature. The 50% ethylene glycol and water mixture is widely used in heat exchanger industry as a heat transfer fluid. Studies of pressure drop and heat transfer on this commercially important fluid using narrow tube multi-channel slab is scarce and the availability of experimental data is rare in the open literature. Conducting research on various shapes of meso- and micro-channel heat exchanger cores using a variety working fluids are a definite needs as recommended and consistently urged in ongoing research publications in this promising area. Under present long-term project, an automated dynamic single-phase experimental infrastructure has been developed to carryout the fluid flow and heat transfer research in meso- and micro-channel test specimens and prototype microchannel heat exchanger using a variety of working fluids in air-to-liquid crossflow orientation. In the series, experiments have been conducted on 50% ethylene glycol and water solution in a serpentine meso-channel slab having 68 individual channels of 1 mm hydraulic diameter to obtain the heat transfer data and the general pressure drop nature of the test fluid. Current paper presents the heat transfer characteristics of ethylene glycol-water mixture and the Reynolds number effects on pressure drop, heat transfer rate, test specimen NTU and effectiveness, overall thermal resistance, and the Nusselt number.


Author(s):  
Ahmed M. Nagib Elmekawy ◽  
Abdalrahman M. Shahin ◽  
Alaa A. Ibrahim ◽  
Sara Al-Ali

Abstract Two-dimensional simulations are carried out for a heat exchanger to study the cross-flow behavior in a circular tube bank in a staggered configuration in case of bare cylinders and cylinders with splitter plate attachment. A considerable performance evaluation of the heat exchanger with splitter plate can be achieved by studying the heat transfer and the pressure drop of the flow. Numerical simulation results carried out from this study are compared to experimental results. The numerical investigation has been established to study the effect of splitter plate on the heat exchanger thermal performance as there were no previous studies performed on the optimization of the splitter thickness. The study also illustrates the effect of splitter plate thickness variation on pressure drop and heat transfer for different Reynolds number.


Author(s):  
Paolo M. Congedo ◽  
Giuseppe Starace

A compact and efficient heat exchanger for exhaust gas recovery energy was needed to raise the total efficiency of a thermo-photovoltaic system TPV (Thermo-Photo-Voltaic) for automotive applications (see [1]). In order to respect the strict condition of a high heat transfer surface to volume ratio, a heat exchanger configuration with a plate compact multi-pass counter flow and locally cross-flow recuperator has been chosen. The goal of this work is the understanding of the behaviour of the heat exchanger with numerical and experimental analysis for different geometrical and operating conditions. A high number of dimensions and manufacturing constraints was evaluated before reaching a definite design of a compact and efficient heat exchanger to be tested in the lab for initial experiments. The experimental work was needed in order to validate the numerical model. As the material needed for the real application could not be easily manufactured and instrumented in a workshop, a simplified real model, made of brass, was built, in order to compare numerical results and experimental findings. It was supposed that results obtained in this way would be sufficient to be considered valid when extrapolated in the real heat exchanger high temperature operating conditions and manufacturing material. The experimental results have been successfully compared with numerical ones obtained with the Fluent CFD code (release 6.2.16) Curves of performance (ε-NTU diagram plotted as a function of the ratio between the minimum and the maximum thermal capacities of the flows and pressure drop -mass flowrate diagram as a function of the average temperature) have been obtained and were useful to choose the adequate configuration for different applications, depending on the requested heat transfer and maximum allowable pressure drop. The output of the investigation was: heat transfer, outlet temperatures for both air flows, heat exchanger efficiency, differential pressure drop for both hot and cold sides. After this validation final numerical simulations have been carried out in order to understand the dependence of the heat exchanger efficiency on other geometrical parameters and operating conditions such as plates dimensions, numbers and height of vanes, operating pressure and so on.


2013 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 120-127
Author(s):  
Jong-Min Kim ◽  
Jinsu Kim ◽  
Byeonghun Yu ◽  
Sungmin Kum ◽  
Chang-Eon Lee ◽  
...  

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