Heat exchangers. Forced circulation air-cooling and air-heating coils. Test procedures for establishing the performance

1994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Moisseytsev ◽  
Qiuping Lv ◽  
James J. Sienicki

The capability to utilize dry air cooling by which heat is directly rejected to the air atmosphere heat sink is one of the benefits of the supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) energy conversion cycle. For the selection and analysis of the heat exchanger options for dry air cooling applications for the sCO2 cycle, two leading forced air flow design approaches have been identified and analyzed for this application; an air cooler consisting of modular finned tube air coolers; and an air cooler consisting of modular compact diffusion-bonded heat exchangers. The commercially available modular finned tube air cooler is found to be more cost effective and is selected as the reference for dry air cooling.


1979 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 516-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
James C. Eastwood

The efficiency of turbocharged diesel engines can be increased by cooling the charge air. This paper presents a design approach for liquid-coupled indirect-transfer heat exchanger systems to perform the air-cooling function. The two advantages most commonly cited for this approach to charge-air cooling are (1) the heat exchangers involved are easily packaged so that their shapes can be controlled by judicious design, and (2) simple gas ducting allows for compact machinery arrangements and relatively low charge-air pressure drop. An analytical approach to the design of liquid-coupled indirect-transfer heat exchanger systems is presented. Performance curves are constructed on the basis of this analysis. Four important design conditions are evident from the observation of these performance curves including (1) the relative capacity rate combination of the three fluids (ambient air, coupling liquid, and engine charge-air) which yields the highest overall effectiveness, (2) an optimum coupling-liquid flow rate, (3) the relative effectiveness distribution for each of the two component heat exchangers (hot and cold components), and (4) a broad design range for the optimum area distribution between the hot and cold exchangers. These performance curves serve as a guide for the design of a liquid-coupled charge-air cooling system.


2001 ◽  
Vol 123 (5) ◽  
pp. 926-936 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Korte ◽  
A. M. Jacobi

A study of condensate retention is presented for plain-fin-and-tube heat exchangers typical to those used in air-cooling applications. An experiment in which the retained mass of air-side condensate was measured under dynamic conditions is described, and the results are analyzed using conventional thermal-hydraulic measurements of j and f. With the coupling between condensate retention and thermal performance established, a new model for predicting the mass of retained condensate is described and compared to the steady-state retention data. The model is successful in predicting retained condensate under relatively restricted conditions. The promise of this new approach, and possible refinements that will add engineering value are discussed.


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