O'Neill Lucas E, Park Ilchung, Kharangate Chirag R, Devahdhanush V S, Ganesan V, Mudawar Issam
Boiling and Two-Phase Flow Laboratory (BTPFL), School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, 585 Purdue Mall, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Int J Heat Mass Transf. 2017 Feb;106:313-328. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2016.07.019. Epub 2016 Jul 26.
This study concerns the development of a set of mechanistic criteria capable of predicting the flow conditions for which gravity independent flow condensation heat transfer can be achieved. Using FC-72 as working fluid, a control-volume based annular flow model is solved numerically to provide information regarding the magnitude of different forces acting on the liquid film and identify which forces are dominant for different flow conditions. Separating the influence of body force into two components, one parallel to flow direction and one perpendicular, conclusions drawn from the force term comparison are used to model limiting cases, which are interpreted as transition points for gravity independence. Experimental results for vertical upflow, vertical downflow, and horizontal flow condensation heat transfer coefficients are presented, and show that, for the given test section, mass velocities above 425 kg/m s ensure gravity independent heat transfer. Parametric evaluation of the criteria using different assumed values of mass velocity, orientation, local acceleration, and exit quality show that the criteria obey physically verifiable trends in line with those exhibited by the experimental results. As an extension, the separated flow model is utilized to provide a more sophisticated approach to determining whether a given configuration will perform independent of gravity. Results from the model show good qualitative agreement with experimental results. Additionally, analysis of trends indicate use of the separated flow model captures physics missed by simpler approaches, demonstrating that use of the separated flow model with the gravity independence criteria constitute a powerful predictive tool for engineers concerned with ensuring gravity independent flow condensation heat transfer performance.
本研究关注的是开发一套能够预测实现重力无关型流动冷凝传热所需流动条件的机理准则。以FC - 72作为工作流体,对基于控制体积的环状流模型进行数值求解,以获取作用于液膜上不同力的大小信息,并确定在不同流动条件下哪些力占主导地位。将体积力的影响分为平行于流动方向和垂直于流动方向的两个分量,从力项比较得出的结论用于对极限情况进行建模,这些极限情况被解释为重力无关的转变点。给出了垂直向上流动、垂直向下流动和水平流动冷凝传热系数的实验结果,结果表明,对于给定的试验段,质量流速高于425 kg/(m·s)可确保重力无关型传热。使用质量流速、方向、局部加速度和出口干度的不同假设值对准则进行参数评估,结果表明这些准则符合与实验结果一致的可物理验证的趋势。作为扩展,利用分离流模型提供一种更复杂的方法来确定给定构型是否能实现与重力无关的运行。模型结果与实验结果在定性上吻合良好。此外,趋势分析表明,分离流模型的使用捕捉到了简单方法遗漏的物理现象,这表明将分离流模型与重力无关准则结合使用,对于关注确保重力无关型流动冷凝传热性能的工程师而言,构成了一个强大的预测工具。