Analytical and experimental investigations of packed bed solar air heaters under the collective effect of recycle ratio and fractional mass flow rate

2018 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 167-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satyender Singh ◽  
Prashant Dhiman
2015 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Satyender Singh ◽  
Prashant Dhiman

The present work intended to investigate thermal and thermohydraulic efficiencies of two different models of recyclic double pass packed bed solar air heaters experimentally. Model-I consists of single air pass through two glass covers as well as double air pass caused due to recycle of the air exiting from the packed bed duct formed between the absorber plate and the glass cover through another duct integrated between the absorber and back plates to inlet of the packed bed duct. On the other hand, model-II consists of only double air pass originated due to recycle operation constituted between the similar solar air heater elements as that of model-I. Twelve numbers of wire mesh screens to form 95% bed porosity were used. Both solar air heater models were tested under the range of packed bed Reynolds number from 300 to 1500 for air mass flow rate and recycle ratio of 0.01 kg/s to 0.025 kg/s and 0.3 to 1.8, respectively. Results revealed that thermal performance of model-I is found to be 15% higher than that of model-II. The optimum value of the recycle ratio for model-I and model-II are obtained as 0.9 and 1.2, respectively, at a mass flow rate of 0.025 kg/s that yields the best thermohydraulic efficiency of 77% and 67%, respectively. Moreover, optimum solution for recycle ratio and air mass flow rate during off sun shine hours are also obtained and presented in the current work.


Author(s):  
Souheyla Khaldi ◽  
A. Nabil Korti ◽  
Said Abboudi

AbstractThis article provides numerical study of the solar chimney (SC) assembled with a reversed absorber and packed bed for the indirect-mode solar dryer. The present study was designed to determine the effects of using the SC in three configuration and physical proprieties of the packed (thickness and porosity) on the dynamic and thermal behavior of airflow. The results reveal that (1) using SC without storage material can increase the maximum mass flow rate up to 5%. However, integrating a storage material in the SC can improve the mass flow rate up to 32% during nighttime; (2) the use of a packed bed can decrease the crops temperature fluctuation until about 76% and increase the operating time of the solar dryer up to 12.5 hours rather than 10 hours in the case without packed bed; (3) increasing the porosity from 0.1 to 0.8 can increase the maximum temperature by about 10°C.


Author(s):  
Youssef Morghi ◽  
Jesus Puente ◽  
Amir Mesquita ◽  
Ana Baliza

Gas/liquid two-phase stratified flows in horizontal channels are frequently encountered in nuclear reactors, oil and gas pipelines, steam generators, refrigeration equipment, reflux condensers, packed columns, and heat pipes. The phenomenon known as countercurrent flow limitation, or flooding, is the limiting condition where the flow rates of neither the gas nor the liquid can be further increased without changing the flow pattern. This is the condition where the maximum air mass flow rate at which the down-flowing water mass flow rate is equal to the inlet water mass flow rate. This limiting condition, also known as onset of flooding, can occur in vertical or horizontal geometry. This work is a review of recent experimental investigations of countercurrent flow limitation (CCFL) for various hot-leg geometries of pressurized water reactors (PWRs). We compare results with those obtained from the Nuclear Technology Development Centre (CDTN) in 2005. Recent experimental results in the literature are in good agreement with the 2005 findings.


Author(s):  
Xiao Chen ◽  
Ye Feng ◽  
Lijun Wu

In a modern gas turbine, the air bled through High Pressure Compressor (HPC) rotor drums from the main flow is transported radially inwards and then transferred to cool the High Pressure Turbine (HPT). The centripetal air flow creates a strong vortex, which results in huge pressure losses. This not only restricts the mass flow rate, but also reduces the cooling air pressure for down-stream hot components. Adding vortex reducer tubes to the centripetal air bleed can reduce the pressure loss and ensure the pressure and mass flow rate of the supply air. Design optimization of the tubed vortex reducer is essential in minimizing the pressure losses. This paper describes experimental investigations of different configurations of tubed vortex reducers at different rotational speeds and mass flow rates. Particular attention is paid to the shape of the drum hole, the length of the tubed vortex reducers at the same installation location, and the angles of the nozzle guide vane outlets. The core section of test rig is comprised of two steel disks, one drum rotor and stationary cases with nozzle guide vanes. It operates at representative engine parameters, such as the turbulent flow parameter, λT(0.2–1.8) and the Rossby number Ro(0.05–0.08). Three conclusions can be drawn based on the experimental results. 1) The shape of the drum hole is a key factor of the bleed system pressure loss. An oval hole configuration has less flow resistance and results in lower pressure losses compared with a circular hole design. 2) The tests prove that tubed vortex reducers are instrumental in minimizing centripetal air flow. These components effectively restrain the free vortex development and decrease the pressure losses in the cavity. 3) Basically, the flow field consists of a free vortex and a forced vortex. The length of the tube influences the flow field and the pressure losses at the inlet and outlet of the tubed vortex reducer. However, the tube length is less important when compared with the shape of drum hole.


Author(s):  
C Kannan ◽  
M Mohanraj ◽  
P Sathyabalan

In this paper, the performances of a novel jet impingement solar air collector (JISAC) using flat and pin-fin absorbers were experimentally investigated. The experimental observations in a JISAC have been made under the climatic conditions of Coimbatore city in India during the year 2019. The thermo-hydraulic analyses were conduced to study the influence of pressure drop across the perforated jet plate. The effects of solar irradiation, ambient temperature, ambient wind velocity and air mass flow rate through the JISAC duct using flat and pin-fin absorbers were studied. The air mass flow rate through the JISAC was optimized to 0.025 kg/s based on the experimental trials. Thermodynamic performance comparisons have been made among the flat and pin-fin absorbers. The results showed that, the JISAC using pin-fin absorber has 2–7°C higher air temperature at the outlet with 3–7%, 2–6% and 2–6% improved energy efficiency, thermo-hydraulic efficiency and exergy efficiency, respectively when compared to the JISAC using flat absorber. The pressure drop across the JISAC duct is about 90% higher when compared to the conventional solar air collectors. The pressure drop through the jet plate has increased the air velocity impinging on the absorber. As a result, the heat transfer coefficient between air and the absorber has been significantly improved.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 405-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Ray ◽  
B. Ünsal ◽  
F. Durst ◽  
Ö. Ertunc ◽  
O. A. Bayoumi

Pressure gradient driven, laminar, fully developed pulsating pipe flows have been extensively studied by various researchers and the data for the resultant flow field are available in a number of publications. The present paper, however, concentrates on related flows that are mass flow driven, i.e., the flows where the mass flow rate is prescribed as ṁ=ṁM+ṁAfm(t) and fm(t) is periodically varying in time. Sinusoidal and triangular mass flow rate pulsations in time are analytically considered in detail. Results of experimental investigations are presented and are complemented by data deduced from corresponding analytical and numerical studies. Overall, the results provide a clear insight into mass flow rate driven, laminar, fully developed pulsating pipe flow. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, flows of this kind have not been studied before experimentally, analytically and numerically.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 175-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gnanadurai Sugantharaj ◽  
Kumar Vijay ◽  
Kalidasa Kulundaivel

Solar air heating is a technology in which the solar energy from the sun is captured by an absorbing medium and used to heat the air flowing through the heater. In this study, thermal performance of a double pass solar air heater has been investigated experimentally at different conditions. The experiments were conducted with different inclinations of the collector, with and without wire mesh vertically fixed at the second pass in transverse direction and with different mass flow rates. The effect of air mass flow rate, wire mesh pitch and collector inclination on temperature rise and thermal efficiency have been studied. Results show that efficiency increases with mass flow rate. For the same mass flow rate, the thermal efficiency increases with the decrease in the wire mesh pitch. The maximum daily average efficiency of air heater was 79.8% at 0.025 kg/s mass flow rate, 10 cm wire mesh gap and 9? collector inclination facing south. The highest collector efficiency was observed in solar air heaters with 10 cm wire mesh gap.


Author(s):  
V.N. Petrov ◽  
◽  
V.F. Sopin ◽  
L.A. Akhmetzyanova ◽  
Ya.S. Petrova ◽  
...  

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