Effects of Heterogeneous Nucleation of Water Vapor in Nozzles

1970 ◽  
Vol 92 (4) ◽  
pp. 689-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Pouring

Condensation initiated by heterogeneous nucleation, which is surface dependent, is examined experimentally for the case of rapid nozzle expansions of water vapor. In contrast to previous de Laval nozzle steam experiments for vapor condensation initiated by homogeneous nucleation, the present results are for flows seeded with inorganic smoke and metallic ions. The influence of heterogeneous seeding materials on the condensation process is readily observable by comparison of seeded and unseeded experiments which are otherwise identical. Quantitative results for temperature and other properties, as well as condensation rates, follow based on pressure distribution. The results indicate that the prolonged isentropic expansion of a seeded flow gives a substantial decrease in entropy production for 1/10 micron and below particle sizes determined by electron microscopy. An attempt is made at determining the relative influence of ions and smokes. The competitive nature between heterogeneous and homogeneous processes is clearly evident.

Author(s):  
Hualing Zhang ◽  
Liu Chao

The model of two phases of liquid and vapor flow and vapor condensation under the condition of exerted force was established in parallel nanochannel. Fluid was water molecular and the solid walls are composed of Pt atoms. The process of vapor condensation in nanochannel wall was simulated by molecular dynamic simulation. The different flow patterns of the condensation process of superheated water vapor, which mainly were annular flow, injection flow, slug flow, bubble flow and shrinking bubble flow, were observed under different conditions. For low pressure of water vapor, a new flow pattern which was named as fluctuation flow appeared during condensation process. The simulation results agreed very well with the experimental results provided by references.


Author(s):  
Jiang Bian ◽  
Xuewen Cao

Abstract Condensation phenomenon has been studied actively for decades because of its extensive and significant applications in various fields of technology and engineering. The condensation phenomenon of condensable component in supersonic flows is still not understood very well as a result of the complex nucleation and droplet growth process, especially the condensation characteristic of gas mixture. In this paper, the Laval nozzle was designed based on the bi-cubic curve, state equation of real gas, arc plus straight line and viscous correction of boundary layer. The physical and mathematical models were developed to predict the condensation process in the supersonic air flows based on the nucleation and droplet growth theories, surface tension model and gas-liquid governing equations. The condensation processes of gaseous water/air binary (single condensable) gas and water/ethanol/air ternary (double condensable) gas mixture in the designed nozzle were simulated, and the reliability of the established models was verified by the experimental data. By comparing the condensation process of water/air binary gas with water/ethanol ternary gas, the influence of the second condensable component on the condensation process was analyzed. The results show that in the condensation process of gaseous water, as the pressure and temperature of water vapor decrease in the nozzle, spontaneous condensation occurs further downstream the nozzle throat. The nucleation rate grows rapidly from 0 to peak in a very short distance. With the consumption of water vapor, due to the decrease of the degree of supercooling, the nucleation environment is destroyed, and the nucleation rate quickly decreases to 0. The nucleation process is rapid in time and space, while the droplet growth process could maintain longer. The droplet number and mass fraction increase continuously till the nozzle outlet. There is a weak condensation in the nozzle due to the release of latent heat, but it is not obvious because the air acts as a heat container and absorbs the latent heat released by condensation. In the water/ethanol/air ternary system, the ethanol nucleates prior to water vapor. With the increase of supercooling, water vapor also begins to nucleate. In essence, there are two kinds of condensation nuclei (water nuclei and ethanol nuclei), and both the water and ethanol vapor can aggregate on these two kinds of condensation nuclei. Compared with the condensation process of water, the Wilson point of condensation is closer to the throat and the outlet mass fraction of liquid phase is greater in the condensation process of water/ethanol mixture, which shows that the water and ethanol can affect and promote each other. The maximum nucleation rate, droplet growth rate, droplet radius and outlet mass fraction of liquid phase of water/air binary and water/ethanol/air ternary mixture are about 9.46 × 1026 m−3s−1 and 2.57 × 1027 m−3s−1, 1.65 × 10−5 m/s and 1.02 × 10−5m/s, 1.32 × 10−7m and 1.63 × 10−7m, 0.19% and 1.34%, respectively.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
Mustapha Ait Hssain ◽  
Sara Armou ◽  
Kaoutar Zine-Dine ◽  
Rachid Mir ◽  
Youness El Hammami

This paper is aimed at investigating the nanofluid film condensation by mixed convection in the presence of water vapor, Cu nanoparticles, and air treated as a noncondensable gas (NCG) on the inner walls of a vertical channel. In this simulation, the flow is laminar, stationary, two dimensional, and axisymmetric. The coupled governing equations for the liquid film with the nanoparticles and the mixture air-humid-nanoparticles are solved together using the finite volume method. Since the application of humid air condensation is one of the most applicable methods of phase change processes that is observed in different industrial fields such as heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) or cooling systems, for this purpose, the influence of injecting a uniform volume fraction of nanoparticles on improving heat and mass transfer is determined as a function of the variation in relative humidity, velocity, temperature, pressure, and volume fraction of Cu nanoparticles at the channel inlet. The numerical results indicate that under the best conditions in the range of variation studied RH in = 100 % , Re in = 2000 , T in = 50 ° C , P in = 0.5     atm , and φ in = 0.1 % , the use of nanoparticles has a greater impact, and the maximum improvement in the condensation film thickness, the local Nusselt number, and the accumulated condensation rate has an effective ratio strictly greater than one compared with the case of pure humid air.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 844
Author(s):  
Robertas Poškas ◽  
Arūnas Sirvydas ◽  
Vladislavas Kulkovas ◽  
Povilas Poškas

Waste heat recovery from flue gas based on water vapor condensation is an important issue as the waste heat recovery significantly increases the efficiency of the thermal power units. General principles for designing of this type of heat exchangers are known rather well; however, investigations of the local characteristics necessary for the optimization of those heat exchangers are very limited. Investigations of water vapor condensation from biofuel flue gas in the model of a vertical condensing heat exchanger were performed without and with water injection into a calorimetric tube. During the base-case investigations, no water was injected into the calorimetric tube. The results showed that the humidity and the temperature of inlet flue gas have a significant effect on the local and average heat transfer. For some regimes, the initial part of the condensing heat exchanger was not effective in terms of heat transfer because there the flue gas was cooled by convection until its temperature reached the dew point temperature. The results also showed that, at higher Reynolds numbers, there was an increase in the length of the convection prevailing region. After that region, a sudden increase was observed in heat transfer due to water vapor condensation.


Author(s):  
Nicholas Goodman ◽  
Brian J Leege ◽  
Peter E Johnson

Exposing students to hands-on experiments has been a common approach to illustrating complex physical phenomena that have been otherwise modelled solely mathematically. Compressible, isentropic flow in a duct is an example of such a phenomenon, and it is often demonstrated via a de Laval nozzle experiment. We have improved an existing converging/diverging nozzle experiment so that students can modify the location of the normal shock that develops in the diverging portion to better understand the relationship between the shock and the pressure. We have also improved the data acquisition system for this experiment and explained how visualisation of the standing shock is now possible. The results of the updated system demonstrate that the accuracy of the isentropic flow characteristics has not been lost. Through pre- and post-laboratory quizzes, we show the impact on student learning as well.


Author(s):  
Zi-Jie Wang ◽  
Shao-Yu Wang ◽  
Dan-Qi Wang ◽  
Yan-Ru Yang ◽  
Xiao-Dong Wang ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 131-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eunseuk Park ◽  
Sungmin Chin ◽  
Yeon Seok Kim ◽  
Gwi-Nam Bae ◽  
Jongsoo Jurng

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