Evaluation of Heating Process of Apple, Eggplant, Zucchini and Potato by Means of Their Thermal Properties

Author(s):  
Hilario Terres ◽  
Sandra Chavez ◽  
Raymundo Lopez ◽  
Arturo Lizardi ◽  
Araceli Lara

In this work, the heating process for apple, eggplant, zucchini and potato by means of evaluation of their thermal properties and the Biot number determined in experimental form is presented. The heating process is carried out using a solar cooker box-type as heating device. The thermal experimental properties determined are conductivity (k), density (D), specific heat (C), diffusivity (Dif) and the Biot number (Bi) for each product evaluated. In the experimentation, temperatures for center and surface in each product and water were measured in controlled conditions. For those measures, a device Compact Fieldpoint and thermocouples placed in the points studied were used. By using correlations with temperature as function, k, D and C were calculated, while by using equations in transitory state for the products modeled as sphere and cylinder was possible to estimate the Biot number after calculation of the heat transfer coefficient for each case. Results indicate the higher value for k, C and Dif correspond to zucchini (0.65 W/m °C, 4084.5 J/kg °C, 1.5 × 10−7 m2), while higher value for D correspond to potato (1197.5 kg/m3). The lowest values for k and C were obtained for potato (0.59 W/m °C, 3658.3 J/kg °C) while lowest values for D and Dif, correspond to zucchini (998.2 kg/m3) and potato (1.45 × 10−7 m2/s) respectively. The maximum and minimum values for Bi corresponded to potato (21.4) and zucchini (0.41) in respective way. The results obtained are very useful in applications for solar energy devices, where estimates for properties are very important to generate new results, for example, numerical simulations. Also, results could be used to evaluate the cooking power in solar cookers when the study object is oriented in that direction.

Author(s):  
Gligor H. Kanevce ◽  
Ljubica P. Kanevce ◽  
George S. Dulikravich ◽  
Marcelo J. Colac¸o

The inverse problem of using temperature measurements to estimate the moisture content and temperature-dependent moisture diffusivity together with the heat and mass transfer coefficients is analyzed in this paper. In the convective drying practice, usually the mass transfer Biot number is very high and the heat transfer Biot number is very small. This leads to a very small temperature sensitivity coefficient with respect to the mass transfer coefficient when compared to the temperature sensitivity coefficient with respect to the heat transfer coefficient. Under these conditions the relative error of the estimated mass transfer coefficient is high. To overcome this problem, in this paper the mass transfer coefficient is related to the heat transfer coefficient through the analogy between the heat and mass transfer processes in the boundary layer. The resulting parameter estimation problem is then solved by using a hybrid constrained optimization algorithm OPTRAN.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guo-liang Bai ◽  
Ning-jun Du ◽  
Ya-zhou Xu ◽  
Chao-gang Qin

To reduce energy consumption and protect the environment, a type of hollow shale block with 29 rows of holes was designed and produced. This paper investigated the thermal properties of hollow shale blocks and walls. First, the guarding heat-box method was used to obtain the heat transfer coefficient of the hollow shale block walls. The experimental heat transfer coefficient is 0.726 W/m2·K, which would save energy compared to traditional wall materials. Then, the theoretical value of the heat transfer coefficient was calculated to be 0.546 W/m2·K. Furthermore, the one-dimensional steady heat conduction process for the block and walls was simulated using the finite element analysis software ANSYS. The predicted heat transfer coefficient for the walls was 0.671 W/m2·K, which was in good agreement with the test results. With the outstanding self-insulation properties, this type of hollow shale block could be used as a wall material without any additional insulation measures in masonry structures.


2016 ◽  
Vol 139 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chien-Shing Lee ◽  
Tom I-P. Shih ◽  
Kenneth Mark Bryden

The heat transfer coefficient (HTC) is often averaged spatially when designing heat exchangers. Since the HTC could vary appreciably about a heat transfer enhancement feature such as a pin fin or a rib, it is of interest to understand the effects of averaging the HTC on design. This computational study examines those effects via a unit problem—a flat plate of thickness H and length L, where L represents the distance between pin-fins or ribs. This flat plate is heated on one side, and cooled on the other. Variable HTC is imposed on the cooled side—a higher HTC (hH) over LH and a lower HTC (hL) over LL = L − LH. For this unit problem, the following parameters were studied: abrupt versus gradual transition between hH and hL, hH/hL, LH/L, and H/L. Results obtained show that if the averaged HTC is used, then the maximum temperature in the plate and the maximum temperature gradient in the plate can be severely underpredicted. The maximum temperature and the maximum temperature gradient can be underpredicted by as much as 36.3% and 542%, respectively, if the Biot number is less than 0.1 and as much as 13.0% and 570% if the Biot number is between 0.25 and 0.4. A reduced-order model was developed to estimate the underpredicted maximum temperature.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elham Maghsoudi ◽  
Michael James Martin

Heat transfer in a thermally positioned doubly clamped bridge is simulated to obtain a universal scaling for the behavior of microscale and nanoscale bridge structures over a range of dimensions, materials, ambient heat transfer conditions, and heat loads. The simulations use both free molecular and continuum models to define the heat transfer coefficient, h. Two systems are compared: one doubly clamped beam with a length of 100 μm, a width of 10 μm, and a thickness of 3 μm, and a second beam with a length of 10 μm, a width of 1 μm, and a thickness of 300 nm, in the air at a pressure from 0.01 Pa to 2 MPa. The simulations are performed for three materials: crystalline silicon, silicon carbide, and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond. The numerical results show that the displacement and the response of thermally positioned nanoscale devices are strongly influenced by ambient cooling. The displacement depends on the material properties, the geometry of the beam, and the heat transfer coefficient. These results can be collapsed into a single dimensionless center displacement, δ* = δk/q″αl2, which depends on the Biot number and the system geometry. The center displacement of the system increases significantly as the bridge length increases, while these variations are negligible when the bridge width and thickness change. In the free molecular model, the center displacement varies significantly with the pressure at high Biot numbers, while it does not depend on cooling gas pressure in the continuum case. The significant variation of center displacement starts at Biot number of 0.1, which occurs at gas pressure of 27 kPa in nanoscale. As the Biot number increases, the dimensionless displacement decreases. The continuum-level effects are scaled with the statistical mechanics effects. Comparison of the dimensionless displacement with the thermal vibration in the system shows that CVD diamond systems may have displacements that are at the level of the thermal noise, while silicon carbide systems will have a higher displacement ratios.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 391-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Mahajan ◽  
C. P. Malhotra ◽  
R. K. Sharma

An analytical model relating the degree of cure of an underfill epoxy to the heat transfer coefficient of the heating process and time is presented. The model was verified experimentally by partially curing samples of a commercial underfill epoxy in two different heating environments for various times and scanning the samples in a differential scanning calorimeter to determine the degree of cure. A simplified equation can be used to relate the time required to achieve a given degree of cure to the heat transfer coefficient and the isothermal cure time.


TAPPI Journal ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 441-450
Author(s):  
HENRIK WALLMO, ◽  
ULF ANDERSSON ◽  
MATHIAS GOURDON ◽  
MARTIN WIMBY

Many of the pulp mill biorefinery concepts recently presented include removal of lignin from black liquor. In this work, the aim was to study how the change in liquor chemistry affected the evaporation of kraft black liquor when lignin was removed using the LignoBoost process. Lignin was removed from a softwood kraft black liquor and four different black liquors were studied: one reference black liquor (with no lignin extracted); two ligninlean black liquors with a lignin removal rate of 5.5% and 21%, respectively; and one liquor with maximum lignin removal of 60%. Evaporation tests were carried out at the research evaporator in Chalmers University of Technology. Studied parameters were liquor viscosity, boiling point rise, heat transfer coefficient, scaling propensity, changes in liquor chemical composition, and tube incrustation. It was found that the solubility limit for incrustation changed towards lower dry solids for the lignin-lean black liquors due to an increased salt content. The scaling obtained on the tubes was easily cleaned with thin liquor at 105°C. It was also shown that the liquor viscosity decreased exponentially with increased lignin outtake and hence, the heat transfer coefficient increased with increased lignin outtake. Long term tests, operated about 6 percentage dry solids units above the solubility limit for incrustation for all liquors, showed that the heat transfer coefficient increased from 650 W/m2K for the reference liquor to 1500 W/m2K for the liquor with highest lignin separation degree, 60%.


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