Lecture 02 Conduction
Lecture 02 Conduction
Heat Exchangers
by
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Objectives
When you finish studying this chapter, you should be able to:
• Recognize numerous types of heat exchangers, and classify
them,
• Develop an awareness of fouling on surfaces, and determine
the overall heat transfer coefficient for a heat exchanger,
• Perform a general energy analysis on heat exchangers,
• Obtain a relation for the logarithmic mean temperature
difference for use in the LMTD method, and modify it for
different types of heat exchangers using the correction factor,
• Develop relations for effectiveness, and analyze heat
exchangers when outlet temperatures are not known using the
effectiveness-NTU method,
• Know the primary considerations in the selection of heat
exchangers.
Types of Heat Exchangers
• Different heat transfer applications
require different types of hardware
and different configurations of heat
transfer equipment.
Ai = Di L ; Ao = Do L
• It is convenient to combine all the thermal
resistances in the path of heat flow from the
hot fluid to the cold one into a single resistance
R
T
Q=
& = UAT = U i Ai T = U o Ao T (11-3)
R
U is the overall heat transfer coefficient,
whose unit is W/m2ºC.
• Canceling T, Eq. 11–3 reduces to
1 1 1 1 1
= = =R= + Rwall + (11-4)
UAs U i Ai U o Ao hi Ai ho Ao
• When the wall thickness of the tube is small
and the thermal conductivity of the tube
material is high (Rwall=0) and the inner and
outer surfaces of the tube are almost identical
(Ai≈Ao≈As), Eq. 11–4 simplifies to
1 1 1
+ (11-5)
U hi ho
1 1
• When hi>>ho
U ho
1 1
• When hi<<ho
U hi
Fouling Factor
• The performance of heat exchangers usually
deteriorates with time as a result of accumulation of
deposits on heat transfer surfaces.
• The layer of deposits represents additional resistance
to heat transfer and causes the rate of heat transfer in a
heat exchanger to decrease.
• The fouling factor Rf ─ The net effect of these
accumulations on heat transfer.
• Two common type of fouling:
– precipitation of solid deposits in a
fluid on the heat transfer surfaces.
– corrosion and other chemical fouling.
• The overall heat transfer coefficient needs to
be modified to account for the effects of
fouling on both the inner and the outer surfaces
of the tube.
• For an unfinned shell-and-tube heat exchanger,
it can be expressed as
1 R f ,i ln ( D0 Di ) R f ,o 1
R= + + + + (11-8)
hi Ai Ai 2 kL Ao ho Ao
Rf,i and Rf,o are the fouling factors at those
surfaces.
Analysis of Heat Exchangers
• Two different design tasks:
1) Specified:
- the temperature change in a fluid stream, and
- the mass flow rate.
Required:
- the designer needs to select a heat exchanger.
2) Specified:
- the heat exchanger type and size,
- fluid mass flow rate,
- inlet temperatures.
Required:
- the designer needs to predict the outlet temperatures and heat transfer
rate.
• Two methods used in the analysis of heat exchangers:
– the log mean temperature difference (or LMTD)
• best suited for the #1,
– the effectiveness–NTU method
• best suited for task #2.
• The analysis of heat exchangers can be greatly
simplify by making the following assumptions,
which are closely approximated in practice:
– steady-flow,
– kinetic and potential energy changes are
negligible,
– the specific heat of a fluid is constant,
– axial heat conduction along the tube is negligible,
– the outer surface of the heat exchanger is perfectly
insulated.
• The first law of thermodynamics requires that
the rate of heat transfer from the hot fluid be
equal to the rate of heat transfer to the cold
one.
• The transfer rate to the cold fluid:
Q&= m&c (T − T ) = C (T − T
c pc c ,out c ,in c c ,out c ,in );C
c = m&c c pc
(11-9) (11-12) (11-11)
• The transfer rate to the hot fluid:
Q&= m&h c ph (Th ,in − Th ,out ) = Ch (Th ,in − Th ,out ) ; Ch = m&h c ph
(11-10) (11-13) (11-11)
• Two special types of heat exchangers commonly used
in practice are condensers and boilers.
• One of the fluids in a condenser or a boiler undergoes
a phase-change process, and the rate of heat transfer
is expressed as
Q&= mh
& fg (11-14)
The Log Mean Temperature Difference
Method
• The temperature difference between the hot and cold
fluids varies along the heat exchanger.
→ it is convenient to have a mean temperature
difference Tm for use in the relation
Q&= UAs Tm (11-15)