CH - 7 Heat Exchangers
CH - 7 Heat Exchangers
Heat Exchangers
In a car radiator, for example, heat is transferred from the hot water
flowing through the radiator tubes to the air flowing through the
closely spaced thin plates outside attached to the tubes.
Heat transfer in a heat exchanger usually involves convection in each fluid
and conduction through the wall separating the two fluids.
The rate of heat transfer between the two fluids at a location in a heat
exchanger depends on the magnitude of the temperature difference at
that location, which varies along the heat exchanger.
Parallel flow
Counter flow
Cross flow
Shell-and -tube
The most common type of heat exchanger in industrial applications is the
shell-and-tube heat exchanger,
Heat transfer takes place as one fluid flows inside the tubes while the other
fluid flows outside the tubes through the shell.
Baffles are commonly placed in the shell to force the shell-side fluid to flow
across the shell to enhance heat transfer and to maintain uniform spacing
between the tubes.
Despite their widespread use, shell-and-tube heat exchangers are not suitable
for use in automotive and aircraft applications because of their relatively
large size and weight.
Shell-and-tube heat exchangers are further classified according to
the number of shell and tube passes involved
Heat exchangers are often given specific names to reflect the
specific application for which they are used.
The ratio of the heat transfer surface area of a heat exchanger to its volume is
called the area density β.
These devices operate with heat transfer coefficients that are between
ten and one hundred times lower than the coefficients of liquid-to-liquid
exchangers.
A third type is the liquid-to-gas heat exchanger (or vice versa), usually
water and air are used, for instance in automotive radiators.
THE OVERALL HEAT TRANSFER COEFFICIENT
A heat exchanger typically involves two flowing fluids separated by a solid
wall.
Heat is first transferred from the hot fluid to the wall by convection, through
the wall by conduction, and from the wall to the cold fluid again by
convection.
Any radiation effects are usually included in the convection heat transfer
coefficients.
where U is the overall heat transfer coefficient, whose unit is W/m2· °C, which
is identical to the unit of the ordinary convection coefficient h.
Note that UiAi=Uo Ao, but Ui≠Uo unless Ai =Ao. Therefore, the
overall heat transfer coefficient U of a heat exchanger is
meaningless unless the area on which it is based is specified.
When the wall thickness of the tube is small and the thermal
conductivity of the tube material is high, as is usually the case, the
thermal resistance of the tube is negligible (Rwall ~0) and the inner
and outer surfaces of the tube are almost identical (Ai ~Ao ~As).
If you check the inner surfaces of your teapot after prolonged use, you will
probably notice a layer of calcium-based deposits on the surfaces at which
boiling occurs.
The fouling factor depends on the operating temperature and the velocity of
the fluids, as well as the length of service.
The overall heat transfer coefficient relation given above is valid for clean
surfaces and needs to be modified to account for the effects of fouling on
both the inner and the outer surfaces of the tube.
Heat exchangers usually operate for long periods of time with no change in
their operating conditions. Therefore, they can be modeled as steady-flow
de-vices.
As such, the mass flow rate of each fluid remains constant, and the fluid
properties such as temperature and velocity at any inlet or outlet remain the
same.
Also, the fluid streams experience little or no change in their velocities and
elevations, and thus the kinetic and potential energy changes are negligible.
This quantity is called the heat capacity rate and is defined for the
hot and cold fluid streams as
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
where U is the overall heat transfer coefficient, As is the heat transfer area
and Tm is an appropriate average temperature difference between the two
fluids.
In order to develop a relation for the equivalent average temperature
difference between the two fluids, consider the parallel-flow double-pipe
heat exchanger
•The rate of heat loss from the hot fluid at
any section of a heat exchanger is equal to the
rate of heat gain by the cold fluid in that
section.
The rate of heat transfer in the differential section of the heat exchanger
can also be expressed as
Integrating from the inlet of the heat exchanger to its outlet, we obtain
Similar relations are also developed for cross-flow and multipass shell-and-
tube heat exchangers, but the resulting expressions are too complicated
because of the complex flow conditions.
where the subscripts 1 and 2 represent the inlet and outlet, respectively.
Note that for a shell-and-tube heat exchanger, T and t represent the shell-
and tube-side temperatures, respectively, as shown in the correction factor
charts.
Once ΔTlm, the mass flow rates, and the overall heat transfer
coefficient are available, the heat transfer surface area of the heat
exchanger can be determined from:
The task is completed by selecting a heat exchanger that has a heat transfer
surface area equal to or larger than As .
A second kind of problem encountered in heat exchanger analysis is the
determination of the heat transfer rate and the outlet temperatures of the
hot and cold fluids for prescribed fluid mass flow rates and inlet
temperatures when the type and size of the heat exchanger are specified.
The heat transfer surface area A of the heat exchanger in this case is
known, but the outlet temperatures are not.
The LMTD method could still be used for this alternative problem, but
the procedure would require tedious iterations, and thus it is not
practical.
In an attempt to eliminate the iterations from the solution of such
problems, Kays and London came up with a method in 1955 called
the effectiveness–NTU method, which greatly simplified heat
exchanger analysis.
The heat transfer in a heat exchanger will reach its maximum value
when :
(1) The cold fluid is heated to the inlet temperature of the hot fluid or
(2) The hot fluid is cooled to the inlet temperature of the cold fluid.
These two limiting conditions will not be reached simultaneously
unless the heat capacity rates of the hot and cold fluids are
identical (i.e., Cc = Ch).
When Cc ≠ Ch, which is usually the case, the fluid with the
smaller heat capacity rate will experience a larger temperature
change, and thus it will be the first to experience the maximum
temperature, at which point the heat transfer will come to a halt.
Substituting this relation and after adding and subtracting Tc, in gives
which simplifies to
We now manipulate the definition of effectiveness to obtain
Substituting this result and solving fore gives the following relation for the effectiveness of a
parallel-flow heat exchanger:
Taking either Cc or Ch to be Cmin (both approaches give the same result), the relation above
can be expressed more conveniently as
Again Cmin is the smaller heat capacity ratio and Cmax is the larger one, and it makes no
difference whether Cmin belongs to the hot or cold fluid.
Effectiveness relations of the heat exchangers typically involve the
dimensionless group UAs /Cmin.
This quantity is called the number of transfer units NTU and is
expressed as:
Note that NTU is proportional to As . Therefore, for specified values of U and Cmin, the value of NTU is a
measure of the heat transfer surface area As .
Thus, the larger the NTU, the larger the heat exchanger.
In heat exchanger analysis, it is also convenient to define another dimensionless quantity called the
capacity ratio C as
It can be shown that the effectiveness of a heat exchanger is a function of the number of transfer units
NTU and the capacity ratio C. That is,