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    Internal Condensing Flows inside a Vertical Pipe: Experimental/Computational Investigations of the Effects of Specified and Unspecified (Free) Conditions at Exit

    Source: Journal of Heat Transfer:;2007:;volume( 129 ):;issue: 010::page 1352
    Author:
    A. Narain
    ,
    J. H. Kurita
    ,
    M. Kivisalu
    ,
    A. Siemionko
    ,
    S. Kulkarni
    ,
    T. W. Ng
    ,
    N. Kim
    ,
    L. Phan
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2755063
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Reported experimental and computational results confirm that both the flow features and heat-transfer rates inside a condenser depend on the specification of inlet, wall, and exit conditions. The results show that the commonly occurring condensing flows’ special sensitivity to changes in exit conditions (i.e., changes in exit pressure) arises from the ease with which these changes alter the vapor flow field in the interior. When, at a fixed steady mass flow rate, the exit pressure is changed from one steady value to another, the changes required of the interior vapor flow toward achieving a new steady duct flow are such that they do not demand a removal of the new exit pressure imposition back to the original steady value—as is the case for incompressible single phase duct flows with an original and “required” exit pressure. Instead, new steady flows may be achieved through appropriate changes in the vapor/liquid interfacial configurations and associated changes in interfacial mass, heat-transfer rates (both local and overall), and other flow variables. This special feature of these flows has been investigated here for the commonly occurring large heat sink situations, for which the condensing surface temperature (not heat flux) remains approximately the same for any given set of inlet conditions while the exit-condition changes. In this paper’s context of flows of a pure vapor that experience film condensation on the inside walls of a vertical tube, the reported results provide an important quantitative and qualitative understanding and support an exit-condition-based categorization of the flows. Experimental results and selected relevant computational results that are presented here reinforce the fact that there exist multiple steady solutions (with different heat-transfer rates) for multiple steady prescriptions of the exit condition—even though the other boundary conditions do not change. However, for some situations that do not fix any specific value for the exit condition (say, exit pressure) but allow the flow the freedom to choose any exit pressure value within a certain range, experiments confirm the computational results that, given enough time, there typically exists, under normal gravity conditions, a self-selected “natural” steady flow with a natural exit condition. This happens if the vapor flow is seeking (or is attracted to) a specific exit condition and the conditions downstream of the condenser allow the vapor flow a range of exit conditions that includes the specific natural exit condition of choice. However, for some unspecified exit-condition cases involving partial condensation, even if computations predict that a natural exit-condition choice exists, the experimental arrangement employed here does not allow the flow to approach its steady natural exit-condition value. Instead, it only allows oscillatory exit conditions leading to an oscillatory flow. For the reported experiments, these oscillatory pressures are induced and imposed by the instabilities in the system components downstream of the condenser.
    keyword(s): Flow (Dynamics) AND Condensation ,
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      Internal Condensing Flows inside a Vertical Pipe: Experimental/Computational Investigations of the Effects of Specified and Unspecified (Free) Conditions at Exit

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/136195
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    • Journal of Heat Transfer

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    contributor authorA. Narain
    contributor authorJ. H. Kurita
    contributor authorM. Kivisalu
    contributor authorA. Siemionko
    contributor authorS. Kulkarni
    contributor authorT. W. Ng
    contributor authorN. Kim
    contributor authorL. Phan
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:24:33Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:24:33Z
    date copyrightOctober, 2007
    date issued2007
    identifier issn0022-1481
    identifier otherJHTRAO-27825#1352_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/136195
    description abstractReported experimental and computational results confirm that both the flow features and heat-transfer rates inside a condenser depend on the specification of inlet, wall, and exit conditions. The results show that the commonly occurring condensing flows’ special sensitivity to changes in exit conditions (i.e., changes in exit pressure) arises from the ease with which these changes alter the vapor flow field in the interior. When, at a fixed steady mass flow rate, the exit pressure is changed from one steady value to another, the changes required of the interior vapor flow toward achieving a new steady duct flow are such that they do not demand a removal of the new exit pressure imposition back to the original steady value—as is the case for incompressible single phase duct flows with an original and “required” exit pressure. Instead, new steady flows may be achieved through appropriate changes in the vapor/liquid interfacial configurations and associated changes in interfacial mass, heat-transfer rates (both local and overall), and other flow variables. This special feature of these flows has been investigated here for the commonly occurring large heat sink situations, for which the condensing surface temperature (not heat flux) remains approximately the same for any given set of inlet conditions while the exit-condition changes. In this paper’s context of flows of a pure vapor that experience film condensation on the inside walls of a vertical tube, the reported results provide an important quantitative and qualitative understanding and support an exit-condition-based categorization of the flows. Experimental results and selected relevant computational results that are presented here reinforce the fact that there exist multiple steady solutions (with different heat-transfer rates) for multiple steady prescriptions of the exit condition—even though the other boundary conditions do not change. However, for some situations that do not fix any specific value for the exit condition (say, exit pressure) but allow the flow the freedom to choose any exit pressure value within a certain range, experiments confirm the computational results that, given enough time, there typically exists, under normal gravity conditions, a self-selected “natural” steady flow with a natural exit condition. This happens if the vapor flow is seeking (or is attracted to) a specific exit condition and the conditions downstream of the condenser allow the vapor flow a range of exit conditions that includes the specific natural exit condition of choice. However, for some unspecified exit-condition cases involving partial condensation, even if computations predict that a natural exit-condition choice exists, the experimental arrangement employed here does not allow the flow to approach its steady natural exit-condition value. Instead, it only allows oscillatory exit conditions leading to an oscillatory flow. For the reported experiments, these oscillatory pressures are induced and imposed by the instabilities in the system components downstream of the condenser.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleInternal Condensing Flows inside a Vertical Pipe: Experimental/Computational Investigations of the Effects of Specified and Unspecified (Free) Conditions at Exit
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume129
    journal issue10
    journal titleJournal of Heat Transfer
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2755063
    journal fristpage1352
    journal lastpage1372
    identifier eissn1528-8943
    keywordsFlow (Dynamics) AND Condensation
    treeJournal of Heat Transfer:;2007:;volume( 129 ):;issue: 010
    contenttypeFulltext
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