Water Evaporation and Condensation in Air With Radiation: The Self-Similar Spalding ModelSource: Journal of Heat Transfer:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 008::page 81501Author:Brewster, M. Q.
DOI: 10.1115/1.4036075Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Abstract: Several simple ways of improving the accuracy of Spalding model predictions over common textbook conventions for air/water evaporation/condensation problems are illustrated using open-literature examples. First is the choice of thermodynamic reference state for enthalpy evaluation. The common practice of choosing the steam table reference point (0.01 °C) with water-vapor enthalpy of hfg (2501 kJ/kg) and air enthalpy of zero introduces an enthalpy mismatch between air and water vapor that unnecessarily compromises accuracy. Choosing the air/water interface temperature as the reference point and setting both air and water-vapor enthalpies at this point to the same numerical value gives the most accurate results of several methods tried. Second is judicious choice of the blowing factor in high-rate mass transfer situations. The laminar boundary layer blowing factor is more accurate than the common stagnant-film (Couette flow) blowing factor for flat-plate flow and may be more accurate for a cylinder in crossflow under laminar conditions, as illustrated by the example of air leak effect on steam condenser tube performance. Third is radiation modeling, often a problematic or ignored feature in this type of problem. Two common, but opposite, assumptions about radiation participation in water—transparent interface and opaque interface—are shown to be equivalent for most purposes. A methodology is introduced for modeling true interfacial absorption/emission associated with phase change if/when the amount of this effect becomes known well enough to justify its inclusion. The importance of including radiation is illustrated by several examples: cloud droplet evaporation–condensation, sweat cooling, and the wet-bulb psychrometer. Fourth is inaccuracy introduced by unnecessarily setting Lewis number to unity.
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contributor author | Brewster, M. Q. | |
date accessioned | 2017-11-25T07:16:55Z | |
date available | 2017-11-25T07:16:55Z | |
date copyright | 2017/11/4 | |
date issued | 2017 | |
identifier issn | 0022-1481 | |
identifier other | ht_139_08_081501.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4234292 | |
description abstract | Several simple ways of improving the accuracy of Spalding model predictions over common textbook conventions for air/water evaporation/condensation problems are illustrated using open-literature examples. First is the choice of thermodynamic reference state for enthalpy evaluation. The common practice of choosing the steam table reference point (0.01 °C) with water-vapor enthalpy of hfg (2501 kJ/kg) and air enthalpy of zero introduces an enthalpy mismatch between air and water vapor that unnecessarily compromises accuracy. Choosing the air/water interface temperature as the reference point and setting both air and water-vapor enthalpies at this point to the same numerical value gives the most accurate results of several methods tried. Second is judicious choice of the blowing factor in high-rate mass transfer situations. The laminar boundary layer blowing factor is more accurate than the common stagnant-film (Couette flow) blowing factor for flat-plate flow and may be more accurate for a cylinder in crossflow under laminar conditions, as illustrated by the example of air leak effect on steam condenser tube performance. Third is radiation modeling, often a problematic or ignored feature in this type of problem. Two common, but opposite, assumptions about radiation participation in water—transparent interface and opaque interface—are shown to be equivalent for most purposes. A methodology is introduced for modeling true interfacial absorption/emission associated with phase change if/when the amount of this effect becomes known well enough to justify its inclusion. The importance of including radiation is illustrated by several examples: cloud droplet evaporation–condensation, sweat cooling, and the wet-bulb psychrometer. Fourth is inaccuracy introduced by unnecessarily setting Lewis number to unity. | |
publisher | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) | |
title | Water Evaporation and Condensation in Air With Radiation: The Self-Similar Spalding Model | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 139 | |
journal issue | 8 | |
journal title | Journal of Heat Transfer | |
identifier doi | 10.1115/1.4036075 | |
journal fristpage | 81501 | |
journal lastpage | 081501-13 | |
tree | Journal of Heat Transfer:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 008 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |