Return to search

Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop During Condensation of Refrigerants in Microchannels

Two-phase flow, boiling, and condensation in microchannels have received considerable
attention in the recent past due to the growing interest in the high heat

fluxes made possible by these channels. This dissertation presents a study on

the condensation of refrigerant R134a in small hydraulic diameter (100 < Dh

< 160 mm) channels. A novel technique is used for the measurement

of local condensation heat transfer coefficients in small quality increments,

which has typically been found to be difficult due to the low heat transfer

rates at the small flow rates in these microchannels. This method is used to

accurately determine pressure drop and heat transfer coefficients for mass

fluxes between 300 and 800 kg/m2-s and quality 0 < x <

1 at four different saturation temperatures between 30 and 60oC. The

results obtained from this study capture the effect of variations in mass flux,

quality, saturation temperature, hydraulic diameter, and channel aspect ratio

on the observed pressure drop and heat transfer coefficients. Based on the available

flow regime maps, it was assumed that either the intermittent or annular flow

regimes prevail in these channels for the flow conditions under consideration.

Internally consistent pressure drop and heat transfer models are proposed

taking into account the effect of mass flux, quality, saturation temperature, hydraulic

diameter, and channel aspect ratio. The proposed models predict 95% and 94% of

the pressure drop and heat transfer data within ±25%, respectively. Both

pressure drop and heat transfer coefficient increase with a decrease in

hydraulic diameter, increase in channel aspect ratio and decrease in saturation

temperature. A new non-dimensional parameter termed Annular Flow Factor is also

introduced to quantify the predominance of intermittent or annular flow in the

channels as the geometric parameters and operating conditions change. This

study leads to a comprehensive understanding of condensation in microchannels

for use in high-flux heat transfer applications.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/14129
Date20 November 2006
CreatorsAgarwal, Akhil
PublisherGeorgia Institute of Technology
Source SetsGeorgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
Format8953560 bytes, application/pdf

Page generated in 0.0017 seconds