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Experimental results on gravity driven fully condensing flows in vertical tubes, their agreement with theory, and their differences with shear driven flows' boundary-condition sensitivities

Posted on:2012-09-23Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Michigan Technological UniversityCandidate:Kurita, Jorge HFull Text:PDF
GTID:2450390008992755Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
This doctoral thesis presents the experimental results along with a suitable synthesis with computational/theoretical results towards development of a reliable heat transfer correlation for a specific annular condensation flow regime inside a vertical tube. For fully condensing flows of pure vapor (FC-72) inside a vertical cylindrical tube of 6.6 mm diameter and 0.7 m length, the experimental measurements are shown to yield values of average heat transfer coefficient, and approximate length of full condensation.;The experimental conditions cover: mass flux G over a range of 2.9 kg/m 2-s ≤ G ≤ 87.7 kg//m2-s, temperature difference DeltaT (saturation temperature at the inlet pressure minus the mean condensing surface temperature) of 5 ºC to 45 ºC, and cases for which the length of full condensation xFC is in the range of 0 < xFC < 0.7 m.;The range of flow conditions over which there is good agreement (within 15%) with the theory and its modeling assumptions has been identified. Additionally, the ranges of flow conditions for which there are significant discrepancies (between 15--30% and greater than 30%) with theory have also been identified.;The paper also refers to a brief set of key experimental results with regard to sensitivity of the flow to time-varying or quasi-steady (i.e. steady in the mean) impositions of pressure at both the inlet and the outlet. The experimental results support the updated theoretical/computational results that gravity dominated condensing flows do not allow such elliptic impositions.
Keywords/Search Tags:Experimental results, Condensing flows, Vertical, Theory
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