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Heat Pipes

Heat Pipes

Heat Pipes

(OP)
I am looking for a book on the design of heat pipes.  The catch is that I want to use them in an industrial setting, not for the cpu on a computer.  I would like to build a couple on our own to see how it works out.  Any ideas are appreciated.

Thanks
StoneCold

RE: Heat Pipes

There several books available on heat pipes with most being in the $150 dollar range.  In looking for a book make sure you get a recent publishing date as the landscape has changed.  
There is wealth of information on the net.
  
I installed several on large pillow block bearings that were on high temperature reticulation blowers, they upped the gas temperature.  They are working extremely well in keeping the bearings cool without having to change the type bearings.        

Here is type of setup  that we used quite a number of.   I have a similar one in my shop.

http://www.colmaccoil.com/heatcool.asp

RE: Heat Pipes

Back in the early 1990's they were marketed by B+W Hudson division, and also by Foster Wheeler. At that time, these were verylarge primary air heaters for coal fired power plants.

I recall circa 1992 one mfr was scheduled to give a paper on his company's heat pipes at a conference in Wash DC. 2 days prior to the conference, their largest application for heat pipes suffered a catastrophic failure , at the same site the paprr was to discuss.

The failure was: the heat pipes in the hotter zone ( gas temp = 800 F) become overpressured ,and the end caps burst off. They were shooting around the power plant like mortar shells. The US  supplier, whio had purchased the heat pipe fluid from a japanes concner, was not able to translate teh japanese warning that the fluid may not be used above 600F, since it will dissaociate into a compound that will have more moles of vapor than the orignal product. At 800 F gas temp , the heat pipes  were overpressurized to  greater than 3200 psig, and the end caps failed.

The emergency repair required the heat pipe air heater to be replaced with a conventional tubular air heater on an expedited basis and a $28 million USD write down.

The author of the proposed paper showed up at the conference 2 days after the accident, but he suddenly changed the topic of the paper to a completely other topic, so we were unable to ask embarassing questions.

So, the ASME changed the code to require these heat pipe tube to have overpressure protection, whcih basically killed the market for that device.

RE: Heat Pipes

StoneCold-
Try:
"Heat Pipes",P.D.Dunn and D.A. Reay, Pergammon,4th ed,1994, ISBN 0-08-041903-8.  This book is eleven years old though.

Tunalover

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