themroc
Chemical
- Sep 7, 2006
- 76
I am working for a company which manufactures turbulators to improve the efficency in tubular heat exchangers.
A sketch of those Inserts can be found here:
Those turbulators induce turbulence near at the tube wall and therefore improve the heat transfer. The packing density and wire thickness of those turbulators can be altered.
They are manufactured from Stainless Steel
Now my Question:
As more Metal touches the wall as better the performance.
I am looking for a simple device which could give me an indication how much metal contacts the wall on an electronic basis, That means if I put an higher packed Insert into the tube it should give me an different reading compared to a lower packed Insert.
maybe someone can comment on the following:
1. First I tried to measure how much metal is in contact with the tube wall by using a simple Voltmeter and measured the electrical resistance between tube wall and Insert core wire. Unfortunately the resistance was so small that in essens I could not measure anything sensible. Would this in principle work?
2. I thought about a second principle but did not do this yet maybe someone could advise:
If I use a metal tube which is coated with paint then with the Insert inside it should work as an capacitor/condenser.
I should get more capacity if there is more metal in near contact to the wall. Is this right??
The tubes are typical 1'' or 3/4 inch in diameter. Where can I find measurment devices to meassure the capacity?
Any comment is wellcome!!
A sketch of those Inserts can be found here:
Those turbulators induce turbulence near at the tube wall and therefore improve the heat transfer. The packing density and wire thickness of those turbulators can be altered.
They are manufactured from Stainless Steel
Now my Question:
As more Metal touches the wall as better the performance.
I am looking for a simple device which could give me an indication how much metal contacts the wall on an electronic basis, That means if I put an higher packed Insert into the tube it should give me an different reading compared to a lower packed Insert.
maybe someone can comment on the following:
1. First I tried to measure how much metal is in contact with the tube wall by using a simple Voltmeter and measured the electrical resistance between tube wall and Insert core wire. Unfortunately the resistance was so small that in essens I could not measure anything sensible. Would this in principle work?
2. I thought about a second principle but did not do this yet maybe someone could advise:
If I use a metal tube which is coated with paint then with the Insert inside it should work as an capacitor/condenser.
I should get more capacity if there is more metal in near contact to the wall. Is this right??
The tubes are typical 1'' or 3/4 inch in diameter. Where can I find measurment devices to meassure the capacity?
Any comment is wellcome!!