rhirsch
Mechanical
- Oct 21, 2008
- 18
I've searched for this throughout the forums. Its seems so simple, but I am simply not getting it:
I have a pipe with gas flowing in it. I know the input temp and output temp I want. I know how much power I am going to put to the heater I know the diameter. I know the flow rate. I think I know everything to be able to discern the required length of the tube to achieve the desired output temp. But I am not seeing how to do it.
Here is the data:
Tin=5 deg C
Tout (desired) = 120 deg C
Mass flow rate, mdot= 3.6 kg/day
Heat input, qconv = 300W
Inner Tube diameter Di= .5 in
Outder Tube diameter Do = .5125 in (sorry about units switch)
h = 25 W/Km2
The problem I am having is that I think I can do the problem if I know the heat flux, but this flux is dependent on the length of the tube (because the surface area increases with length).
so I know
qconv=qdot*Vtube and
qdot=mdot * Cp *(To-Ti)
assuming its insulated and all the heat goes from the heater, through the pipe and into the gas. Then:
qconv=mdot * Cp * (To-Ti) * A * L
and then
L = qconv/(mdot * Cp * (To-Ti) * A)
but this means that the length gets longer if I increase the power for the same temp differential. This makes no sense, and why don't I need the convection coefficient?
I haven't done this stuff in years (decades) and I am obviously doing something wrong. This should be simple....
argh
I have a pipe with gas flowing in it. I know the input temp and output temp I want. I know how much power I am going to put to the heater I know the diameter. I know the flow rate. I think I know everything to be able to discern the required length of the tube to achieve the desired output temp. But I am not seeing how to do it.
Here is the data:
Tin=5 deg C
Tout (desired) = 120 deg C
Mass flow rate, mdot= 3.6 kg/day
Heat input, qconv = 300W
Inner Tube diameter Di= .5 in
Outder Tube diameter Do = .5125 in (sorry about units switch)
h = 25 W/Km2
The problem I am having is that I think I can do the problem if I know the heat flux, but this flux is dependent on the length of the tube (because the surface area increases with length).
so I know
qconv=qdot*Vtube and
qdot=mdot * Cp *(To-Ti)
assuming its insulated and all the heat goes from the heater, through the pipe and into the gas. Then:
qconv=mdot * Cp * (To-Ti) * A * L
and then
L = qconv/(mdot * Cp * (To-Ti) * A)
but this means that the length gets longer if I increase the power for the same temp differential. This makes no sense, and why don't I need the convection coefficient?
I haven't done this stuff in years (decades) and I am obviously doing something wrong. This should be simple....
argh