istocrabin
Mechanical
- Nov 30, 2010
- 3
I'm designing fins for a heat exchanger to transfer heat from an enclosure to environment using natural convection, and I want to ensure that the heat exchanger will transfer enough heat out of the enclosure. The heat exchanger has two sets of fins – one set pointing vertically down into the case and another pointing up vertically out of the case, making the wall horizontal. I’ve checked my formulas against several heat transfer textbooks, dimensions, and math for errors and don’t find any, yet I also don’t trust the numbers I’m getting.
Here are my specs for the bottom row of fins:
Temperature Ambient – 80 C
Temperature Wall – 70 C
Height – .03 m
Width – .059 m
Thickness – .0019 m
Number of fins - 38
Thermal Conductivity – 172 W/m-K
Heat Transfer Coefficient (estimate for air inside enclosure) – 2 W/m^2-K
Perimeter – .122 m
Cross Section Area - .00011 m
With m = (hP/kA)^.5, I calculated m = 3.549 m^-1 and m*L = 0.1065. If heat flux continues to increase as mL approaches 3, then my mL value is very small and should be increased. Yet if I use mL=1.46 as an optimized design value the resulting height would be 0.4 m, which is nearly the size of the enclosure! Intuitively this number seems wrong.
The strange numbers get stranger when calculating optimal fin spacing.
If
Dynamic Viscosity (of air) – 2.03e5 N*s/m^2
Gravitational constant – 9.81 m/s^2
Air density – 1.029 kg/m^3
and
(Optimum fin spacing/Length) Grashof No.×Prandtl No.=50, which simplifies to
Optimum Spacing=0.29 (L^0.25×Dyn. Visc.^0.5×Tair^0.25)/(g^0.25×density^0.5×temp. rise^0.25)
then the optimum fin spacing would be .7 mm, which sounds optimum for a brick, but not a finned array. So what am I doing wrong?
Here are my specs for the bottom row of fins:
Temperature Ambient – 80 C
Temperature Wall – 70 C
Height – .03 m
Width – .059 m
Thickness – .0019 m
Number of fins - 38
Thermal Conductivity – 172 W/m-K
Heat Transfer Coefficient (estimate for air inside enclosure) – 2 W/m^2-K
Perimeter – .122 m
Cross Section Area - .00011 m
With m = (hP/kA)^.5, I calculated m = 3.549 m^-1 and m*L = 0.1065. If heat flux continues to increase as mL approaches 3, then my mL value is very small and should be increased. Yet if I use mL=1.46 as an optimized design value the resulting height would be 0.4 m, which is nearly the size of the enclosure! Intuitively this number seems wrong.
The strange numbers get stranger when calculating optimal fin spacing.
If
Dynamic Viscosity (of air) – 2.03e5 N*s/m^2
Gravitational constant – 9.81 m/s^2
Air density – 1.029 kg/m^3
and
(Optimum fin spacing/Length) Grashof No.×Prandtl No.=50, which simplifies to
Optimum Spacing=0.29 (L^0.25×Dyn. Visc.^0.5×Tair^0.25)/(g^0.25×density^0.5×temp. rise^0.25)
then the optimum fin spacing would be .7 mm, which sounds optimum for a brick, but not a finned array. So what am I doing wrong?