ramblin
Mechanical
- Jun 28, 2002
- 6
I have a finned tube in tube heat exchanger for which we can measure various global parameters - hot and cold side pressure drop, hot and cold side delta T, hot and cold side mass flow for many combinations of running condition.
I'm trying to break the data down into an accurate assessment of the hot and cold side heat transfer coefficients. One approach I'm considering is to use the Reynold's analogy between heat and momentum ie. Cf/2 = StPr^2/3.
My question is whether or not this method can be used with any real degree of certainty. The pressure drops are not great (5 psid MAX) but we should be able to get a decent idea of the coefficient of friction if we run enough points.
Is this a reasonable approach? (I've got another method but I'm wondering if the pressure drop data can be useful)
I'm trying to break the data down into an accurate assessment of the hot and cold side heat transfer coefficients. One approach I'm considering is to use the Reynold's analogy between heat and momentum ie. Cf/2 = StPr^2/3.
My question is whether or not this method can be used with any real degree of certainty. The pressure drops are not great (5 psid MAX) but we should be able to get a decent idea of the coefficient of friction if we run enough points.
Is this a reasonable approach? (I've got another method but I'm wondering if the pressure drop data can be useful)