BretCahill
Mechanical
- Jan 14, 2005
- 17
This concerns the mechanical energy required to get a certain heat duty and/or effectiveness while factors such as heat exchanger volume are set.
One strategy might be to use long thin tubes and have a lot of surface area and the only work required will be moving the fluids through the tubes.
Another strategy might use larger tubes, less surface area and less pressure drop -- less work to pump the fluids -- but would accomplish the same heat transfer by independently forcing convection thereby requiring some additional work that is independent of the fluid flow pressure drop work.
Is there any number, parameter, equation, graphs etc. already in use that is used to compare, say, the work required to pump the fluids through the tubes to the work required for any added forced convection to the heat transfer?
In other words, is there a quick way to determine if creating turbulence requires more work that what it's worth?
Bret Cahill
One strategy might be to use long thin tubes and have a lot of surface area and the only work required will be moving the fluids through the tubes.
Another strategy might use larger tubes, less surface area and less pressure drop -- less work to pump the fluids -- but would accomplish the same heat transfer by independently forcing convection thereby requiring some additional work that is independent of the fluid flow pressure drop work.
Is there any number, parameter, equation, graphs etc. already in use that is used to compare, say, the work required to pump the fluids through the tubes to the work required for any added forced convection to the heat transfer?
In other words, is there a quick way to determine if creating turbulence requires more work that what it's worth?
Bret Cahill