Measured and Predicted Effects of Air Flow Non-Uniformity on Thermal Performance of an R-134a Evaporator 970831
Tests have been carried out over a wide range of operating conditions on a single circuit plate-finned tube type of refrigerant evaporator, exchanging heat between ambient air and refrigerant R134a. Uniform and non-uniform air flow distributions were applied with the objective of studying the effects of non-uniformity on heat transfer.
The experimental results revealed that, for a given total volume flow of air, heat transfer performances could be up to 15% better with a non-uniform flow where turbulence levels were also high.
Extensive comparisons were also made between these measurements and predictions from a computer model. This was designed to simulate the thermal behavior of cross-flow heat exchangers on a tube segment-by-segment basis, allowing for flow non-uniformity. Predictions were found to match measurements satisfactorily for test cases involving uniform air flows and a relatively large temperature difference between fluids. In contrast to the measured trends, the simulation results predicted a degradation in heat transfer performance for non-uniform air flow cases.
Citation: Ryan, A. and Timoney, D., "Measured and Predicted Effects of Air Flow Non-Uniformity on Thermal Performance of an R-134a Evaporator," SAE Technical Paper 970831, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/970831. Download Citation
Author(s):
Aidan M. Ryan, David J. Timoney
Affiliated:
University College Dublin
Pages: 14
Event:
International Congress & Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
New Developments in Heat Exchangers for Automotive Design-SP-1262, SAE 1997 Transactions - Journal of Passenger Cars-V106-6
Related Topics:
Heat transfer
Heat exchangers
Computer simulation
Turbulence
Simulation and modeling
Refrigerants
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