[TRNSYS-users] overall heat transfer,pressure drop, controlling
Michaël Kummert
kummert at engr.wisc.edu
Thu Aug 12 08:23:17 PDT 2004
Florian,
> 1) I have a problem to verify the "Overall heat transfer coefficient of
> exchanger" of type 5b .
> The heat exchanger i use, has the temperature-spreading primary
> 85/38°C ,secondary 80/32°C and the power of 15kW.
> Can anyone tell me ,how i get the "Overall heat transfer coefficient of
> exchanger"?
If q is the heat ransfer rate accross the heat exchanger and UA the
overall heat transfer coefficient:
q = UA (dTlm)
dTlm is the log-mean temperature difference, which has to be calculated
taking the heat exchanger configuration into account.
dTlm = (dT2 - dT1) / ln(dT2/dT1)
Counter-flow:
dT1 = Th,i - Tc,o
dT2 = Th,o - Tc,i
Parallel flow
dT1 = Th,i - Tc,i
dT2 = Th,o - Tc,o
h and c refer to "hot side" and "cold side"
i and o refer to "in" and "out"
[ref: Introduction to heat transfer, Incropera & Dewitt, John Wiley and
sons, New-York - ISBN 0-471-38649-9]
In your case, I would say:
Counter-flow heat exchanger, dT1 = 5 and dT2 = 6
UA = 15kW / 5.48K = 2.735 kW/K = 9845 kJ/h-K (for TRNSYS)
> 2) Can anyone tell me, if trnsys implicate the pressure drop caused by
> pipe and does this have an effect on the flow rate in trnsys ( i don´t
> think so) ?
Pressure drops are not taken into account. The flowrate imposed by the
pump only depends on its control signal.
> 3) To control the solar circle i use the Type2b old control strategy.
> (Upper dead band dT 10/lower dead band 2 ) Upper input temperature Th is
> the output temperature of the collector, and the lower input
> temperature Ti should be the lowest temperatur of the tank . I´m using
> the tank type4e with 5 nodes . If i had understand it correctly, than
> node 1 is the top node ( hot input) and node 5 the bottom node (cold
> input). The type 4e gives as outputs "Temperature to heat source" and
> "Temperature of node 1+-1" ,"...-2.",."....-3". So for the" lower input
> temperatur Ti" of the controller i can use " Temperature to heat
> source" as lowest temperature in the tank.
You are correct, the "temperature to heat source" is the temperature at
the bottom of the tank (node 5 for you) and the "temperature to load" is
the temperature at the top of the tank.
Kind regards,
Michaël Kummert
--
_________________________________________________________
Michaël Kummert
Solar Energy Laboratory - University of Wisconsin-Madison
1303 Engr Res Bldg, 1500 Engineering Drive
Madison, WI 53706
Tel: +1 (608) 263-1589
Fax: +1 (608) 262-8464
E-mail: kummert at engr.wisc.edu
SEL Web Site: http://sel.me.wisc.edu
TRNSYS Web Site: http://sel.me.wisc.edu/trnsys
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