NUMERICAL DESIGN OF EFFICIENT SLOTTED FIN SURFACE BASED ON THE FIELD SYNERGY PRINCIPLE |
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Authors: | Y. P. Cheng Z. G. Qu W. Q. Tao Y. L. He |
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Affiliation: | State Key Laboratory of Multiphase Flow in Power Engineering , Xi'an, China |
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Abstract: | In this article, a numerical investigation of the flow and heat transfer in a three-row finned-tube heat exchanger is conducted with a three-dimensional laminar conjugated model. Four types of fin surfaces are studied; one is the whole plain plate fin, and the other three are of slotted type, called slit 1, slit 2, and slit 3. All four fin surfaces have the same global geometry dimensions. The three slotted fin surfaces have the same numbers of strips, which protrude upward and downward alternatively and are positioned along the flow direction according to the rule of “front coarse and rear dense.” The difference in the three slotted fins is in the degree of “coarse” and “dense” along the flow direction. Numerical results show that, compared to the plain plate fin, the three types of slotted fin all have very good heat transfer performance in that the percentage increase in heat transfer is higher than that in the friction factor. Among the three slotted fin surfaces, slit 1 behaves the best, followed by slit 2 and slit 3 in order. Within the Reynolds number range compared ( from 2,100 to 13,500), the Nusselt number of slit 1 is about 112–48% higher than that of the plain plate fin surface under the identical pumping constraint. An analysis of the essence of heat transfer enhancement is conducted from the field synergy principle, which says that the reduction of the intersection angle between the velocity and the temperature gradient is the basic mechanism for enhancing convective heat transfer. It is found that for the three comparison constraints the domain-average synergy angle of slit 1 is always the smallest, while that of the plain plate fin is the largest, with slit 2 and slit 3 being somewhat in between. The results of the present study once again show the feasibility of the field synergy principle and are helpful to the development of new types of enhanced heat transfer surfaces. |
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