Deposition of dry particles on a fin-and-tube heat exchanger by a coupled soft-sphere DEM and CFD
Välikangas, Turo; Hærvig, Jakob; Kuuluvainen, Heino; Dal Maso, Miikka; Peltonen, Petteri; Vuorinen, Ville (2020)
Välikangas, Turo
Hærvig, Jakob
Kuuluvainen, Heino
Dal Maso, Miikka
Peltonen, Petteri
Vuorinen, Ville
2020
119046
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202001151307
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202001151307
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
In this study, a novel computational model is utilized for investigating fouling of two commonly encountered heat exchanger fin shapes in an air-conditioning application. The computational method utilizes the discrete element method (DEM) coupled with a large-eddy simulation (LES) framework. The fin-and-tube heat exchangers (FTHE) are investigated for three different Reynolds numbers (ReDh =243, 528, 793), three different particle sizes (Dp= 5, 10, 20 µm) and two different adhesive particle types based on the experimental values in the literature. The code is first benchmarked from the CFD and DEM viewpoints. A comprehensive fouling study of the FTHE's, consisting of altogether 36 simulations, is then carried out. The major numerical findings of the paper consist of the following four features. First, with low adhesive particles, the plain fin shape has a 3.45 higher volume fouling rate with ReDh =793 than at ReDh =264. With the herringbone fin shape, and the low adhesive particles, the volume fouling rate is 1.76 higher with ReDh =793 than at ReDh =264. Second, for the high adhesive particles, the plain fin has a 5.4 times higher volume fouling rate at ReDh =793 than for ReDh =264. The herringbone fin shape has a 3.92 times higher volume fouling rate with the highest Reynolds number of ReDh =793 compared to ReDh =264. Third, high adhesive particles have 3.0 times higher volume fouling rate than low adhesive particles for both fin shapes, all particle sizes and all Reynolds numbers combined. And finally, herringbone fins have 1.74 times higher volume fouling rate than plain fins for low adhesive particles. For high adhesive particles, herringbone has 1.8 times higher volume fouling rate and when both particle types are summed together, herringbone has a 1.78 times higher volume fouling rate than the plain fin shape. As a major finding of the study, the high adhesive particle collection efficiency increases monotonously with the Stokes and Reynolds numbers while low adhesive particle collection efficiency poses a non-monotonous trend.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [19077]