Combined natural convection heat and mass transfer from vertical fin arrays
โ Scribed by A Giri; G.S.V.L Narasimham; M.V Krishna Murthy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 610 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0142-727X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Natural convection transport processes play an important role in many applications like ice-storage air-conditioning. A mathematical formulation of natural convection heat and mass transfer over a shrouded vertical fin array is developed. The base plate is maintained at a temperature below the dew point of the surrounding moist air. Hence there occurs condensation of moisture on the base plate, while the fins may be partially or fully wet. A numerical study is performed by varying the parameters of the problem. The local and average Nusselt numbers decrease in streamwise direction and tend to approach fully developed values for sufficiently large values of the fin length. The results show that beyond a certain streamwise distance, further fin length does not improve the sensible and latent heat transfer performance, and that if dry fin analysis is used under moisture condensation conditions, the overall heat transfer will be underestimated by about 50% even at low buoyancy ratios.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In analyzing the combined heat and mass transfer in natural convection, most of the surface conditions are either maintained at an uniform wall temperature and uniform wall concentration or subjected to an uniform heat flux and uniform mass flux. Other conditions are seldom investlgated. This study
The heat transfer characteristics of staggered, frontally shrouded fin arrays have been studied experimentally, in the case of forced convection of air. Nusselt number and Colburn number are given, for the range of Reynolds numbers from 2000 to 12000. The local Husselt number distributions signal th
An experimental investigation of heat dissipation from vertically stacked fin arrays subjected to varying air velocities was carried out. The fin arrays essentially form the heated wall of a narrow duct under forced air flow. Although heat dissipation is primarily by convection to the airstream, rad