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Convective heat transfer in foams under laminar flow in pipes and tube bundles.

Authors :
Attia JA
McKinley IM
Moreno-Magana D
Pilon L
Source :
International journal of heat and mass transfer [Int J Heat Mass Transf] 2012 Dec 01; Vol. 55 (25-26), pp. 7823-7831.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The present study reports experimental data and scaling analysis for forced convection of foams and microfoams in laminar flow in circular and rectangular tubes as well as in tube bundles. Foams and microfoams are pseudoplastic (shear thinning) two-phase fluids consisting of tightly packed bubbles with diameters ranging from tens of microns to a few millimeters. They have found applications in separation processes, soil remediation, oil recovery, water treatment, food processes, as well as in fire fighting and in heat exchangers. First, aqueous solutions of surfactant Tween 20 with different concentrations were used to generate microfoams with various porosity, bubble size distribution, and rheological behavior. These different microfoams were flowed in uniformly heated circular tubes of different diameter instrumented with thermocouples. A wide range of heat fluxes and flow rates were explored. Experimental data were compared with analytical and semi-empirical expressions derived and validated for single-phase power-law fluids. These correlations were extended to two-phase foams by defining the Reynolds number based on the effective viscosity and density of microfoams. However, the local Nusselt and Prandtl numbers were defined based on the specific heat and thermal conductivity of water. Indeed, the heated wall was continuously in contact with a film of water controlling convective heat transfer to the microfoams. Overall, good agreement between experimental results and model predictions was obtained for all experimental conditions considered. Finally, the same approach was shown to be also valid for experimental data reported in the literature for laminar forced convection of microfoams in rectangular minichannels and of macrofoams across aligned and staggered tube bundles with constant wall heat flux.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0017-9310
Volume :
55
Issue :
25-26
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of heat and mass transfer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25552745
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2012.08.005