HEAT EXCHANGER ELEMENT AND METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING SAME
20210018281 ยท 2021-01-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
F28F13/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F2245/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F13/185
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A heat exchanger element for being in contact with a gas includes a solid surface coated with a layer of a predetermined material. The layer is configured to enhance the heat transfer between the solid surface and the gas by thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
Claims
1. A heat exchanger element for being in contact with a gas, the heat exchanger element comprising: a solid surface coated with a layer of a predetermined material, the layer being configured to enhance the heat transfer between the solid surface and the gas by thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
2. The heat exchanger element according to claim 1, wherein the predetermined material is a material with values of thermo-acoustic impedance between the values of the heat exchanger element and the gas.
3. The heat exchanger element according to claim 1, wherein the layer has a thickness in a range between 1 m to 100 m.
4. The heat exchanger element according to claim 1, wherein the solid surface has a flat section or at least one section with a predetermined structuring and/or topology or a combination of both.
5. The heat exchanger element according to claim 1, wherein the solid surface has a section which has a tubular shape with an outer surface and/or an inner surface and/or a cylindrical shape with an outer surface and/or an inner surface.
6. A method for coating a heat exchanger element being in contact with a gas, wherein the heat exchanger element comprises a solid surface, the method comprising: coating the solid surface with a layer of a predetermined material, wherein the layer is configured to enhance the heat transfer between the solid surface and the gas by thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
7. The method according to claim 6, wherein the predetermined material is a non-crystalline material having intermediate values of thermo-acoustic impedance.
8. The method according to claim 6, wherein coating the solid surface with the layer is performed by slot-die coating, doctor blading, dip coating, spray painting or by lamination of films.
9. The method according to claim 6, wherein the solid surface is coated by several layers of different predetermined materials and/or having different thicknesses.
10. The method according to claim 7, wherein the non-crystalline material is a non-metallic amorphous material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] The present invention will be described in even greater detail below based on the exemplary figures. The invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments. All features described and/or illustrated herein can be used alone or combined in different combinations in embodiments of the invention. The features and advantages of various embodiments of the present invention will become apparent by reading the following detailed description with reference to the attached drawings which illustrate the following:
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] The known heat transfer enhancement techniques of the state of the art in case of heat transfer to single-phase flow have the general disadvantage of an increased pressure drop, which foils the energetic benefit of heat transfer enhancementparticularly in case of gas flow.
[0018] The present invention includes an improved heat exchanger element, which has an enhanced heat transfer capability and where the pressure drop is not increased.
[0019] The present invention further includes a cost-effective method for manufacturing a heat exchanger element with enhanced heat transfer capability.
[0020] A heat exchanger element for being in contact with a gas according to the invention comprises one or more solid surface(s). Meaning as such, that a heat exchanger element can have areas, which are coated and areas without any coating. At least one of these areas, one which is in contact with the heat exchanger fluid, here a gas, can be coated. According to the invention, said solid surface is coated with one or more layer(s) of predetermined material, the layer being suitable to enhance the heat transfer between the solid surface and said fluid by thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
[0021] This layer is a homogeneous material layer, whereas such a consistent material layer works for a single-phase fluid, such as any gas, effectively. The gas as the heat exchanging fluid can be a pure gas, a mixture of gases or an aerosol, i.e. a suspension of particles and/or droplets in a gaseous phase. The physical basis for the layer can be explained as follows:
[0022] Classical heat transfer theory is based on the concept of a thermal (as well as hydrodynamic) boundary layer, whereby the temperature of the fluid in contact with the wall is equal to the wall temperature and a decline in temperature occurs as
[0023] A fundamentally different behaviour was discovered by P. L. Kapitza (The study of Heat Transfer on Helium II, Journal of Physics (USSR) 4, 181, 1941), who found a temperature step during heat transfer from a solid wall to the quantum fluid Helium II, as shown in
[0024] As a general consequence of the Kapitza resistance, the differences in both the thermo-acoustic impedances and other thermal properties of the solid and the gas are responsible for the thermal resistance and thus the temperature step at the interface.
[0025] The layers of predetermined materials and the layer thicknesses are chosen such that the heat transfer between the solid surface and the gas is enhanced by thermo-acoustic impedance matching between all the layers in contact with each other. With this implementation, the sum of thermal resistances and thus the overall temperature difference between the solid surface and the gas is smaller than in case of the uncoated solid surface. Candidates for the coating and therefore examples for the predetermined materials are materials with intermediate values of thermo-acoustic impedance. This promotes in particular non-metallic amorphous materials rather than crystalline materials, as the latter have impedances in the range of metals or beyond.
[0026] Further, according to the invention, said solid surface can have at least one flat section or at least one section with a predetermined structuring or topology or a combination of both. The heat transfer enhancement according to the invention can be applied on either side of said solid surface. Further, it can be combined with the other enhancement methods, in particular with surface enhancement methods.
[0027] The heat exchanger element and or its surface can be made out of any suitable solid, such as copper, aluminum, steel, silicon, graphene or diamond, for example.
[0028] According to the invention, the solid surface has either at least one section which has a tubular shape with an outer surface and/or an inner surface both with a curvature, either concave or convex, as for example a tube segment, or which has at least one section which has a cylindrical shape with an outer surface and/or an inner surface, as for example a cylindrical body with a bore. The heat transfer enhancement according to the invention can be applied on either side of said solid surface. Further, it can be combined with the other enhancement methods, in particular with surface enhancement methods. The heat exchanger element and or its surface can be made out of any suitable solid, such as copper, aluminum, steel, silicon, graphene or diamond, for example.
[0029] Heat transfer enhancement between solid surfaces and gases can be applied by means of thermo-acoustic impedance matching. Thermo-acoustic impedances depend on the speed of sound and the mass density. The values for solids and gases can differ by several orders of magnitude. The layer materials and the layer thicknesses might be chosen such that the heat transfer between the solid surface and the gas is enhanced by thermo-acoustic impedance matching between all the layers in contact with each other. If the layer is too thin for the phonon excitation, there will be no effect of the layer, if it is too thick, said layer will function as a thermal insulator.
[0030] With this, the sum of thermal resistances and thus the overall temperature difference between the solid surface and the gas is smaller than in case of the uncoated solid surface. This is counter-intuitive with regard to classical heat transfer theory, where such coating would act as thermal insulation and worsen the heat transfer due to the additional thermal resistance(s) of the layer(s). Candidates for the coating are materials with intermediate values of thermo-acoustic impedance. This promotes in particular non-metallic amorphous materials rather than crystalline materials, as the latter have impedances in the range of metals or beyond.
[0031] The values for solids, liquids and gases differ by orders of magnitude as shown by the example data in Tab. 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Thermo-acoustic properties of selected materials. Longitudinal wave Density/ velocity/ Impedance/ Material kg/m.sup.3 m/s Pa s/m Helium @ 293K 0.166 1010 1.7E+02 Nitrogen @ 293K 1.17 349 4.0E+02 LNG @ 77K 808 855 6.9E+05 Water @ 293K 998 1480 1.5E+06 LD-PE 920 1950 1.8E+06 Polyurethane 1110 1760 2.0E+06 Glas: pyrex 2240 5640 1.3E+07 Aluminum 2700 6420 1.7E+07 Steel 7800 5850 4.6E+07 Copper 8930 5010 4.5E+07
[0032] For instance, the implementation of a LD-PE coating on a steel surface would enhance the heat transfer to gaseous nitrogen (or air) at 293 K, because the impedance (1.8E+06) is in-between that of steel (4.6E+07) and that of nitrogen gas (4.0E+02). On the other hand, the same LD-PE coating would have a negligible or even negative effect in case of heat transfer to water at 293 K, because the impedances of water (1.5E+06) and LD-PE are nearly the same and the LD-PE layer would thus not improve the thermo-acoustic impedance matching and only act as an additional thermal insulator. Depending for which gas the heat transfer has to be enhanced, the best layer-coating can be chosen and used. The effect is very effective for the heat transfer enhancement between solids and gases, which show the largest mismatch in thermo-acoustic impedance.
[0033] Due to the mechanism of phonon propagation, the thickness(es) of the coating layer(s) is one design parameter for thermo-acoustic impedance matching, beside the choice of the layer material. Preferably, said layer can have a thickness in a range between 1 m to 100 m. Thinner layers of non-matching material might therefore be applied on the surface next to the gas, without disturbing the thermo-acoustic impedance matching. An example are sub-micron metallic layers for UV or corrosion protection, for the prevention of fouling or for optical reasons. The thickness can be adapted according to phonon propagation properties of specific materials.
[0034] In a further embodiment, said solid surface can be coated with several layers out of different predetermined materials and having different thicknesses.
[0035] In a preferred embodiment, said heat exchanger element can be manufactured according to the method described according to the invention. This enables a simple and cost-efficient manufacturing of an enhanced heat exchanger element. For being in contact with a gas, said heat exchanger element comprises one or more solid surface(s). The manufacturing comprises the step of coating said solid surface with one or more layer(s) of predetermined material, wherein said layer is suitable to enhance the heat transfer between the solid surface and said gas by thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
[0036] In another embodiment of the invention, coating of said layer is performed onto the solid surface by slot-die coating, doctor blading, dip coating, spray painting or alternatively by the lamination of films. These methods can be used continuously (roll-to-roll).
[0037] In
[0038] Onto the solid surface 2 a layer 4 is coated, so that the layer 4 is part of the heat exchanger element 1.
[0039] The heat transfer direction is represented by arrow 5 and the generated temperature profile is depicted by curve 6. The temperature profile results from the consideration of both Kapitza conductance and thermal boundary theory in case of a gas 3 flowing along a heat exchanger element 1. The total temperature difference results from the first and second temperature steps 6a, 6b, a temperature gradient 6c and a thermal boundary layer 6d (shown by curve 6). Due to thermo-acoustic impedance matching, the total temperature difference 7b between the surface 2 and the gas 3 is smaller than the temperature difference of the uncoated wall, which would result in a larger temperature difference 7a (indicated by the dashed lines). As the layer 4 does not influence the thermal boundary layer by the promotion of turbulence, the heat transfer enhancement is due to thermo-acoustic impedance matching.
[0040] In
[0041] Further, in
[0042] While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, such illustration and description are to be considered illustrative or exemplary and not restrictive. It will be understood that changes and modifications may be made by those of ordinary skill within the scope of the following claims. In particular, the present invention covers further embodiments with any combination of features from different embodiments described above and below.
[0043] The terms used in the claims should be construed to have the broadest reasonable interpretation consistent with the foregoing description. For example, the use of the article a or the in introducing an element should not be interpreted as being exclusive of a plurality of elements. Likewise, the recitation of or should be interpreted as being inclusive, such that the recitation of A or B is not exclusive of A and B, unless it is clear from the context or the foregoing description that only one of A and B is intended. Further, the recitation of at least one of A, B and C should be interpreted as one or more of a group of elements consisting of A, B and C, and should not be interpreted as requiring at least one of each of the listed elements A, B and C, regardless of whether A, B and C are related as categories or otherwise. Moreover, the recitation of A, B and/or C or at least one of A, B or C should be interpreted as including any singular entity from the listed elements, e.g., A, any subset from the listed elements, e.g., A and B, or the entire list of elements A, B and C.
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS
[0044] 1 Heat exchanger element
[0045] 2 Solid Surface
[0046] 3, 3 Gas
[0047] 4, 4, 4 Layer
[0048] 5 Heat flux
[0049] 6 Temperature profile
[0050] 6a, 6a First temperature step
[0051] 6b, 6b Second temperature step
[0052] 6c, 6c Temperature gradient in the layer
[0053] 6d, 6d Temperature gradient in the boundary layer
[0054] 7 Overall temperature difference
[0055] 7a Temperature difference of an uncoated surface
[0056] 7b Temperature difference of a surface coated with one layer
[0057] 7c Temperature difference of a surface coated with more than one layer