SUBJECT: Ph.D. Proposal Presentation
   
BY: Matthew Hughes
   
TIME: Wednesday, April 27, 2022, 9:00 a.m.
   
PLACE: Love Building, 109
   
TITLE: Acoustically Enhanced Condensation in Horizontal Tubes
   
COMMITTEE: Dr. Srinivas Garimella, Chair (ME)
Dr. S. Mostafa Ghiaasiaan (ME)
Dr. G. P. "Bud" Peterson (ME)
Dr. Laurence Jacobs (CE)
Dr. Thomas Fuller (CHBE)
 

SUMMARY

Condensation is a ubiquitous heat transfer process in heating, ventilation, air-conditioning, and refrigeration (HVAC&R) and chemical processing. However, while condensation is an effective heat transfer mechanism, the heat transfer coefficient decreases as the vapor quality decreases; therefore, several methods to enhance condensation heat transfer have been explored over the past several decades. This study focuses on active techniques to achieve enhancement in condensation in regions where the heat transfer coefficient is typically lower.
A review of the pertinent literature on active enhancement of condensation is conducted, from which one promising and relatively unexplored method, enhancement by actuation of the flow with acoustics, is selected for detailed investigation. Acoustic actuation can enhance the heat and mass transfer during condensation by agitating the vapor and liquid phases and providing an additional mixing mechanism for the two phases, which in turn reduces the thermal resistance in the condensate. In this study, a tube-in-tube condenser test section is coupled to an acoustic actuator at the inlet and a Helmholtz resonator at the outlet. A flow visualization study is performed to characterize the flow regimes, oscillations in the fluid motion that modify the regimes, and void fraction. A phase-change heat transfer test facility is fabricated to experimentally measure the heat transfer coefficient and frictional pressure gradient of the actuated flow compared with the baseline flow. The effects of mass flux, actuation frequency, actuation amplitude, and degree of subcooling are studied to understand the relevant heat transfer enhancement mechanisms. Based on these experimental results, a model will be developed to predict the heat transfer and pressure drop for such enhanced flows to aid in condenser design. Insights from these experiments and analyses will guide the future development of more compact condensers and the potential use of acoustics to enhance heat flux.