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is the so-called momentum density, B
=
< jl > + < j v > = QlA, via the
240
relationship given by Eq. (6), where Co is the concentration parameter and Vvj is the drift velocity. Also, < jv >, < ji >, and can be expressed in terms of the flow quality, <X> = Gv/G, as shown in Eqs. (7) - (9).
,- P�\ •
Bulk Boiling
==>
1
..
:�O:·e,,, I •
Figure 5 .
I
�
,
.;. ; ; ,.�·t � •
, •6 '
Subcooled BOiling
�
t
J
<= q (t)
3"
� '
, .�
j in (t)
I
I
A (t)Distance to Boiling
Two-phase flow in a heated channel.
For single-phase flows, the above-described model simplifies to three equations (Eqs. (1), (3) and (5) for liquid flows, and Eqs . (2), (4) and (5) for vapor/gas flows). Also, by making some additional simplifying assumptions, the present general five equation model of two-phase flow can be simplified to four or even three equations only. In particular, assuming thermodynamic equilibrium between phases (i.e., hi' = hf , hv = hg , Pi = Pf , Pv = Pg ) and ignoring phasic slip yields the homogeneous two-phase flow model given by the mixture conservation equations shown in Table 3. A similar three-equation model can be obtained assuming slip between the phases. In this case, however, it is convenient to replace the original mass and energy conservation equations of the two-phase mixture by a modified continuity equation and the void propagation equation, both shown in Table 4 . The presence of thermodynamic nonequilibrium conditions in boiling channels usually manifests itself as the interaction between subcooled liquid and saturated vapor (although, rigorously speaking, vapor is always slightly superheated, the effect of superheat can be neglected in most cases of practical interest). Consequently, the modeling of two-phase flow dynamics can still be
241
based on equations obtained from Eqs. ( 13) - ( 14) by replacing saturated liquid (subscript "f') by subcooled liquid (subscript «L"), supplemented by an additional equation - the energy balance for subcooled liquid, as shown in Table 5. Table 1. One-dimensional
(a)
of
flow
Liquid Phase
� [ PI(1- < a » A] + � (PI < jl > A) = - rA at az
(1)
� (P < a > A ) + � P < j > A) = v rA � az ( v v
(2)
(b)
(a)
Vapor Phase
Liquid Phase
-
" a a lhl p)( l < a » A] + - [Plhl < jl > A] qlIH [(P at az (b)
(3)
=
Vapor Phase
-
� [(p h p) < a > A] + � [p h < j > A] = q P v H at v v az v v v
(
[
(4)
]-
f n ac ap CI a G 2A + G2 + 1 L KiCliO (Z - Zi ) + i + + < j5 > gSin9 = O o D H i= l at A az < P > az 2Pl where
J
(5)
242
Table 2. Drift. flux model
=
< }'v >
(6)
Co < j > + Vvj
<jv> = G<x>/Pv
(7)
< jl > = G(l-<X» /P l
(8)
< a > = {CO [1 + (Pv / Pi )(1 - < x » / < x >] + Pv Vvj / (c < x » Table 3,
}-
1
(9)
flow model
(10)
Ph >< 11 » at
(--
ap q"PfI + --
a(C < h » dz
A
(11)
at
[
]
f n ap c2 ac a c2 = - , + < P h > gSm8 - - + LKiB(Z - zd +az DB i=l at az < P h > 2 < Ph > where
J
< Ph >= Pf(l- < a » + Pg < a >
< 11 >= [Pfhf(l- < a » + Pghg < a >] / < Ph >
�
< 11 >=< h >
(12)
243
Table 4. Drift flux model - thermodynamic equilibrium. between the liquid and vapor
a < j > r Vfj _ = g az
a < a. >
-- + at
)
< a > d Pf + < a > � CJp _ pf dp P g dp at
pf
d Pf + dp
Pg
)
> � CJp dp az
a < a > r < a. > pg ap < jg > pg ap < a CJC K - - -- -- - -- -- > CK -az az Pg Pg dp at Pg dp az d
d
=
( 1 3)
(14)
where the volumetric vapor generation rate can be obtained from,
( 15) and CK is the kinematic wave speed given by,
(16) Table 5.
between
(subcooled
Additional Equation: Energy Balance for Subcooled Liquid,
ahl ah l PI(l- < a. » at + Pl < jl > az + r (h g - hl ) = -
q -+ "PrI A
NOm
(
-
]
.
I - Pg < a. > dhg ap Pg < Jg > dhg ap dp at dp az
(17)
The volumetric vapor generation rate, r, is given by an empirical relationship which accounts for wall heat flux partitioning between evaporation and single-phase convection.
244
It should be mentioned that in order to obtain the volumetric vapor generation rate, r, in Eq. ( 17), Eq. ( 15) must be replaced by another, usually not fully mechanistic, relationship accounting [2] for the fact that heat transferred from the channel wall is partially used to increase the temperature of the subcooled liquid. The above-given equations can be used to model two-phase flow dynamics in a single boiling channel (see Fig. 5). In various practical applications, the boiler consists of several parallel channels, having common inlet and exit plena. In addition, the individual channels can be axially interconnected, including ventilations made in the channel walls, and flow across gaps formed between heated rods in a multi-rod array. In order to account for the effect of cross-flow between the channels, modified equations can be used [3]. The equations obtained for heated channels can be easily modified for use under adiabatic flow conditions, including both two-phase channels (chimney) and single-phase (liquid or vapor) sections of the loop. An important aspect of model derivation for a boiling loop deals with the boundary conditions at the junctions between individual sections of the loop. Two typical problems are discussed next. (a)
Sudden change in the channel cross section area. Two-phase flow parameters which maintain continuity along flow direction are: mass flow rate and quality, given by Eqs. (18) and ( 19) in Table 6, where Zc is the axial location of the junction. If the channel area changes from A l to A2 , the new mass flux, G 2 , is given for Eq. (20).
Table 6.
Sudden
in the channel cross section area (18) (19)
(20)
In general (see Eq. (9»
It follows from Eqs. (7)-(9) that other parameters of the one dimensional drift-flux model considered herein may also experience a discontinuity at Z=Zc (note that Eq. (9) implies that if V vj =0, then is continuous at Z=Z c , otherwise it is not). Consequently, the integration of governing equations along a multi-sectional channel must be performed over each section
245
separately, and the inlet conditions for each section must be established based on the exit conditions for the preceding section. (b)
Mixing in large plena. Since, regardless of a particular shape, the UA ratio for large plena is typically small, a perfect mixing homogeneous flow model can usually be applied. Specifically, the lumped parameter mass and energy conservation equations are given in Table 7, where Vp is the volume of the plenum, and
Table 7.
in
Using perfect mixing homogeneous flow model, lumped-parameter mass and energy conservation equations become, respectively,
d < Ph >p LWi ,i -Wout,j P dt i n
V
(21)
(22) where
So far, the thermal energy added to a boiling loop system was considered in " the form of a given heat flux, q , at the channels wall (see Eqs. (11) and (15), for example). In reality, the heater power, rather than the wall heat flux, should be used as a given (controlled) parameter. Any changes in the power generated in the heater will be transmitted to the coolant with a delay depending on the heater geometry and material properties. Two options of a heated wall dynamics model are given in Table 8. For heaters characterized by spatially-distributed heat sources (electrically-heated rods, nuclear reactor
246
fuel elements, etc.), the lateral heat transfer can be described by a one dimensional heat conduction equation, Eq. (23), where T=T(y,t) is the temperature of the heater, q'" is the volumetric heat generation rate and ah is the thermal diffilsivity of the heater. The wall heat flux can be obtained from Eq. (24). For simplicity, the distributed-parameter model, given by Eq. (23), can be replaced by a lumped-parameter model, given by, Eq. (25), where Ah is the heater cross-section area, and Tw can be related to q" via Eq. (26), with H and Tb being, respectively, the effective (single or two-phase flow) heat transfer coefficient between the channel wall and the coolant, and the coolant bulk temperature. Table 8. Heated wall
1. One-dimensional Heat Conduction Equation aT at
=
ah
V2T + q" ' /(pcp )
(23)
with Wall Heat Flux given by q
-
ay wall
(24)
2. Lumped-parameter Model dTw
PhCp ,hAh � = q" ' Ah - q" Ib
(25)
with Wall Heat Flux given by
(26)
q" = H(Tw - Tb)
If the heater power depends on some other system parameters, an additional relationship must be given to evaluate q"'. For example, in boiling water nuclear reactors the reactor power, P, (and, thus, q" ') varies with average void fraction in the core. A simple model which can be used in this case is given by Eq. (27) in Table 9, where � and A are constant parameters, and p (the reactivity) is a linear function of the core-average void fraction, av (which can be obtained by integrating local void fraction in heated chanels over the entire coolant volume). The void-reactivity feedback is given by Eq. (28).
247
Table 9.
in
water nuclear reactors
Point Kinetics Equation dP
dt
= pP - �A I t Exp[-A,(t - 't)][P(t) - P('t)]d't
(27)
-00
where,
(28)
The final part of model derivation for the analysis of boiling loop (or a section thereof) dynamics concerns the formulation of boundary conditions and selection of external variables perturbing the system. The fundamental boundary condition for a boiling loop is obtained by summing-up pressure drops over the closed flow path around the loop, as shown by Eq. (29) in Table 10, where �Ppump is the pump head (for a natural convection-driven loop, �P pump =O). Eq. (29) is complemented by other boundary conditions, such as those at the junctions (discussed before). Table 10. 1. Pressure Drop over closed flow around the loop
�Ploop - 6ppump = 0
(29)
2. Parallel Channels (30)
In some cases, it is interesting to study transient behavior of the boiler itself rather than of the entire loop. In particular, the above applies to multi channel, non-uniformly heated assemblies, where highest temperatures and boiling rates are experienced by a single (or a few, at most) channel only. For channels having common inlet and exit plena, the same (given) pressure drop boundary condition can be used, given by Eq. (30). Transients in boiling loops may be caused by several reasons. In general, depending on the nature of the initial events, the following three classes of transients can be defined: (a) intended operational transients, accidents, (b)
248
(c) system response to random perturbations. In any of the above-mentioned transients, the initiating events (external perturbations) are related to changes in several physical parameters of the system The most important external perturbations are listed in Table I I . Other external perturbations may include: vibrations of solid structures (flow-structure interaction), valve manipulations, etc. Since the dynamic response of a boiling loop usually includes several parameters of interest (flows, temperatures, void fraction, power, etc.), boiling loops must be treated as multi-inputlmulti-output (MIIMO) systems. Table II. External (a) System Pressure (b) Coolant Velocity (eg, variation in the feedwater flow rate or pump speed) (c) Coolant Temperature (feedwater) (d) Thennal Power of the Heater 3.
EXAMPLES OF 'IWO-PHASE FLOW TRANSIEN
Boiling channel's response to a step change in inlet flow rate (velocity) Assumptions: uniformly heated channel, saturated inlet conditions (hin=hf), homogeneous two-phase flow model, constant system pressure. Governing equations are:
(31) (32) where,
Q
=
rVfg =
q" PJ-IVfg = cons tan t Ah £g
(33)
249
Trajectories of particles moving with velocity, <j>, satisfy the equation,
n
dt = < j > = ji (t) + nz
dz
(34)
Assuming that jin(t) is given by,
·in(t) { �l
J
=
J2
(35)
t�O t>O
for for
(36)
to
for t > 0, where is the particle entrance time (z(to )=O, as shown in Fig. 6 (a) in the case when j2 <.i 1 ). Solving Eq. (31) along trajectories (i.e., along the characteristic and combining with Eq. (36) yields,
j2 - j2 - j1 nz . +� h
h
� .Qz 1 +-
j2
for 0
11
t
�In(l J2 �lQ n(l + J2
�t�Q
for >
dt = < j »
dz
+
(37)
Solutions for <j> and < Ph >, given by Eqs. (34) and (37), respectively, are shown in Fig. 6(b) and 6(c). Boiling channel's response to a step change in inlet flow rate, using drift-flux model. Using the remaining assumptions same as in Problem 1, and taking constant C o and Vgj, the governing equations can be obtained from Eqs. (13) and (14) as,
250
t* Z
L I
<j>
I
z·
I I I I I
j 1 + nL
j 2 + nL
(b)
Z
•
=
[ Ex p ( nt ) - 1 ] j 2 / n •
I
I
z·
(c)
L
z
Figure 6. Response of a boiling channel to a step change in the inlet flow rate (Example 1). Assumptions: saturated inlet conditions, homogeneous two-phase flow model.
a<j> � = n = rVfg
where,
(38) (39)
25 1
(40)
C K = CO<j> + Vgj and the boundary/initial conditions are:
=
jin (t) =
(41)
0
{ �1
J2
<j(Z,t» = j 1
for for
t�O t>O
+QZ
(42)
for t S 0
(43)
Let, dz - = CK = C K in + CoQz
dt
where, C k,in
=
Co,jin
'
(44)
+ Vgj
(45)
Integrating Eq. (44), yields,
(46)
if to > 0 for t > o . Integrating Eq. (40) along trajectories z(t,to ), and combining the resultant equation with Eq. (46), we obtain,
<
a(z,t) >=
Eq. (47) can be used to obtain the two-phase density,
(47)
252
< p(z, t) >
=
pI [
1
-
< a(z, t) >] + Pg < a(z, t) >
(48)
As can be easily checked, assuming C o= 1 and Vgj=O, Eq. (48) becomes Eq. (37) obtained under the homogeneous flow model assumption. Boiling channel with subcooled liquid at the inlet at the inlet (same model and transient as in Example 1). Integrating the single-phase energy conservation along the characteristic, =
dt jin (t)
dz
(49)
yields, �h sub = hf - hin =
q"PH v PfA
(50)
--
where v is the particle residence time in the nonboiling section of the channel . Assuming hin =constant, v can be calculated as, A pf�hsub q" PH = constant
v
(51)
Integrating Eq. (49) between the inlet (z=O) and the boiling boundary (z=A,(t» yields, A,{
t t) lhn (t)dt =
(52)
t-v
Now, Eq. (32) can be integrated for Z�A,(t) to obtain,
< j(z,t) > jin (t) + O[z - A,(t)] =
Again, solving along the characteristic, t
�� = < j >, we have,
z(t,to ) = [hv + (h - h)to]Exp[n(t - v - to)] + JExp[n(t - 't)Ih - m.('t)] dt YHo
(53)
(54)
253
forbO. In the case of step change in the inlet velocity, given by Eq. (35), Eq. (54) yields, it -ato ) + -0
[iaExp t (
h
]Ex
p[a(t v)] + h
( a) v
1
for t for
v
>
v
+ to
S
t
(55)
Trajectories, z(t,t ), for different t and for a step change in the inlet velocity, are shown inoFig. 7(a). Solving oEq. (31) along the trajectories z(t,to), (56)
=
{01 02
for t � 0 for t > 0
(57)
Consequently, integrating the equation of the characteristic,
.
dz . = < J > = Jin dt
yields,
(58)
254
(59) fort>O. t
I J
1
It1
;L
I I
h i2
..
:I
I
=
v + {qn [1 +Q ( L - A. 2) ! j 2 ]} ! Q
Z
h + Q ( L - A. 1 ) j 2 + Q ( L - A. 2)
I 1 I
Z
L
I I
1 0 < t < t1
A. 2 A. 1
(C)
t�t1 Z
to a step change in the inlet flow Figure 7. Response of a boiling channel rate (Example 3). Assumptions: subcooled inlet conditions, homogeneous two-phase flow model.
255
Now, integrating Eq. (31) along the trajectories z(t,to) and eliminating to , the density variation,
Plots for <j(z,t» and
j in + n 2 L I I I I I I
i in + Q 1 L
L I
(a)
z
Pf
t�t1
=
!O < t
z
=
[ Exp (n 2t)- 1 ] j in l n 2
(b)
L
z
Figure 8. Response of a boiling channel to a step change in the wall heat flux (Example 4). Assumptions: saturated inlet conditions, homogeneous two-phase flow model.
256
Pool swelling due to depressurization.29 C onsider a pool of saturated liquid. The initial pressure, P , starts decreasing at t=O, and is a given function of time. As a result, ovapor is generated a inside thevelocity pool ofandthegradually movesY (this towards the surface. Assuming constant vapor bubbles, assumption is good aswithlong as the void fraction remains small), and ignoring pressure variation the height in Eq. (15), we have, (61)
{[ I-Pf(l - < ex » - Pg < ex > -tJ Z} Now, Eqs. (61) and (62) can be substituted into Eq. (2), to obtain a(pg < ex >) Y a(pg < ex » 1 { f dhr dhf - �) g + dt - hfg I-P dp + dp dp P < ex >} � r=
at
Substituting,
az
pg
(62) (63)
(64) (65) (66) y = Pg
�
257
(70) y(O,t) = 0 be written as, y (z,t) = B�l [l-Exp (-B2 at) ]U(t) - ( l-Exp [-B2a(t - ,,z )] )Exp (-B2a,,z )U(t - ,,z )} (71) where U(t) is the unit step function. the following expression for the transient axial distribution of theEq.pool(71)voidyields fraction, (ptdhr/dp - l ) � -� t]} fort<..!. -V h dp dp g f dp h dp dh ) gl pg r/ pg prd (72) < ex (z,t) > = (prdhr/dp -1) dhf [ ..!. ] } .!. for 1 t Exp > V Pg dp dp hfg V prdhr/dp - pgdhgldp { given by Eq.axial (72) isdistribution The solutionexponential graphically isshown in Fig. 9.when As seen, a established t exceeds steady-state N, where Lmax is, the final heightcanof bethecalculated swollen pool. The transient Lmaxheight, in particular) from the following pool L(t), (L max transcendental equation, (73) Pfg foL(t) < ex(z,t) > dz = Pf [L(t) - Lo] where Lo is the collapsed (also initial) pool height. can
1
z
o L(t) L max Figureat9. t=O,Pool swelling due reduction to depressurization. Assumption: saturated liquid constant pressure Vt
L
rate.
258
OF LATERAL DISTRIBUTION OF FLOW PARAMETERS ON BOILING CHANL DYNAMICS
4. EFFECT
model useful, but not always accurate enough. Possible problems due to: empirical correlations Oimited to certain - Use of non-mechanistic conditions and geometries) - These correlations refer steady-state conditions Alternative Approach 1-D Two-fluid modeltwo-fluid models -- Multi-dimensional Problems belateral discussed Effect of boiling dynamics flow and heat transfer phenomena on subcooled Theanalysis discussion in thesystem preceding sectionbased wasonconcerned with the modeling and of boiling dynamics a one-dimensional drift-flux model. Although such an approach has several advantages (in particular, relative simplicity as compared toit.other models), the theremodel are also considerable limitations inherently built into Specifically, requires several closure conditions which, as a rule, are obtained from steady-state experiments. Examples include: drift flux parameters (Co and Vvj), two-phase friction multipliers ( �o and
I-D Drift
-
Flux
•
is
to
•
•
to
to
259
As an illustration, a comparison of transient subcool-boiling dynamics and a phenomena in a uniformly heated channel, obtained from a model, is presented below. The two-dimensional two-fluid model of two-phase flow used in this comparison is given in Table
1-D
2-D
12 [4].
12.
Table Two-dimensional two-fluid model
£. p 1
. .!2.( Dt U.) = v- [£. (Il' + J.L!)VU.)] +gp . £. + v(£, p ) + F.d + FY
£. p. -(h . 1
1
1
1
1
o
Dt
1
1
1
1
1 1
P i ) V- [£. ( k.t + k. ) VT. ] + Q. P =
i
1
. 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
(74) +
F1F
(75) (76) (77)
FV = _Fv = E G
L
(D Dt
U
0 U
P C vm � - �
G L
Dt
J
(78)
(79) where
(SO) I
4.5 £G- EGs - Db 1-E
A -
dB =
G
&Gs dB
1-EGs
10-4 (Tr., - Tsat> +0.0014
(81) (82)
260
Table 12. Two-dimensional two-fluid model (continued) (83)
(84) (85)
=
Ct1$ A1$PLCpuL,aSta (Tw-Ta)
(86) where 2 [210 (Tw - Tsat) ] 2 Nsd 1td Bm AQ 1td Bm =
=
3
PL
L8
(87) (88)
89) In Eqs. (74) (76) the index, i, indicates either the liquid or vapor phase, 'Fd is the drag force, FV is the virtual mass force, and Fr is the force due to phase change. These three interfacial forces, are given by Eqs. (77) - (79), with the assumption that the interface velocity is equal to the dispersed (vapor) phase velocity. -
261
The dragbubble coefficient, Eq. and (80),Rewasisintroduced by Ishii [5]. diameter thisexpression expression,fordBtheis the the Reynolds number d based on the bubble diameter and the magnitude of the vapor-liquid relative velocity. The interfacial area density, A , (i.e. the area per unit volume of the mixture) in Eq. (77) is given by Eq i(81), where Dh is the pipe diameter, and £Gs=min(£G ,0.25). diameter hasa linear been interpolation assumed to behasa been function ofbetween local liquid The bubbleSpecifically, subcooling. used the diameter of bubbles detaching from the wall [6], and the diameter at low subcooling and dB is in[7].em].The resultant expression is given by Eq. (82), where T is in rOC] The virtual mass forcehowever showedit little significance for model the range of flowto conditions considered, was retained in the in order improve numerical stability. The virtual mass coefficient Cvm, was set to 0.5, which is a theoretical result fort spherical bubbles. The turbulent viscosity, j.1. , is calculated as a sum of the wall-generated turbulent viscosity, obtained byandabubble-generated single phase solution of lC-£ viscosity turbulencegiven modelby for the same flow conditions, turbulent Sato et al. [8]. phase change per unitthatvolume, is obtained fromfrom the the energy balanceto attheThe theliquid interface, assuming all the heat transferred interface phase istheassociated withthephase change. The heatby Ishii transfer coefficient between interface and liquid phase is given Thus the source term in Eq. (76) is given by Eq. (83) in Table 12, where [5]. the viscous dissipation was neglected as compared to the source due to phase change. For the momentum boundary conditions at thefor wall, the well knownat law is used. The boundary conditions the energy equation logarithmic the wall require theliquid knowledge ofand partitioning theto wall heat fluxphase. betweenInthat transferred to the phase that used form vapor the present model, the wall heat flux has been partitioned as shown in Eq. (84), where q 1 e!> is the heat transferred to the liquid phase outside the zone of influence of the bubbles, qQ is the heat transferred to (relatively) cold liquid that fills the volume vacated by detaching bubbles (the so-called quenching heat flux), and q is the net heat to form vapor phase. The single phase heat flux,obtained frome the Reynolds analogy, is given by Eq. (85), where the index, S, indicates a location within the buffer layer, and A le!> is the fraction of the wallTheareaquenching not affected the presence heatbyflux is given ofbybubbles. Eq. (86) [9], where f is the bubble detachment frequency, tQ is the waiting period, aL is the thermal diffusivity of the liquid, and AQ is the fraction of the wall area influenced by the detaching bubbles, which is given by Eq. (87). In
r,
262
Here, N sd is the number of nucleation sites per unit area given as a function of wal superheat [9] . The bubble detachment frequency is given by Eq. [10] , where dBm is the bubble diameter at detachment from the wall. This diameter is given as a function of the wall heat flux, liquid sub cooling and liquid velocity [6] . The heat to form vapor is, given by Eq. The 2-D model equations has been solved using the PHOENICS code [11] as a solver of the governing equations. The calculations were performed based on an elliptic scheme. Time-dependent problems used a fully implicit scheme starting from initial steady state conditions. The results of the comparison between the experiments of Bartolemei & Chanturia [12] and the calculations using the present model are shown in Fig. 10. In addition, 1-D calculations were performed for the same conditions with a drift-flux model. The resultant void fraction and temperature distributions are also given in Fig. 10. The diameter of the vertical test chanel was 0.0154 m, the wall heat flux was 5.7 105 W/m2, and the inlet mass flux was 900 kglm2-s at 4.5 MPa. The wall temperature in the drift-flux model was calculated from the Jens-Lottes correlation. The radial profiles of void fraction and superficial velocities are given in Fig. 1 1 , and the axial distributions of averaged drag and virtual mass forces are given in Fig. 12, both obtained from the 2-D calculations.
(88)
(89).
20
Void Fraction
Temperature (CO)
0.75
-5
30
o Bartolemei (1 967) -- Drift Flux Model - 2- D Model
0.50
0.25
-55
-80 0 .0
0.5
1 .0
1 .5
2 .0
0 .00
Distance from Inlet (m)
Figure 10. Axial steady- state distrubutions of temperature and void fraction in a vertical uniformly heated channel.
263
Superficial velocity (m/s) and void fraction
1 .0
0.0 0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
Radius (cm)
Figure 1 Radial distributions of superficial velocities and void fraction at 1.6 m from the inlet of the pipe (same conditions as in Fig. L
10).
(N/m3 )
Interfacial Force
2000
0 . 50
Virtual Mass
I
I 0 .75
(W/m2 )
Drag Force
Heat Flux x
1 .25 1 .00 1 .50 Distance from Inlet (m)
1 .75
1 0-6
Total
0.5
0.0 0.00
0.25
0.50
0.75
1 .00
(m)
1 .25
Distance from Inlet
1 .50
1 .75
Figure 12. Distributions of selected two-phase parameters along the channel.
264
As can beand seen,thegood agreementdata, has whereas been obtained between themodel 2-D calculations experimental the 1-D drift-flux yields a void distribution which is substantially lower than the measured values. Following the testing aspects and verification of bothdistributions 2-D and 1-D models, described above, two particular of the radial of flow andheated heat transfer parameters on forced-convection subcooled boiling in chanels have been investigated. One of them is concerned with the void distribution in the developing flow regionofnear the channel entrance, the other with the effect on flow conditions an unheated section being an extension of a heated chanel. used approach to evaluate the void distribution along boiling A commonly channels is the use of 1-D models which are based on experimental correlations flow parameters. One such correlation is the expression forforthevarious void detachment point, proposed by Saha & Zuber [13]. Whereas this correlation compares well with a wide range of experimental results, conditions only. inlet Usingitstheapplication present 2-Dis limited model, thefully-developed effect has beenflow studied of decreasing subcooling, the location the void detachment in the developing flow region. Theonresults obtainedofusing a fixed value ofpoint void fraction at detachment (corresponding to that given by the Saha Zuber correlation in fully developed flow) for each case have been correlated by- the following expression, hf - h (90) hf- (hd)dS-Z 1 - 0.044'1' e-O·0223 e-O·0505 to
'I' +
=
'I'
where = G�hin/q. The correlation given by Eq. (90) is illustrated in Fig. 13. This correlation was subsequently used to verify the 1-D model described before. The results of calculations are predict shown inlocalFig.boiling 14. Asinseen, whereas this improved 1-D model still cannot the low void fraction region, good agreement has been obtained for the remaining part of the boiling section. If subcooled boiling still exists at the exit of a heated channel which is followed by an unheated section, the two-phase mixture in the latter section will gradually return to the thermodynamic equilibrium conditions. In order to see how a 1-D drift-flux model (theheated validation of whichcompares is mainlyagainst based ona flows in adiabatic or uniformly channels) mechanistic 2-D model for such flow and heat transfer conditions, calculations were inperformed using thethepreviously discussed The Cmodels. results are shown Fig. 15. seen, exit subcooling of 3° was already high enoughquickly to causein the the unheated (2-D)-model-calculated void fraction to start diminishing section. In contrast, the 1-D model predicted slow void fraction decrease, substa.n.tially overestimating the overallonly vapora very concentration in this section. 'I'
As
265
400
h f h in -
200
( h f h in )Glq" 200
400
-
13_ point The ineffect of inletflows; subcooling on thefrom enthalpy the void Figure detachment developing hd is evaluated (see Eq.at(90)). 0. 1 5
0. 1 0
Void Fraction
- - Original Saha-Zu ber Carr. Modified Saha-Zuber Carr. -2-D model
---
/'
/'
0.05
o .00
0.0
0.5
Distance from In let (m)
1 .0
Figure 14. Entrance effect on void fraction. D=0.0254 m, q�=1.17 105 W/m2, Re=135000, Tsat-Tin=8°C.
266
5
Void Fraction
Temperature (C) - --- Drift Flux Model 2-D Model
-5
0.50
--
0.25
-1 5 o
2
3
4
Distance from Inlet (m)
5
Figure 15. Void fraction and temperature distributions in a partially heated pipe. D=0.0254 m, q� =3.885 106 W/m2, G=630.4 kg/m2s, heated length=2.8 m. important practical question islocation concerned withvoidthedetachment impact of lateral A very flow and heat transfer effects on the of the point under unsteady-state conditions. 1-D transient calculations are inherently based on this quasi-steady stateproves correlations suchinasdetermining the Saha-Zuber correlation. Whereas correlation very useful the steady-state beginning ofpoint boilingis usually from theconsiderably hydrodynamic viewdownstream point, the from calculated void detachment shifted the onset of-nucleation pointwall(i.e.temperature the point where boiling starts affecting heataccuracy transfer,of asthisshown by the distribution in Fig. 10). The correlation under transient conditions has not been studies systematically before. Invoid orderdetachment to quantifypoint the location, effect of unsteady-state heat transfer conditions on 2-D the the present model has been compared against the results of 1-Dpoint calculations. thisas comparison, thefrom transient void fraction at detachment was the same that obtained the Saba Zuber correlation for steady state conditions [14]. In
267
Theof varying calculations were performed forarea shown sinusoidal change in the wall heat frequency. The results in Figures 16, 17 and 18. As can be seen(quasi-steady in Fig. 17, the 1-Dconditions) and 2-D departing results agree well onlyfromforeach low frequencies state considerably other for high the 2-D value for of zincreasing tends to frequencies. stabilize (dueIn particular, liquid inertia) whilefrequencies, the 1-D correlation d indicates oscillations proportional to those in the wall heat flux. flux
to
0.20
Void Fraction
At 3 . 1 m from inlet
i n l et
0. 1 5
0. 1 0
3
Time (5)
4
5
Figure average voidoffraction following a (20%) sinusoidal change 16. in wallVariation heat fluxofwith a period 2 sec.
268
2.3
Zd (m)
-----
__
2-D Model Drift Flux Model
2.0
0.0
2.3
(a)
0.2
zd (m)
Ti
0.6
�e(5 )
2.0 1
�
· .00
2.3
0.25
(b) zd (m)
0.50
0 . 75 ' 1 .00
'1 .25
1 .50
5.0
6.0
Time (s)
2.0 1. 7
0.0
2.4 2.1
1 .0
2.0
(c) Zd (m)
1 .8
1 .5 " 0.0 2.4
'
(d)
3.0
4.0
Time (s)
, I 2.5
"
5.0 1
I
I
.
I I
7.5
I
Time (5 )
I I 1 1 0.0
'
1
2.1
1 .8
1 .5 0.0
'
(e)
5. 0 I
1 0.0
1 5.0
I
•
I
'
20.0
I
Time (s)
Figure 17. Void detachment point trajectories as calculated by 1-D and 2-D models for various frequencies of the wall heat flux oscillations: a) 4Hz, b) 2Hz, c) 0.5 Hz, d) 0.25 Hz, e) 0. 125 Hz.
269
90 60 30 1 0-1
Frequency (1 Is) 1
10
Figure 18. Phase shift (cj> UJ-C\l1 0 ) and relative amplitude (A2 0/AIO) of the void detachment a pipe with sinusoidal heat flux location 2-D inmodels. oscillations,of calculated by I-D andpoint 5. REFERENCES:
1 2 3 4 5 786 9 10
R.T. Lahey, Jr.Multiphase and M.Z.Science Podowski, (eds. G.F. Hewitt, J.183-371. M. Delhaye N. Zuber) and Technology, 4, 1989, and R.T. Lahey, Jr.Reacter, and F.JANS, . Moody, The Thermal-Hydraulics of a Boiling Water Nuclear 1977. R.P. Taleyarkhan, M.Z. Podowski and R.T.Channels, Lahey, Jr.,NUREG/CRAn Analysis 297of2, Density-Wave Oscillations in Ventilated 1983.Kurul and M.Z. Podowski, On the Modeling of Multidimensional N.Effects in Boiling Channels, ANS Proceedings, HTC, 52nd (1991). M. Ishii, Two-Fluid Model for Two-Phase Flow, International Workshop on Two-Phase Fundamentals, RPI, Troy, 1987. H.C. Int. Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 197 (1981) (1976) 709-717. 643-649. R.Y.MSato, . Unal, Thomas, J. Multiphase Flow, M. Sadatomi and K. Sekoguchi, Int. J. Multiphase Flow, 7 (1981) 167-190. M.1907-19 Del 2Valle, and D.B.R. Kenning, Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 28 (1985) 0. W.C. Ceumern-Lindenstjerna, (eds. and E. Hahne and U.1977.Grigull) Heat Transfer in Boiling, Academic Press Hemisphere, NY,
270
Spalding, Mathematics and Computers in Simulation, 23, North 11 D.B. Holland Press. 1981 G.G. Bartolemei and V.M. Chanturiya, Thermal Engineering, 14(2) (1967) 123-128. P.Fraction Saha and N. Zuber,Boiling, Point ofProc. Net Vapor Generation andHeatVapor Void in Subcooled Fifth International Transfer Conference, 4, 1974. Kurul and M.Z. Podowski, Multidimensional Effects inTransfer Forced 14 N. Convection Subcooled Boiling, Proc. Ninth International Heat Conference, 2, 1990. 12
13
27 1
INSTABILITIES IN TWO-PHASE SYSTEMS
M. Z. Podowski Department of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York
12180-3590
1. INSfABILITY MODES
The instability phenomena associated with two-phase flow dynamics may cause problems in the operation of energy systems. Various instability modes and mechanisms have been identified to date, depending on the geometry and operating conditions of particular boiling and condensing systems. A classification of two-phase flow instabilities is shown in Table It is based 4] on dividing the different instability modes into two classes: static instabilities and dynamic instabilities. Each class covers a broad spectrum of physical phenomena resulting in either fundamental (i.e., a single dominant mechanism governs the flow dynamics) or compound instabilities. In general, a two-phase system is stable if its response to an external perturbation (e.g., in flow, temperature, pressure, power, etc.) converges asymptotically to the operating conditions of the unperturbed system. If certain perturbations of arbitrarily small magnitude result in a diverging type response, the system is unstable. A common feature of static instabilities is that the perturbed system suddenly departs from the initial operating conditions to reach a new operating state, the parameters of which are significantly different from the original ones. This new state may be either stable or unstable. In the latter case another departure may occur so that after some time the system will temporarily return to the original state and the cycle may repeat. Dynamic instabilities usually manifest themselves as either self-sustained (periodic) or diverging oscillations associated with the propagation of kinematic (i.e. , density) or dynamic (i.e. , pressure) waves. Because of its practical importance, the question of two-phase flow instabilities has been studied quite extensively. Various physical mechanisms have been identified and modeled analytically. However, knowledge of the subject is still far from satisfactory. As a consequence, predictions based on either measurements or calculations (or both) are usually associated with a substantial degree of uncertainty.
2, 3,
1.
[1,
272
Table 1 • •
•
•
•
•
•
•
modes Excursive (Ledinegg) Instabilities Flow Regime Relaxation Nucleation Instabilities Instabilities Density-Wave Oscillations Oscillations Pressure-Drop Acoustic Instabilities Condensation-Induced InstabilitiesInstabilities
One ofqualities the most and important instability modes, which usually occurs atdensity low or medium high-power-to-flow ratios, is associated with waves. Theof combined so-called sections density-wave oscillations(liquid) may flows appearandintwo-phase systems consisting of single-phase (vapor/liquid) flows. Thesewater oscillations have been (where observedthey mainly incombined boiling systems, such as boiling nuclear reactors are with neutronic effects), butoscillations may also can occurbein explained condensingbysystems. The nature of density-wave taking into the different speeds ofregions propagation offlow flowchannel. velocity perturbations ininconsideration the single-phase and two-phase of the For example,at the liquid sections of a boiling system any such perturbations propagate the speed of sound (i.e., they traverse these sections verya velocity rapidly perturbation compared to the residence time of the liquid). On the other hand, in the boiling region leads to up)an ofincrease (when the flow slows appearing down) or decrease (when the flow speeds the local void fraction. Such void fraction perturbations will propagate downstream at a kinematic velocity characteristic of( indensity-waves which is much smaller than the two-phase speed of sound fact, the speed of density-waves is often close to the speedtwoof the vapor). Any changes in the flow velocity and/or void fraction in the phase regionto note resultthatinthea pressure drop effect variation in this region. Itis tois interesting hydrodynamic of a decreasing velocity reduce the pressure drop,ofwhile the thermal effect of it leads in a heated channel is topressure increase the amount gas phase, which in turn to an increased drop. Since region, the perturbations discussed above travel rathercondition slowly along the two-phase a constant pressure drop boundary across thesingle-phase entire system may result inparticular, the two-phase pressure dropinletandto the induced flow velocity (in the velocity at the the two-phase region) oscillating out of-phase with each other, even after the external oscillations perturbation,maywhich originated theor transient, has-sustained ceased. Such self excited either diverge reach a self periodic mode. Inlimits the latter case,system the magnitude of oscillations may bewillso high that the thermal of the (such as those due to CHF) be exceeded, causing damage to the heater.
273
general, boiling and condensing of Indensity-wave instabilities (see Table 2).systems can experience various modes Table 2 instabilities in Loop Instabilities Instabilities Parallel-Channel Channel-To-Channel Instabilities Instabilities modes are: loopthatinstabilities andcanparallel channel The two basic It is important to note a given system experience either instabilities. one or the other mode, depending on the operating conditions, and either can beoperating the limiting one. The loop instabilities may occur in phase-change systems in a closed-loop fashion (e.gto., BWRs, U-tube steamofgenerators, etc.). Parallel channel instabilities refer systems consisting multi-channels a common inletseparators, and common exitThe(e.g., BWRs, once-through steam having generators, moisture etc.). thermal-hydraulic mechanisms associated withthatthesuch loop instabilities instability mode are fairly well understood. It(zero) has been shown are governed by the constant drop boundary condition around the loop.provided A similar boundary pressure condition applies to parallel channel instabilities, the number of interconnected channels is very large (or if the two-phase channels interact a large single-phase bypass).operating In thisatcase oscillations are usually with to one or a few channels low flow and/or high power limited conditions, and the constant channel pressure drop is imposed by the remaining stable channels. The problem gets considerably more complicated when the number of parallel channels is channel-to-channel small and their operating conditions similar. In this case the so-called oscillations have are observed. In the case of two identical channels, the phase of oscillations been willorbemore opposite to that inmore the complicated other, whileand the not oscillation in one channel for three channels are clearly patterns understood. Indeed, several questions still require further investigation, of an controlling even/odd number of channels and the overall includingofthethe effect analysis phenomena the magnitude and frequency of self sustained nonlinear oscillations (i.e., the limit cycle). oscillations constitute the dominant instability mode While density-wave encountered in many systems, they are frequently combined with other phenomena, such as neutronic feedback, compressibility effects (i.e., pressure-drop oscillations), acoustic instabilities, and others. The neutronic feedback,through which the is particularly important inreactor boilingcoolant water nuclear reactors, effect of voids in the channels onhave the occurs reactor power. Whereas neutronically-coupled density-wave oscillations been little ratherhasextensively studied using point kinetics modelsof spatial of core neutronics. neutronics, very been done so far to investigate the effect area which particularly interesting concerns have neutronically-coupled parallel channelis oscillations. Such phenomena been observed •
•
•
•
An
274
experimentally and confirmed numerically [5], but no consistent theoretical studies have yet been undertaken to explain the basic mechanisms associated with them. Another example of compound instabilities the superposition density-wave oscillations and pressure drop concerns oscillations. Pressure dropof oscillationssuch mayasoccur in tanks boilingorsystems directly connected to compressible volumes, surge plena. As in the case of Ledinegg-type (static) instabilities, pressure-drop instabilities occur when the slopeeffect of theof pressure drop-to-flow curve is negative. In this case, however, the compressibility results in periodic oscillations the period of which can vary from tensboiling of seconds. amplitude of suchIf, oscillations is usually high, asofewthatto the crisis The is likely to occur. due to pressure-drop oscillations, the threshold of modes density-wave instabilities is dramatic. reached, theAlthough effect of such compound instability may be even more acoustic instabilities occur oscillations at frequencies higherHzthan the characteristic frequency ofusually density-wave (e.g., 10-40 vs 1 Hz), the possiblemayinteraction between theseoverheating two modes and (especially in lowvibrations pressure systems) lead to simultaneous mechanical which can substantially augment system damage. 2. LINEAR ANALYSIS OF TWO-PHASE FLOW INSTABILITIES
Because of the nonlinear mathematical form of the conservation equations governing two-phase flow dynamics, a rigorous stability analysis of a boiling channel is only possible if some simplifying assumptions are made. In particular (see Table 3), if the threshold of instability is of interest, linearized models are often used. constitutive Such models are obtained perturbing the conservation and related equations around abygiven steady-state operating point. It should be noted that while linear stability analysis can be used to determine whether a steady-state solution of a nonlinear system is stable or unstable to small perturbations, this approach does not provide information concerning other characteristics of nonlinear systems, such as the magnitude and frequency of any limit cycle oscillations. For this purpose a non-linear analysisthemust be performed (see Table Section 3). In order tostability demonstrate analytical approach used in3 and linear stability analysis, a simple thermal hydraulic model will be used. The basic assumptions and fundamental- equations for this model are summarized in Table 4. Table 3 • • •
of Linearize Governing Equations Around Steady-State Operating Parameters Obtain Transfer Function(s) Examine Properties Of Roots Of Characteristic Equation
275
Table 3 •
•
•
•
(continued) of Hopf s Bifurcation Method Method Of Liapunov HarmonicAsQMeasure uasi-Linearization Method) Fractals Of (Describing Attractors Function (Chaotic Vibrations)
Table Linear4 of flow instabilities Upflow InAxial A Vertical Boiling Channel (A) Uniform Power Distribution (B) (C) No Subcooled Boiling Homogeneous Two-Phase Flow (D) (E) Constant System Pressure (F) Incompressibility Of Both Liquid And Vapor Phases The total length of the channel isthedivided into bulk two sections; the nonboiling single-phase liquid region, and saturated boiling region, as, pressure drop across each section is evaluated from Eq. ( 12)[in referenceand6] the
(�p2cp )H +
i
2
(
L H ac a c2 c2 + g < P dz I -+- - + f h> A at az < Ph > DH 2 < Ph > 1 < Ph (z . ) > C2 (z .)
= pe A) pex
K I.
tL241
{
(1)
=
I
I
J
}
(2)
where A is the position of the boiling boundary. with the appropriate mass and energy (2 ) can be(seecombined Eqs. (1) andequations conservation [6]), then perturbed (linearized) around steady state operating A detailed in Appendixparameters A and theandfinalLaplace-transformed. results are summarized in Tablederivation 5. is given
276
Table 5 (3) where
and
(4) (i=l, 2, 3) are given by Eqs. (A.42) - (A.46) in Appendix A.
PARALCHAN INsrABILITIES
Let us now consider a multichannel system, composed of a number of parallel inletloop.andItoutlet system isboiling shown inchannels, Fig. 1 ashaving a part common of a boiling is clearplena. that allSuch the channels must satisfy an equal-pressure-drop boundary condition. KOUT
CONDENSER
COOLING WATER
DOWNCOMER
Figure 1. A loop containing parallel boiling channels. Because of possible differences in the operating conditions of the various chanels, channelof channels will oftencomposing be the leastthestable the most one. theonenumber system(Le.,is very large unstable) and only one channel reaches the instability threshold, the effect of oscillations in this single channel will not afect the operation of the other (stable) channels. If
277
Therefore, the investigation of the onset of theunstable so-calledchannel parallel channel be done by considering the most subject to a instabilities constant pressure drop boundary condition. Theofconditions for neutral stability (onset of small instability) may(N)change in the case an assembly containing a relatively number of parallel chanels.since For the thiscommon case, thepressure flow ratedropin canot each chanel is not anto independent be considered be constant. variable, Indeed, the multi-channel system may be unstable, with variations innearly the flow rates, even though the total flow rate of the boiling loop is channel modetheofanalysis instability, called channel-to-channel instability, beconstant. studied This through of the response of the inlet flow rates of can the individual chanels to an external perturbation in the total loop flow rate. A. LARGE NUMBER OF CHANLS Assuming constant power the heater and drop ignoring changes can in the lower plenuma temperature, the ofchannel' s pressure perturbation be obtained from Eqs. (AAO) - (A.41) can
as,
o(�phi = O(�Plc1 )H +O(�P2c1 )H
or,
=
PfAx-s
[rl,H (S) + n1,H(S)] OWin
(5) (6)
=
If O(�P)H 0 , Eq. (6) always has a solution for dWin (dWin = 0.0, the steady state case). It may also have a nonzero periodic solution provided that, (7)
for some S jco 0 In this case, the channel is self-excited and will undergo self-sustained periodic oscillations at the angular frequency, co . Equation (7) is the characteristic equation of a boiling channel subjected to a constant pressure drop boundary condition. The appropriate block diagram is shown in Fig. 2. B. SMAL NUMBER OF CHANLS The transfer function for channel-i can be defined as, OW1 H·1 (s) = __ (8) =
·
'"
278 /I.
o j in ext
+
+
/I.
/I.
/I.
oj
oj
o j in t
in t
i n fb
/I.
/I.
O (� P H
-1 fl, H
) 1 1j)
-1
o (� P H )21j)
IT I , H
Figure 2. Block diagram for a parallel channel model. where, OWi is the Laplace-transformed perturbation in the inlet flow to channel-i, oWT is the Laplace-transformed perturbation in the total loop flow rate. Using the following boundary conditions, (i, j 1, N) (9) and, oWT 2. Ow. (10) i= where, =
N
=
1
1
yields the following expression for Hi(s), Hi (5)
=
.,
N n. n . Gk (5) .J�l k :;l:J
]
(11)
(12)
279
NoneO.ofInthefact,transfer functions Gj(s),it(jfollows I, . , N), can have poles with Re(s) this were not true, from flow Eq. (11) that variations constant. chanel pressure drop could occur even if the inlet rate was inSince the other parameters characterizing the channel wall heat flux and inletTheenthalpy are constant, this is physicaly impossible. system given be Eq. (12) becomes the transfer function,In Hother i(s), in theunstable complex right half-plane. has a nonremovable singularity words, when the loop is completely stable (Le., SWT = 0) Eqs. (8) & (12) imply the characteristic equation, =
�
if
if
(13)
is theN number of zeros with positive real part,theof multichannel the transfer function system GiIf(s),Ziand z is the number of unstable channels, will be stable if the Nyquist diagram of IIH(jro) encircles the origin of the complex plane in the counter clockwise direction K times, where K i=lI,Zi If all the channels composing the system are identical, Eqs. (9) and (11) yield, =
Nz
(14)
which is precisely Eq. (6), the classical parallel channel result. TWO NON-IDENTICAL PARAL CIIAN
to notice the in Eq.characteristic (13), that if that system consists of two It is also interesting parallel channels, equation can be reduced to, non-identical (15)
this system locationof of(Gthe roots G) in the the stability complexofplane. If thedepends Nyquiston the diagram of(GIt isl clear G 2 )that encircles the origin, the system will be unstable (neither Gl nor G2 havel poles2 inaretheunstable, right-halftheplane), otherwise be stable.the Inorigin fact, in both channels function (Gl Git2will ) encircles the clockwise systemlociis dounstable. On the direction at ifleast once, so thatarethestable, two-channel other hand, both channels their Nyquist not encircle system is stable. theIn origin, and neither does (Gll + G2 ), so the interconnected the same way, if channel- is unstable and channel-2 stable, but (G l G2) encircles the origin, the system will be unstable. +
+
+
if
+
280 EFCT OF THE NUMBER OF PARAL CI
It can be easily shown how the characteristic equation of a multi-channel system tends to that of a classical parallel channel when the number of chanels increases. For this purpose let us consider the case of an assembly composed of (N- l ) identical chanels and one channel (io ) which is different from the others. In this case Eq. (11) can be rewritten as,
(16) =
where Gj(s) Gl(s) for i
*
io .
One chanel unstable and remaining chanels stable. the i� channel is unstable and the other channels are stable, and we denote, Gi o l!. Gun' and Gl =l!. Gsb Eq. (16) becomes, If
=
BWT
=
[
1 + (N - 1) Gun Gst
]
BWun
(17)
Equation (17) yields the following characteristic equation,
(18) Since the transfer function of the stable channels, Gst, have neither poles nor zeros with positive real parts, Eq. (18) is equivalent to, (N- l) G (s) 1 G (s) 0 G(s) l!. -,:.r(19) un + N st =
=
where the number of channels, N, was used as a normalizing factor (i.e., the . BW- T' was replaced by N1 BW- T)' mput, As the number of identical stable channels, N- l , increases, Eq. (19) asymptotically approaches, 0un(s) = 0
(20)
28 1
which is precisely the characteristic equation for the classical parallel The effect of increasing the number of stable channels channel model, Eq. is shown in the Nyquist plots for G(s), given in Figure
(7).
3.
+
1 .40
1
M = (stable) M :: 2 (stable) o M = 5 (unstable) .. M .. 10 (unstable) 6 M :: :.o (same as for the single unstable channel) ;Ie
1 .00
-1 .00
-0.50
2.00
Nyquist plots for two separate channels, one stable (*), the other Figure unstable and for a bundle of parallel chanels consisting of one unstable. channel and stable chanels.
3.
(�),
M
One chanel stable, remaining chanels unstable An interesting result can also be obtained by considering the opposite case, in which the single different channel is stable and the remaining (N-l) channels are unstable. In this case Eq. (16) yields,
aWT =[(N-l)
°
(s)
] aw un . + Gun st(s)
(21)
The corresponding characteristic equation is,
1 CN-l) O(s) = -w- G st(s) + N Gun(s)
=
0
(22)
282
If we now increase the number of identical chanels, N-l, Eq. (22) yields, (23) Gst(s) = 0 This channel result means that ifoscillations the numberwillof unstable channels is sufciently to-channel not occur. Instead, the entire large, bundle will behave as a single unstable channel. Hence, oscillations of the -wave entire boiling loop constitute the only possible mode of density instabilities and will only if the loop is unstable.· occur
EFCT OF En'EBNAL LOP
Let us now considerparallel the effect of the external loop shown in Figure 1 on the dynamics of boiling channels. The(R),different components of the(P),external loop (DC) are the: upper plenum (UP), riser condenser (C), pump downcomer and lower plenum (LP). The momentum equation integrated around the loop yields [7], The basic assumptions implicit in the loop model are: perfect mixing (a) constant (b) liquid inleveltheinplena, the condenser. The terms to theThat single-phase region of the external loop are related directlycorresponding to the total flow. is, (25) S(.�p)p = Gp(s) S;'T S(6P1JC = GDC(s) SWT (26) (27)
The other terms in Eq. (24) correspond to the two-phase region of the loop, and thus are related to the flows and the enthalpies in those regions, (28)
• The present analysis assumes that the total inlet flow rate is the only external perturbation for the entire channel assembly. If external perturbations were imposed on the individual channels (e.g., by changing the thermal power or the inlet pressure loss in a given channe}), channel to-channel oscillations could occur.
283
(29)
(30)
where, in general, aWk and ahk mean the perturbations in the flow rate and enthalpy at the entrance to component-k. Each aWk �d ahk be related to perturbations in the flow (awex) and average enthalpy (ahex) of the two phase mixture at the exit of the heated channels. In turn, Wex and hex can be expressed in terms of similar parameters referring to individual channels, wex = NL wex'J' can
total
j=l
(31)
hex = j=l ' (32) the perturbations offlow flow perturbation and enthalpyatatthetheinlet exit ofthe eachcorresponding channel can Since bechannel, expressed in terms of the the right of Eq. (24) can be directly related to the flow perturbations at thehand inlet side to the individual channels, 1
Wex
N L wex J' hex J' ,
to
(33)
Using Eqs.as(9)a function and (11),ofone can also express the loop pressure drop perturbation the flow rate perturbation in the single phase portion of the system, total
(34)
pressurethedrop acrossloop. the parallel dropThethrough external Hence, channels is balanced by the pressure Using Eq. (34), we obtain,
(35)
284
N 1:
Li(s) G'(S)
1
+
i= l 1
=0
(36)
(36)
Equation is the characteristic equation of a system of parallel channels coupled with an external loop. Let us now rewrite the transfer functions, 4(s), as [8],
(37) where Lo represents the frictional and local hydraulic losses in the single phase portion of the external loop. In particular, Lo can be expressed as,
where Kl <1> is the effective pressure loss coefficient (frictional and local) of the single-phase portion of the external loop, wT , 0 is the steady-state total flow rate, and Ax-s is the reference cross-section area of a channel. Similarly, let Gi(S) be given by, G1. (s)
=G
0 ,1 .
+
(s)
(39)
where Go , 1' are constants representing single-phase/entrance losses in channel-i.
(37) and (39), Eq. (36) becomes, N [L + L�(5)] 1 + 2, o , = 0 i =1 [GO/i + Gi (5)] Using Eqs.
(40)
If, due to a large loss coefficient (K1 <1> » 1), the external loop is very stable, Lo becomes the dominant term in Eq. That is,
(40).
I L i (s) I /Lo < E
Hence, the terms, L i (s) in Eq.
[
]
N 1 1 =0 Lo 2, -+L (5 Gi i=l ) o
(41)
(40)
can
be neglected, to obtain,
(42)
285
For a sufficiently large Lo ' Eq. (42)
can
be approximated by,
N 1 =0 L i=l C i(s)
(43)
-
Equation (43) is equivalent to the characteristic equation for the channel-to channel instability mode, Eq. (13). On the other hand, if al channels are very stable, the Gi(s) terms can be approximated by the constants, Go,i ' so that Eq. (36) becomes, N L. (s) i=l Co,i
(44)
In this case, the loop dynamics dominates, so that the channels may only oscillate in-phase and only if the loop is unstable. As seen, one can always stabilize the loop by increasing the magnitude of G . (e.g., the channel inlet loss coefficients). Predictions of instabilities using the model presented herein have been compared [8] with the experimental data obtained for two interconnected parallel channels by Aritomi, et al [9]. Specifically, the geometry, system pressure and inlet temperature used in the experiments reported in the above mentioned reference were applied to obtain the characteristic equation, Eq. (15). Next, for specified values of the channel heat flux, the Nyquist loci of G(joo) = G 1 (joo ) + G2 (joo) were evaluated using the inlet velocity as a parameter. The values of heat flux and velocity for which the Nyquist locus intersected the origin in the (1m G(joo), Re G(joo)} plane, were then plotted against each other and compared with the measurements. Good agreement was obtained, as shown in Figure 4. An interesting question in the stability analysis of parallel channels concerns the modes of oscillation in the case when all the channels are geometrically similar and operate at similar power, flow and inlet temperature conditions. Theoretically, if a bundle of identical channels was externally perturbed due to a small change in the total flow rate at the inlet, the response of all the channels would be in-phase with one another and no channel-to-channel oscillations would be observed. Such oscilations would be possible only if the initial perturbations in the flow rates at the inlet to the individual channels varied, or if there were asymmetries in the channels, such as slightly different inlet loss coefficients. In addition, channel-to-channel oscillations may be caused by differences in the geometry and/or operating conditions between the individual chanels. Moreover, the modes of oscillation in such systems depend on which asymmetry effects are dominant. 0,1
286
1 .00 Prediction
E
0.80
Unstable R egi o n
N
3' � 0.
0
X ::J -.J u. I- 0.40 « w :J:
Stable Region
0.20
AVERAGE INLET VELOCITY ( m/s)
Figure 4. Comparison between experimental data and prediction [9]. In order to study the effects of individual parameters in parallel channel arrays on their modes of oscillations, numerical tests were performed for a system of three parallel channels [8]. For ease of interpretation these evaluations were made in the time domain. For this purpose, the frequency domain relationship between the channel inlet flow rate and the total flow rate was converted into the time-domain by applying the numerical inverse Laplace transform algorithm developed by Balaram et al (1983), and then used to calculate the system's impulse response. Identical channels, each operating at their instability threshold, were modified by changing the power level in each channel. The results obtained by varying channel power level are shown in Figures 5 through 7. As seen in Figures 5 and 6, for three channels operating at different heat fluxes (i.e., 126.2, 116.7 and 107.3 W/cm2 ), the highest power (i.e., "hot") chanel oscillates out-of-phase with the other two channels. In contrast, the other two channels oscillate almost in-phase. In addition, the magnitude of oscillations of the lowest-power channel is always much smaller than that of the intermediate and high-power channels. These figures also show the stabilizing effect of inlet subcooling, however, the basic mode of oscillation does not appear to change. As expected, when two of the three chanels have identical thermal-hydraulic parameters (see Figure 7), these two channels oscillate in-phase.
0.40 _
>J() o .. W > J w
.. Z
0.20 _
-0.20 _
(a) q" 1 26 . 2 w/cm 2 (b) q" = 1 1 6.7 w/cm 2 " 1 07.3 w/cm 2 (c) q =
0.40
=
Figure 5. Impulse response of a three-channel assembly; different power level in each chanel, .6Tsub 3.3°C. =
0.60
� 0
0.40 -
-
() 0
0.20 -
W > JW ..
.. Z
1 0.00
TIME (SEC) -0.40
_
1 2.00
1 4.00
1 6.00
(a) q" = 1 26.2 w/cm 2 (b) q" 1 1 6.7 w/cm 2 " (c) q = 1 07.3 w/cm 2 =
0.60
Figure 6. Impulse response of a three-channel assembly; different power level in each channel, .6Tsub = 14.9°C.
288
0.45
� � >-
_
() o I-
-1
W > I W
-1 Z
0.30 -
0. 1 5 -
0.00 0.00
12.00
1 4.00
1 6.00
-0. 1 5
-0.30
-0.45
(a) q" (b) q " (c) q"
= = =
1 26.2 w/cm2 1 26.2 w/cm 2 85.2 w/cm 2
Figure 7. Impulse response of a three-channel assembly; two channels identical, the third at a lower power level. The influence of the hydraulic characteristics of an external loop on the channel-to-channel oscillations was also studied [8]. In particular, the case of two channels and loop, such as that shown in Figure 1 , was investigated. In Figure 8, the loop was very stable (i.e., KIN was large) but the two-channel assembly was marginally stable. As a result, both channels oscillated out-of phase, practically without perturbing the loop flow, as predicted by Eq. (43). It should be pointed out that while the perturbations in the loop flow rate were very small (that is, dWT « wT,o)' the channel pressure drop oscillations may still be substantial; this conclusion can be directly drawn from the equation, (45)
which is valid if KIN is large. Figure 9 shows the case when the inlet loss coefficient in the loop was reduced. In this case, some phase shift can be noted but the loop was still stable and was driven into forced oscillations by the unstable channels. In Figure 10, the loop's inlet loss was reduced even more. It is interesting to note that the loop was still stable, but as its stability was reduced, the amplitude of the forced oscillations of the loop flow increased. In addition, we note that the
289
amplitude of oscillations of one of the paralel channels is greater than that of the other. It is clear that complex modes of oscillation can occur. � �
en
�
0
0.6 -
0.4 -
0.2 -I u. 0.0 -I W Z -0.2 Z
«
()
I - 0. 4 -
-0.6 0
0.2
0.4
TIM E
0.6
� �
0.4 .
-I
0.0 .
�
0
u. -I
0.6
0.8
0.2 -
« -0.2
0
..
.. -0. 4 -0.6
0
0.2
0. 4
0.6
TIME
0.8
Figure 8. Interaction between channel-to-channel and loop instabilities, Channel Loss Coefficients
9; Kel = Ke2 =
(i-inlet, e-exit) �l = �2 =
1
KIN = 1000; KoUT = 8
Loop loss coefficients:
Channel heat flux: 2 = 85.2 w/cm , q '2
q :1
= 88.3 w/cm2
290
f!.
- 1 20
f!. 1 0
;;
-I u. -I
u. -I W
15
�
en
�
�
�:c - 1 0 <.:>
�
-5
o
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 TIME
1
10 ;g� 15
�
-I u. -I
0
5 0
�
-5 « � 0 � -1 0
-1 5 0
�
<.:>
;g�
� -I u. -I
�
0 I-
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 TIME
Figure 9. Interaction between channel to-channel and loop instabilities, KIN= 150 ,other parameters same as in Figure
8.
80 40 0 -40 -80
o
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 TIME
1 20 80 40
-80
J\M
- 1 20 0
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8
0 -40
TIME
Figure 10. Interaction between channel-to-channel and loop instabilities, KIN= 20, other con ditions same as in Figure 8.
In Figure 11, the loop's inlet loss coefficient was reduced even more while the inlet loss coefficients in each chanel were increased to stabilize them. In this case, the loop is only marginally stable but the channels are stable. Thus, the chanels oscillate almost in-phase. Note, however, that due to channel-to chanel interaction, a slight component of the out-of-phase mode can be seen. 3.
NONLINEAR PHENOMENA
The propagation of density-waves is governed by combined hydrodynamic and thermodynamic phenomena (which can also be coupled with other effects, such as thermal inertia of heaters, or neutron dynamics in nuclear reactors) which are highly nonlinear in nature. These nonlinear effects
29 1
determine various system characteristics, including the amplitude and frequency of oscilations. most boiling and condensing systems are only conditionally stable, the response of a perturbed system strongly depends on the magnitude of the initial (external) perturbations. This is illustrated in Fig. 12. In particular, while for a sufciently small perturbation the system may return its original steady-state operating conditions, an increase in the a divergent response. Furthermore, perturbation's magnitude may lead even if the perturbed system's response will eventually converge to the equilibrium operating level, its amplitude at some time may temporarily exceed the required thermal limits of the system (e.g., a flow-reduction induced CHF).
Since
to
� 0
en
-
�
0
.. w
.. U.
9 6 3 o -
Z -3 Z « -6
:r: 0
-9
-
0
0.2
0.4
0.2
0.4
9
�
�
�
0 .. U. ..
to
0.6
TIME
0.8
6 3 o -
« -3 I0 -6 I-9
-
0
0.6
TIME
0.8
1
Figure 1 1 . Interaction between channel-to-channel an d loop instabilities, Kil = lG2 = 11 ; Kel = Ke2 = 1.
292
P1
P2 · _ ·_· -· - · P2
CASE (A) . STABLE CHANNEL a x
LIN EAR NONLINEAR
\/-,
CASE (B). UNSTABLE CHANNEL Figure 12. Boiling channel response to step reduction in system pressure. Whereas the linear system theory can be applied to nonlinear two-phase systems, it can be used to describe the behavior of these systems around their steady state operating points only as long as the perturbations remain sufficiently small. However, this approach is unable to predict other important system properties, such as the magnitude of perturbations in
293
various parameters external to the system (e.g., the temperature and flow rate of fluid entering the system, the system pressure, thermal power, etc.) required to maintain the stable operating mode of a conditionally stable system. Neither can it be used to predict the response of such systems when an unstable mode is reached. When the operating parameters of a boiling system exceed the stability limits, the properties of the system response depend on which of two basic unstable modes will occur: subcritical bifurcations or supercritical bifurcations [7] (see Fig. 13).
OJ· .I n
(a)
linear stability I boundary
I
Supercritical bifurcation
�
h !
�
STABLE
Ojin
Ojin
I
linear stability boundary I
� t
STABLE
�
UNSTABLE
� -
I
(b)
Subcritical bifurcation
t
UNSTABLE �
Figure 13. Typical stability boundaries showing amplitude response for (a) limit cycle (b) finite amplitude boundary [7].
294 In the case of subcritical bifurcations, the unstable mode is reached when the amplitude of external perturbation is sufciently large even though the system is linearly stable. Clearly, this is a potentially dangerous situation. Supercritical bifurcations (Le., limit cycles) occur when the threshold of linear instability is exceeded. It has already been shown theoretically [10] that bifurcations of both kinds may occur in a boiling channel. Moreover, they have been measured in actual boiling systems, including both small-scale experiments [11] and operating nuclear power plants [5, 12]. The former were concerned with the channel-to-channel instabilities between two electrically heated parallel chanels. The latter data mainly refer to the neutronically coupled density-wave instabilities, where the void reactivity feedback has a profound effect on the behavior of the perturbed system. For example, if a BWR is stable for a given negative void coefficient of reactivity, and then this coefficient changes (as a result of changing the operating conditions) to a positive value, even small oscillations in reactor parameters may eventually be large enough to cause power excursion which, in turn, may lead to a serious accident (the Chernobyl accident illustrates what may happen if the void coefficient of reactivity is positive). On the other hand, if the magnitude of the void coefficient of reactivity becomes too large on the negative side, supercritical bifurcations may occur, resulting in the onset of self-sustained oscillations of a finite, possibly large, magnitude. For example, in the stability tests performed on the CAORSO (Italy) boiling water nuclear reactor, such oscillations in power and flow were observed in selected channels of the reactor core These local neutronics-induced parallel-channel instabilities (see Fig. 14) may not cause oscillations in the recirculation loop, and still lead to the failure of fuel elements in certain core regions. The development of nonlinear stability methods lags far behind those for linear systems. In most cases the analyses of nonlinear models of diabatic two-phase systems are based on numerical solutions of system equations in the time domain. Even though reasonable agreement with experimental data was obtained in some cases, especially when sophisticated computer codes were used, such as RETRAN [13] or RAMONA [5], both the complexity of the models and the nature of the method itself (direct numerical integration) do not allow for applying this approach to generic studies of the system's stability characteristics. Various theoretical methods of nonlinear stability analysis have also been applied to two-phase systems. Four major methods are listed in Table 6.
Table 6 Nonlinear •
•
•
•
methods
Hopfs Bifurcation Method Method of Liapunov Harmonic Quasi-linearization (Describing Function Method) Attractors) Of Chaos (Fractals As Measure Of
295
I
I
A
FUEL ROD ASSE MBLIES
a: w n. ..
z <
U
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
TIME (SEC )
Figure 14. Typical local instabilities observed in a boiling water reactor. The approach based on Hopfs theory was applied so far to rather simple models only [10, 14, 15] such as: a single boiling channel, uniform and constant heat flux, constant inlet temperature, etc. This method can be used, among others, to determine which of the instability modes (subcritical or supercritical bifurcations) will occur, and, as long as the amplitude of oscillations remains small, to evaluate this magnitude. Whereas the original method of Lyapunov is also difficult to apply to advanced models of boiling systems, its recent extension [16, 17, 18] not only provides effective ;stability criteria for a large class of nonlinear systems, but also yields additional information about the properties of perturbed system trajectories. This new approach, which has mainly been used to study
296
nuclear reactor systems (including BWRs with void reactivity feedback [16, 7]), be readily extended to other non-nuclear two-phase systems. The method itself be used to study instabilities related to subcritical bifurcations (i.e., if a system is conditionally stable) and allows for determining regions of attraction of the steady state operating level and estimating the magnitude of perturbed trajectories as a function of the magnitude of various initial perturbations. The method of harmonic quasi-linearization is an extension of the classical describing function method. It has been successfully used [19] to predict the magnitude and period of limit cycle oscillations in a boiling chanel. One of the most interesting problems in the analysis of nonlinear effects in two-phase systems concerns the so-called period-doubling bifurcation phenomena, possibly leading to chaotic vibrations (see Fig. 15). can
can
y(t)
y(t)
y(t)
Figure 15. Period-doubling bifurcation and the development of chaotic oscillations.
297
So far, only very limited theoretical studies have been undertaken in this area [20], and much more work is still necessary, including both experiments and theoretical/numerical analyses. Each of the three methods described above (i.e., Hopfs bifurcation, Lyapunov method and describing function method) provides important, but partial only, information about properties of nonlinear systems. Usually, analytical studies are limited to one particular method. Since, in fact, these methods complement one another, it is interesting to compare the results obtained by applying each of them to a boiling channel model. Let consider for this purpose a uniformly heated boiling channel under constant-pres sure-drop boundary condition. Using a homogeneous model of two-phase flow, the lumped-parameter mass and momentum conservation equations are given Eqs. (46) and (47) in Table 7. In Eqs. (46) and (47), the subscripts "1", "2", and "24>" refer to the channel inlet (single-phase liquid), exit (two-phase mixture), and two-phase region, us
as
Table 7 A model of uniformly heated boiling channel under constant-pressure-drop condition
G21 G22 f G2 O d f - ( ) L Tt i\p + (1 - 2DH A.) P f P2 2DH P =
(46)
(L A.) -
(47)
(48)
- [1 + f
1 - 0\1 G )] ( G + aL) G21 Pf 1 Pf 1
(L - v
--
(49)
298
Table 7 A model of uniformly heated boiling channel under constant-pressure-drop condition (continued) xl = J.lX1 + w2x2 + F(X 1, x2 ) X2 = -xl 3 - 'Y X 1
X l = J.lX 1 + •
X2 = -X l
(50)
(51)
(52a) (52b)
respectively, p and G are the channel-length-averaged density and mass flux,
A. is the nonboiling length, and the remaining notation is conventional.
v G , where v =constant is the fluid residence time in Pf 1 the non-boiling region, and taking, dp d Pf +P2 1 dp2 1 d�
2
2
2 1 G G (G ) = 2 ( -1 - -2 ) Pf P 2 P 2q, - 1 G = 2 (G 1 + G2)
where n = (q'Vfg)/Axshfg), Eqs. (46) - (47) can be rewritten as Eqs. (48) - (49) in Table 7. Substituting, X l = n (G2 -G 1 ) and X2 = G2 - Go , where Go is the steady-state flow rate, Eqs. (48) and (49) respectively, can be rewritten in the state-variable form as Eqs. (50) (51), where F (X l X2 ) is a third order polynomial, containing quadratic and cubic term� with respect to X l and X 2 , the coefficients of which depend on the operating conditions and geometry of the channel. In particular, the above-mentioned coefficients can be chosen in such a way that Eqs. (50) - (51) become Eqs. (52) - (53). As can be readily seen, Eq. (52) is linearly (i.e. with 'Y = 0) stable if J.I.< O and unstable if J.I.>O. Concerning the properties of solutions of the full nonlinear system, it can be shown by using the method based on Hopfs bifurcation theorem and its extensions that if J.l and 'Y are small and )1.1>0 then Eq. (52)
299
has a non-zero periodic solution, (limit cycle), x*(t) = (xi(t), x2(t)}. Moreover, if J.L>O (supercritical case), this periodic solution is stable and characterizes the asymptotic behavior (as t-+oo) of all trajectories with initial values, x(O), within certain solution distance isfromunstable, x*(O). Onso that the other hand, if J.Lother
J.L
•
Jl
If
•
(53)
where,
(54) yields: (1) ifJ.L>O, the solution x(t) = 0 of the nonlinear system given by Eq. (52) is unstable, (2) if J.L
300
Table 8 Results of
(continued)
(2c) for any solution asymptotically approaching zero, the maximum departure from the zero-steady-state can be evaluated (estimated) as a function of the initial conditions from, X� (t) + olJ.
•
x �(t)
<
x� (0) + olJ. x �(O).
H armonic Quasi-Linearization. Transforming Eq. (52) into, y f.1Y + IDly + 'Y (y)3 = 0
(55)
-
and assuming,
(56)
y= A' sin (oo*t) yields, y = Xl = A'oo* cos(oo*t) = A cos(oo*t) (y)3 = A3 [ � cos(oo*t) + i cos(3ro*t) ]
(57)
(58)
Ignoring the higher (3rd) order term in Eq. (58), a quasi-linear form of Eq. (55) can be written as, 2 Y Il (1 4 A
• •
3
-
-
=0
) +
'Y y • f.1
Assuming f.1'Y > 0, and substituting Eq. (56) into Eq. (59), yields, X l(t) = X2(t) =
3
1 cos(oot) 1.
ro
which is the limit
sin
(59)
(60)
(oot) solution of
(61) (52).
Other aspects of the solution properties of Eq. (52) can be studied by using the method of Lyapunov. The results based on a particular form of the function of Lyapunov, are also given in Table 8.
301
solution (limit cycle), it can be approximately Eq. (52) evaluated by has usinga periodic the method of harmonic quasi-linearization. For this purpose, Eqs. (52a) (52b) will be replaced by a single second-order equation with respect to y=-x2(t). The resuls are shown in Table 8. can be seen, of the der Pol equation. is a generalization Eq. (55) ing to note that theclassical limit cycleVanmagnitude, given by Eq. (60), is interest If
As
It
(if 1l,,(>0) depends on JJi'Y only (i.e. it remains constant for different (small) as long as and 'Y change proportionally). Let us now compare the above-given theoretical predictions with the numerical results, obtained for JJi'Y =3, 0.1 and (1)=1, shown in Figs. 16 and 17. As seen in Fig. 16, if Il = 0.1 > 0, there exists a stable limit cycle, the theoretically predicted magnitude (A=2) and angular frequency «(1)*=1) of which agree very well with the values obtained from numerical calculations. It is also clear that in this case the zero-solution is unstable. If = -0.1 < 0, the unstable limit cycle, predicted theoretically, is not explicitly shownsolutions in Fig. 17, its presence can beconverging) readily deduced from theIn two oscillatory (onebutdiverging, the other given there. this case, the zero-solution is asymptotically stable and its theoreticallyestimated region of attraction includes all initial conditions such that x� (0) + x� (0) <3. The result shown in Fig. 17 (upper part) has been obtained for Xl (0) = -0.8 and X2 1.5, i.e. x� (0) + x� (0) = 2.89. The maximum theoretically calculated initial value of X l to guarantee convergence ofx(t) to zero is, xl (0) = 1.73 (ifx2 (0) = 0) The actual permissible magnitude may be slightly higher, but by no more than 15%, since x (0)=2, x2(0)=0 already yield the limit cycle solution. The maximum values of x1 l(t) in this case (the first peak in the upper part of Fig. 17), obtained from the theory and numerical calculations (X1,max = 1.7) are in perfect agreement with each other. Il
1.1
1.1 =±
Il
=
4. STABILITY MARGINS
modelingalways simplifications, theoretical predictions of Because ofin several boiling systems contain a substantial instabilities uncertainty level. uncertainties associated with the evaluated In particular, bethequantified by using the so-called stability margins.instability thresholds of linear system stability VariOllS margins have been used for this purpose, definitions including the classical gain and phase margins. Another definition, which encompasses the gain and margins obtained from both the normalized phasephase diagrams [7], ascombined shown intogether, Fig. 18. can be can
302
w
--'
�
C/) w
TIME 2.00
�
--' w a: -
0 . 00
c5 -2.00 I C\J
C!J
-4 .00 0.00
30.00
60.00
90.00
TI M E
1 20 . 00
1 50.00
w «
--'
&5
2.00
� -
c5 -2.0 0 I C\J
C!J
0.00
30.00
60.00
90.00
1 20 . 00
1 50.00
Figure 16. Flow rate oscillations in a boiling channel - supercritical case, �=
0.1, 'Y = 0.033, CJ) = 1.
303
W
�
il a:
0 . 00
..
-
c5 -2.00 I C\I
(!J
0.00
W
3 0 . 00
60.. 00
90.00
1 20.00
1 50.00
3 0 . 00
60.00
90. 00
1 20.00
1 50.00
TIME
..
� il >
2.00
�
il a: -
0.00
..
c5 -2.00
(!J
C\I I
0 . 00
Figure 17. Flow rate J.1 = -0.1, "( = 0.033, co = 1.
TIME
oscillations in a boiling channel subcritical case,
304
.Im
Re
Figure
18.
Typical nyquist loci for various operational parameters.
All the above-mentioned definitions apply to single-input/single- output (SISO) systems. As discussed before, two-phase loops and channels are, in general, multi-inpuUmulti-output (MIMO) systems. It can be shown [7] that the calculated conditions of the onset of instabilities are the same, regardless of the particular input/output functions used in the analysis. Consequently, both SISO or MIMO models can be used for this purpose. A question arises, however, whether SISO and MIMO models of a given boiling system are fully equivalent in describing stability characteristics of the system. As has been shown by many authors, the SISO representation of multivariable systems may become inadequate in quantifying various types of uncertainties associated with mathematical modeling of complex physical phenomena. In order to investigate the sensitivity of multivariable system properties to the uncertainties caused by the differences between models and reality, a method has been developed [21] relating MIMO stability margins to the nonn of the close-loop transfer function of a boiling system, given by the following equation,
i (s) = !I (s) i (s)
(62)
112 � 5max (!!) = [l )] 1 1 11HI- 12 -A max am· 1&1 2 max 1 IIxII 2 <
(63)
In Eq. (62), the matrix, !! (s), is the system's closed loop transfer function, and its norm is defined as,-
305
where IIHII2 is the Euclidian norm of the vector, x, !!* is the matrix conjugate and 0max is the largest singular to !I , Amax is the largest eigenvalue of value ofH. As it can be readily shown, if the system under consideration is stable, we have, det �- 1 (joo)] >0 and, consequently, (Omax[ [!!(j oo)]} - 1 >0 for all w. When the instability threshold is reached, there exists such 00* that, det [!- l (joo*) {omax[ [!(j00*)]r 1 o. =
=
Let us define the system stability margin as, (64)
For a stable system, m is always a positive number, decreasing to zero when the system is approaching the instability threshold. Hence, the definition given by Eq. (64) be indeed used to quantify the stability margins of multivariate system. The fundamental practical problem concerning applications of the above mentioned concept deals with establishing a minimum of the stability margin, below which system operation is unacceptable. Since the existing stability acceptance criteria are mainly based on the SISO analysis, it is natural to compare the value of m, evaluated for a multidimensional model, with similar results for individual one-dimensional components. Specifically, in the case of model given by Eq. (62), and assuming that H is a (2x2) matrix, we can calculate m for the three different cases: !!, H II , and H22 . It should be mentioned at this point that, for a scalar systeIl, given by a transfer function, Hii (joo), Eq. (64), reduces to, can
l . m11.. min w [H11 (joo)] =
.
(65)
In order to illustrate the relationship between m, m 1 1 , m22 , results obtained for a model of the Peach Bottom nuclear reactor for various operating conditions, are shown in Fig. 19. The analysis of the results given there yields the following observations:
306
the stability margins, given by Eq. (65), for the reactivity (H ll) and the inlet velocity state variables (H22) similar, the two-dimensional stability margin, of magnitude lower than the one-dimensional marginsm,mllis two and morders , the frequency at which the minimum in Eqs. (64) and22(65) is reached the same the for system al three cases under consideration, after becomes unstable, the values of m and mii (i=1,2) start increasing again. follows from the above that, at least for the case considered here, the MIMO stability margin, given by Eq. acceptable (64), be directly related to the 8180 results, and consequently, a unique margin canhand, be established for the entire two-dimensional system. On the other however, having evaluatedthea system given value of orm>Ounstable. from Eq.Hence, (64), we still cannot determine whether is stable stability concept discussed herein must always be used togetherthewith one ofmargin the existing stability criteria, such as the Nyquist criterion, for instance. are
It
can
j
O. O O
5 46
0.48
m
m 22
Figure 19. Comparison between MIMO and 8180 stability margins.
307
REFERENCES
J.A.E. A. Boure, . Bergles and L.and S. Tong, Nucl. Eng.Two-Phase Des., 25 (1973). Bergles,A.E(eds. S. Kakac F. Mayinger) Flow and Corp., 1976. Heat Transfer, 1, Hemisphere Publishing M. Ishii and N. Zuber, Thermally Induced Flow Conf., Instabilities 5, 1970.in Two PhaseLahey, Mixtures, Proc of the 4th Int. Heat Transfer Jr. and D. Drew, NUREG/CR-144, (1980). R.L. TMoberg . and Tangen, The Time Domain BWR2986 Stability Analysis Code RAMONA-3B, Using 3-D Proc. of the ENO International Conference, ENSIANS "Two-Phase1986. ChapterGeneva, M.Z. Podowski, entitledSwitzerland, Flow Dynamics," in this same book. R.T. Lahey, Jr. and M.Z. Podowski, (eds. G.F. Hewitt. J.M. Delhaye and N. Zuber) Multiphase Science1989.and183-371. Technology. 4, Hemisphere Corporation. Publishing New York. C Chern. Lahey. M.Z. CPodowski. orom., 93, R.T. (1990). Jr A. lausse and N. DeSanctis. Eng. M. Aritomi. 14(2), S. Aoki and A. Inoue. Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology, (1977). J.L. Achard, D.A. Drew and R.T. Lahey. Jr., J. Fluid Mech., 155. (1985) 213-232. and S.S.C Lee, Paper No. 71-H-12, 1971. T.N. Veziroglu and S.NP-2494-SR, F. hen, Trans, S.AHornyik, . SandozEPRI 1982. Nucl. Soc., 45, (1986). Rizwan-uddin and J.J. Dorning. Eng.(1986). Des., 91. (1986). 14 Rizwan-uddin, Trans. Nucl. Nuc!. Soc 53, M.Z.Core Podowski, Proc. of the ANS TopicalLake, Meeting on1982. Reactor Physics 16 and Thermal-Hydraulics, Kiamesha Podowski, IEEE Transactions on Automatic C ontrol, V. AC31, 17 M.Z. 198&. M.Z. Podowski, IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, V. AC31. 1986b. Clausse, A. Kerris and J. Conventi, Proc. of the 3rd International 19 A.Symposium on Multi-Phase Transport and Particle Phenomena, Miami Beach. FL, 1986. J.J. Dorning, CTrans. Nuc!. Lahey, Soc., 53, (1986). .N. Shen, R. T . and M.Margin, Becker,NUREG/ An Analysis J.Boiling Balaram, CR-3291,of Water Nuclear Reactor Stability 1983. 21 3 45 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
K.
.•
ASME
Am.
K
15
Am.
.•
NY,
18
ID 21
Am.
Derivation Of A Linear Model For Boiling Channel StabilityFrequency-Domain Analysis In order to perturb Eqs. (1) and (2) around a steady-state operating point, the steady-state parameters be evaluated. system mass pressure, and inlet velocity of the must subcooled liquid, jin,oFor. thea given steady-state flux p,is given by,
APPENDIX A
308
Go
= Pf jin ,o
(A.l) the inlet subcooling is L\hin and the assumed uniform axial wall heat flux is q � the steady-state le�gth of the liquid region (i.e., the boiling boundary), be evaluated from Eq. (11) in [6] as, 0'
If
A.o •
can
(A.2) Because of the assumed incompressibility of the liquid. the volumetric flux in the single-phase region is constant and equal to jin,o In the two-phase region. the volumetric flux. <jo(z» . can be obtained by integrating Eq. ( 13), in [6], in which ro = (q� PH) / (hfgAx s), and p are assumed to be constant. The resultant equation can be written as, (A.3)
where, (AA) Hence, the homogeneous density, < Pho >, can be obtained from, Go Go < Pho (z) > = (A.5) < jo (z) > Oo(Z-Ao ) + j in,o For transient generalize to, analysis, Eqs. (1). (A.3), (AA), and (A.5), respectively, (A.6) <j(t,z) > O(t,z)[z-A(t)] + jin(t) (A.7) =
O(t,z)
=
�
Ax-s hfg
< Ph(t, z) > = < j(t,z) >
(A.B) (A.9)
309
Eqs. (A.I) - (A.9), we can perturb and Laplace-transform Eqs. (1) and to obtain, (2),Using
(A. 1 1) The next step in the analysis deals with relating the variables in Eqs. (A.IO) and (A.II), B�, B < J > , and B < Ph >, to the channel external perturbations. The volumetric flux (i.e., the superficial velocity) perturbation. B < J > . can be obtained from Eq. (A.7) as, (A. 12) The boiling boundary perturbation. o�. can be expressed in terms of the local enthalpy perturbation. B < ii (S,Ao) > , by integrating the energy equation. Eq. (A.9). in [6] , from Ao, to A(t), and then perturbing it. The resultant equation is,
Taking into account that transforming Eq. (A.13). yields. Go Vfg B < h(s,A.o) >= BA.(s) = oh n fg - --
-
< h ( t,A) > = h f
A0 B < h(s,A.o >
Llsub
= ho (Ao)' and Laplace
(A. 14)
310
The enthalpy perturbation at the boiling boundary, S < 1\ (5,"" ) > , can be evaluated by perturbing and Lapace-transforming Eq. (11) in [6].0 Under the assumptions mentioned earlier, we obtain, d(Sh) dz +
__
5
Jin,o
Sq" (5/Z) Sj � Go Ax-s qo Jin,o
Sh(s,z) = PH q"0 -
..
(A.15) Before Eq. (A.l5) is integrated, we should notice that the perturbation in the surface heat flux, q"(s,z), is not an independent variable, and can be expressed in tenns ofS the perturbation in the heater internal heat generation rate, &1�' (5) . The specific relationship between &1" and sq' " depends on the model used to quantify the heated wall dynamics, as well as the heater geometry. In general, the following expression be obtained, Zl (5) &1" (s,z) + Z2 (5) sq� (5) = STw(s,z) (A.l6) If a lumped-parameter model is used, given by Eq. (25) in [6], we have: can
In the single-phase region, the wall temperature, Tw, is given by Newton's Law of Cooling, as, (A.l7) where Tb is the bulk fluid temperature. Perturbing Eq. (A.l7), and taking into account that, 1cp( H t) = H1cp,o [jin (t) / hn,o]a (where, normally, a = 0.8), yields, Sci" = H1cp,o (STw - STb ) + qoa Sin Jin,o (A.l8) -
-
"
Eqs. (A.16) and (A.l8) can be combined to obtain sq" (s,z) in the single-phase region as a function of sq� ' (s) , sin (s) , and an(s,z). Substituting the resultant expression into Eq. (A.l5) and rearranging, we obtain,
311
&] (S) �Jm (5) + d(�h) + = 9(s) -) �h(s,z) ( 4>( ) 13 S 5 dz Jm. ,o qH,o ' "
_
(A.19)
where,
(A.20) (A.21) (A.22) Integrating Eq. (A.19) from z �h(s,O) = �hin<S), yields,
=
0 to z == A.o , with the boundary condition,
[
� �h(s,A.o ) = Exp [-4><s)A.o ] �hin + 4>(5) {1 EXP[ 4>(S)A.o U 9<S) . �n + J3(s) lin ,
0
qH
,0
]
(A.23)
Substituting Eq. (A.23) into Eq. (A.14), the expression for �):(s) becomes,
(A. 24) where, A l (s) = -
A 9(s) {1 Exp [-4>(s)A. ]} o MlsubJm,o 0 .
.
A.0 J3(s) { 1- Exp[-q,(S)AO ]} Mlsubq 0 A.0 A3 (s) = Exp [-4>(5)A.O ] Llsub
A2 (s) =
I
I
(A.25) (A.26) (A.27)
312
(A.28) Eq. (A.24) can be used to eliminate ai from Eq. (A.12). In order to eliminate an from the expression for a < } > , we can use the equation which describes the heated wall dynamics, Eq. (18) in [6], combined with Newton's Law of Cooling for the boiling heat transfer, q " = C(p) (Tw - Tsat ) (A.29) After perturbing, Eq. (A.29) becomes, (A.30) 11m
where, Z3 = [(Twto - Tsat ) / q� / m] = Co tan t. Substituting Eq. (A.30) into Eq. (A. l6), and rearranging, yields, an(s) = Z4 (5) &i�' (s) where, ns
(A.31) (A.32)
Now, substituting Eqs. (A.24) and (A.31) into Eq. (A.12), we obtain, o < }(s,Z» = [l - Oo Al (S)] a1m (S) + [(Z- Ao ) Z4 (S) - OoA2 (S)] &i�' (s)
- 0oA3 (s) ahin (s)
(A.33) Finally, in order to obtain an equation for 0 < PH (S, Z) > , we can combine Eqs. (10) and 13) in [6], and perturb the resultant equation, where &l is given by Eq. (A.3 l). Substituting Eqs. (A.3) and (A.5) into Eq. (A.34) yields,
[
313
d _ >) + (s I 00 + 1) a < p > = .. a< > G S < -( P h dz (Z-AO + jm',0 / °0 ) h 002 (Z- A0 + J'm. ,o SO _
0
(A.35) In order to integrate Eq. (A.35), a boundary condition must be established at Z 1.0 ' For this purpose Eq. (10) in [6] can be integrated from Ao to A, to yield, =
(A.36) After perturbing and Laplace-transforming Eq. (A.36), and taking into account that, < Ph (t,A) > Ph and < j(t,A) > hn (t) , we obtain, a < Ph (S,AO ) > � [S1n (t) - Sj(s,Ao ) >] hn,o (A.37) Using Eq. (A.12), Eq. (A.37) can be rewritten as, =
=
=
S < Ph (s, Ao ) > =
Jin,o
SiCs)
(A.38) (A.35) be integrated with the boundary conditions given be Eq. (A.Now, 38), toEq.obtain, - S < Ph (s,z) > {S[jin,J < jo(z) >]( sl°o·l) -Oo�Oo / (8-00)][ Go / jo(z) >2] SX(s) - iin,ol < io(z» ](slilo [no I (s-no)][Go l < io (z) > ] 6;" [ ](S/O0 1 [Gojin,ol < jo(z) > ] aO(s) - 1 - hn,ol < jo (z) > (s -Oo) (A.39) (A.24), (A.33), and (A.39) can be substituted into Eqs. (A.10) ll),Eqs. andFinally, (A. and the spatial integrations performed. Assuming simplicity xit,forperforming at the channel inlet and e that the only local losses are those ll ), and rearranging, yields the following thexpressions integration inpressure Eq. (A.drop for the perturbations in the single-phase and two ephase regions, respectively, can
+[ {
=
-I)} -l)}
<
2
2
in
-
(A.40)
314
(A.41)
[
where,
(fjin
]
A. sA. 0 A (s) + f--2. + K in + r1,H (s) = G0 � . 2 DH Jin,0 l DH J mp
g)
(i = Z , 3 )
(A.42) (A. 43) (A.44) (A.45) (A.46)
lll,H (s) = Go [F1 (s) - F2 (s) A1 (S)] llZ,H (s) = Go [FZ (s)A Z (s)-F3 (s)] ll3,H (s) = Go F2 (s)A3 (s)
+ +
H
+(
8-00
1 m,o (8s-2Oo ) {EXP[(2no-S)tex] - } + J�
no [Exp (-st ) - 1] } + K ex ex s
{I
+
(1-ExP( Ootex)
no (1 - Exp [(0 - s)t ] 0 ex no )
2(s -
)}
(A.47)
- Kex 00 {.!.2 ExP [(O
0
F3
(s) = {
(
< S+2(0) 00
- S)'t ] - 1 - 2(s0-000) [1 - Exp[(00 - S)'tex] J} ex
-A.o) -
f
(A.48)
82 . [ ] 0 ( 8-00)00 Jin,o 'tex - ( 8-00)2 Exp (0 -s}tex -1
2 (LH - 1.0 ) - iin ,o (LH - 1.0 ) 0
0 H - (S goo) [l - EXP(-Ootexl] -;[l -ExP(-S<exl] (1 - Exp [(00 -S)tex ])) Kex } Z4 (s) + \(LH - "0) +
315
1
0
(A.49) (A.50)
317
APPLICATIONS O F FRACTAL AND CHAOS THEORY IN THE FIELD OF MULTIPHASE FLOW & HEAT TRANSFER
R.T. Lahey, Jr. The Edward E. Hood, Jr. Professor of Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, 12180-3590 USA NY
Abs1ract
elementsandof discussed. fractals, static & dynamic bifurcations, and chaos theory areThe presented Engineering examplesinstabilities for the application these analytical techniques are given for density-wave in a singleof phase thermosyphon and a two-phase boiling channel. 1.
INTRODUCTION
The study of chaotic phenomena in deterministic dynamical systems relies heavily on the concept of fractal geometry and the topological interpretation of phase space trajectories. This emerging science has already produced some dramatic breakthroughs in our understanding of nonlinear dynamics. It is the purpose of this tutorial chapter to summarize the essential concepts necessary for understanding how these ideas and analytical techniques may applied to physical systems. In particular, applications in the area of besingleand multi-phase flow & heat transfer will be stressed. This paper will begin by reviewing some important concepts concerning fractals and fractal dimensions. Next, some of the essential elements of the theory of chaos will be presented. Examples of static and tlynamic bifurcations will benonlinear presentedoscillations and discussed, and phase plane interpretations of both lineal' will be presented and generalized to higher order and systems of equations. Next, chaotic phenomena will be discussed and the concepts of a "strange attractor" and basins of attraction will be presented. Bifurcation diagrams, Poincare sections, so-called first return maps, and Lyapunov exponents, as well as other tests to verify a chaotic response, will be discussed. Finally,inthese techniquesnatural will becirculation applied toloopproblems ofboiling density-wave instability a single-phase and in a channel. It will be shown that chaotic phenomena may occur for some operating conditions.
318 2. FRACfALS
There are many good books on the theory of fractals in which fractals are carefuly defined [1,2,3,4]. For our purposes here it is sufficient to define a fractal self-similar mathematical object which is produced by simple repetitive mathematical operations. In order to quantify what is meant, let consider a few sets which exhibit important fractal properties. As shown schematically in Figure 1, the Koch set is generated by dividing a line segment of length L into three equal segments (U3), removing the center segment and in its place forming an equilateral triangle having side length U3. As the process is repeated a rather fuzzy looking continuous curve, which is nowhere differentiable, is formed. Significantly, in the limit this set has infinite length. The Cantor set is shown in Figure 2. One way to form it is by again dividing a line segment of length L into three equal segments (U3), except that in this case the center segment is removed and discarded. As the process is repeated, we obtain in the limit a set having zero length and an infinite number of points. The Cantor set is a very important one in the theory of chaos, since the phase space trajectories often form a pattern on so-called Poincare sections (to be discussed later) which have some properties similar to that of a Cantor set. as, a
us
(n= O )
( n= l )
( n= 2 ) (n= 3 )
(n= 4 )
Figure 1. The Koch Set for four applications of the Koch algorithm
3 19
1 /3 1 /9
1 /9
Figure 2. The Cantor Set. Other more complicated sets are also possible using simple iterative algorithms. One of the most famous is the Mandelbrot set. This set is generated from the iteration of the following complex nonlinear function: (1) where, z
=
x + iy, and, C = A + iB.
Equation ( 1) is equivalent to iteration of the following coupled real nonlinear functions: (2a) (2b)
yn+1 = 2xnYn +B
3,
As shown in Figure astoundingly complex patterns can be generated with the relatively simple Mandelbrot set. Moreover, this set demonstrates the fractal property that it repeats itself over and over as we zoom in on a particular portion. This is an important property of fractal sets, and one which we will find significant when we discuss chaotic "first-return maps".
320
Figure 3 . The Mandelbrot Set
[4]
Let us now turn our attention to how to characterize the various sets. In particular, the fractal dimension of a set. There are a number of possible fractal dimensions which one can define. Unfortunately, the fact that they are not all equivalent has often let to confusion. In this chapter we will consider only a few of the most important fractal dimensions for practical applications. The H ausdorff-Besicovitch dimension (DH-B ) is defined below:
DJi-B =
in N(e) lim e�O in( 11e)
(3a)
-D H-B E
(3b)
hence, N(e)
oc
32 1
N(e)
As shown in Figure 4, £ is the length of a hypercube, and is the smallest number of hypercubes necessary enclose the set of hyperspace points shown in Figure 4. We note that when the set is a single point, then Eq. (3b) implies )= the Hausdorft'-B esicovitch dimension is, DH -B = 0.0. In contrast, when the set the number of hypercubes needed is, = is a line segment of length Thus, Eq. (3a) implies:
to
N(e 1,
DH -B
L, ne = { LInn(L( l/e/e)) }= £--+0{LnL-L -Lne }= 10 e-+O lim
lim
Similarly, when the set is a surface of area S, N(£) D H-B
=
lim
e-+O
N(e) Ue.
=
8/£2, thus:
{ LnS--in2eine } = 2.0
For a fractal set, such as the Koch set, which covers more hyperspace than a line but less than a surface, we expect, < DH - B < Indeed, for this set we obtain [5]:
1.0
DH B -
=
ln4 - .:.
Ln3
1
2.0.
26
Figure 4. TIlustration of the covering of an object (a set of points) by cubes of linear dimension
[5]
322
Similarly, for the C antor set, which covers more hyperspace than a single point but less than a line, we expect, 0.0 < DH -B < 1.0. Since the Cantor algorithm implies, = (l/3)m and N(e) = 2m, we obtain: ln2m = -"='O.63 ln2 . -lim DH-B = e�Oln3 m ln3 Unfortunately, practicalBapplications the limiting operation in the definitionforof many the Hausdorfesicovitch dimension converges veryimplicit slowly. ThusHence, it is not useful for most cases of interest. let us next consider the so-called correlation dimension, DC . This dimension ishypersphere particularlyabout usefulpoint-i for thein analysis of data. It consists of centering a hyperspace and then letting the radius (r) of the hypersphere grow until all n points are enclosed. In practice, since the number of points (n) is finite, many spheres are used (centered about different N(r), points) and by: the results are averaged. That is, the correlation function, is given (4) N(r) = lim ..2 .r. �. H(r- I!i -!· I) n E
{to
J
l�J J
where, H(�) is a Heaviside step operation defined such that: H(�) =
0.0
It has been found that, in the limit as r�O [6], (5)
Thus, log N = DC log r C2 (6) As can be seen in Figure 5, we plot N(r) versus r in a log-log plot then the slope of the line will be the correlation dimension, DC . If we have antoanalytic that is being numerically straightforward computefunction the correlation dimension since theevaluated dimensionit ofis the hyperspace is known (ie, al the state variables are known). For example, the Cantor set has a correlation dimension of, DC = 0.63. Interestingly this is the same as the Hausdorff-Besicovitch dimension. Unfortunately this is not always true. In fact, it has been found [6] that, DC DH-B. +
if
S
323
l og N
log
o
D(5)=D(6)= Figure
5.
/
/ /'\WHITE NOISE / /
(FRACTAL
5 -(IDIMMBEDDI ENSION G)N
r
DI MENSION) p
C orrelation Dimension (DC).
Let us now consider evaluating the correlation dimension (DC) of data. If we are processing experimental data we normally do not know how many state variables are needed to characterize the process. Fortunately, it has been shown [7] that a pseudo-phase-space can be constructed using time-delayed measurements of only one temporal measurement, and that the basic topology of the attractor being investigated will be unchanged. This was an important discovery since it allows one to calculate the fractal dimension of a wide range of experimental data. Let us assume we are measuring some variable X (eg, pressure, temperature, etc.). We then have readings X(t), x(t+'t), X(t+2't ), . . . , where the
324
time delay t is somewhat arbitrary, however it is often taken to be the period of the maximum energy peak in the power spectral density (PSD) function. To determine DC , we must first assume a dimension for the hyperspace. Let us start by assuming a 3-D space, and plot x(t), x(t+t) and X(t+2t) as shown in Figure We then center a sphere of radius-r about point-i and apply Eq. (4). Next we make a log-log plot, as in Figure 5, and obtain a slope, DC(3). We then assume that four state variables are needed to describe the process and apply Eq. (4) to the 4-D hyperspace given by, x(t), x(t+t), X(t+2t) and X(t+3t). As before we make a log-log plot of the results and get a new (steeper) slope, DC(4). We continue this process for 5-D space, then 6-D space and so on, until, as shown in Figure 5, the slope (DC ) no longer changes. In the example shown in Figure 5, it has been found that the minimum number of state variables (p) to describe the process being measured is p 5. This is called the imbedding dimension of the process. As shown in Figure the imbedding dimension can be most easily recognized by plotting D versus p. The degree of freedom (p) at which D stops changing is the imbedding dimension and the slope for this value is the correlation dimension (DC) of the process. It should be noted that a truly random process (ie, one which has no underlying structure) has no finite imbedding dimension. That is, as can be seen in Figure 5, the slope never saturates for so-called "white noise" . When random noise is superimposed on the chaotic (ie, deterministic) signal, one expects the slope in the "large r" part of the plot converge to D C , as discussed above. In contrast, for the "smaller rIO part, the slope is different and never converges. Indeed, this part of the curve reflects the white noise in the system.
6.
=
[8]
•
•
•
•
•
•
• • •
Figure 6. 3-D Phase Space
to
•
:
. .. •. • • • • •
:. . . •
..
• •• • ••
X (t + r)
Representation of Signal X(t)
5,
325 Another important and interesting fractal dimension has been discussed by Feder [1]. This dimension is sometimes called the Hurst dimension, DH - B . Hurst showed that many time varying chaotic processes, �(t), of record length t, can be correlated by:
(7) where, R(t)
(Sa)
� Max X(t;t) - Min X(t;t) te t
te t
t
J[�(t') - �(t)]dt'
X(t; t) =
(Bb)
t-t �(t)
= .!t
t g(t')dt' t-t
{� H
(Be)
and,
S=
t
�(t,) _ �
t-t
]2 dt'
}�2
(Bd)
Obviously, X(t;t) is the cumulative temporal variation of �(t) about its mean, �; R(t) is the difference between the maximum and minimum value of X(t;t) in interval t, and S is the standard deviation of �(t). It has been found that random processes are characterized by DH 0.5, while chaotic processes are correlated by, DH = 0.7. Thus, processes having D H > 0.5, have some underlying structure. Thus the Hurst dimension, D H , is a relatively easy way of determining when a random-looking process may have a hidden structure. While there is much more than can be said about fractals, the ideas which have been presented above should be sufcient to allow one to understand the fractal nature of chaos. Thus let us now tum our intention to the mathematics which underlies chaos theory. First, we will consider the elements of bifurcation theory.
[1]
=
326
3. BIFURCATION THEORY
In order to understand how the solutions of nonlinear equations may bifurcate, and examples what it means whenanda bifurcation takes place, letThis us consider some simple of static dynamic bifurcations. tutorial approach follows the work of Doming [9]. There are two main classifications of bifurcations; static and dynamic bifurcations. 3.1. S�c �aoDS
The mostpoint) common and important static bifurcations are and the turning point (ie, saddle bifurcation, the transcritical bifurcation the pitchfork bifurcation. It should be noted solutionmay of aexhibit singlethese nonlinear differential equation, having only onethatstatethevariable, static bifurcations. In contrast, at least two state variables are required for dynamic bifurcations. Let us consider some nonlinear first order ordinary differential equations which the standard forms that the various static bifurcations can be reducedrepresent to. We begin by considering, �(t) = fl (x(t),J,1) x2(t) (9) The thistodifferential given by settingfixed the (ie, timesteady-state) derivative in points Eq. (9) ofequal zero. Hence,equation fl(X;J,1) =are 0, and thus, =
J.1 -
(lOa) or, (lOb) In order to examine the stability of these fixed points, we linearize Eq. (9), obtaining: fl ax (Ua) ax = � •
thus,
eto
(Ub) where the perturbation of the state variable (x) is given by:
327 Sx
=
11
x(t) - Xo
(Uc)
There are two possible values of the steady-state solution, xo ' These are given Eq. (lOb). Thus we have:
in
.(1) Sx
=
(1) - 2xo Sx =
(12a)
and ,
(12b) Assuming that the parameter 1.1 is a positive real number, the solution of Eq. (12a) is stable, and is given by: (13a) while Eq. (12b) is unstable, and is given by: (13b) The turning point (ie, saddle point) bifurcation and its solution flow are given ) in Figure 7. It can be seen that the lower branch, x , is shown dashed
�
to
denote that it is unstable. Next we tum our attention to a somewhat more complicated equation given by: (14) This equation exhibits what is called a transcritical bifurcation. As before the fixed points are given by: (15a) thus, (15b)
328
.. .. .. -
Figure
7.
Turning (ie., saddle) point bifurcation
The stability of the fixed point is given by the solutions of the linearization ofEq. (14): (16) The solution ofEq. (16) is: i 5x(i) (t) = 5x(()o) e(�-2x�i))t
7
(1 ) For i=l, Eqs. (15b) and (17) yield, (18a)
329
while for i=2, (l8b) Equations (18) showin that whenisJ.1 stable. > 0, the Insolution givenwhen by Eqs. (18a) issolution unstablein while(18a) the issolution Eq. (18b) contrast, J.1 < 0, the stable while that in Eq. (18b) is unstable. This bifurcation and its Eq. solution flow areconsider shown intheFigure 8. pitchfork bifurcation. This interesting Let us next so-called and important bifurcation ordinary differential equation:occurs in the solution of the following nonlinear �(t) = f3 (X (t);J.1) = J.1X
(19) x3 As before, the fixed points are determined by setting the time derivative to zero. Thus, -
(2Oa) hence, (2Ob) xo( l) = 0 J.1 < 0 (2Oc) xo(l) = 0 j.1 > 0 The stabilityofofEq.these linearization (19):fixed points are determined from the solutions of the (21) The solution of Eq. (21) is given by: (22)
From Eqs. (20b) and (21) we have:
330
(2) Xo
x
=
�
Jl
- - - - - - -
�
Figure 8. Transcritical Bifurcation
ax
(1)
( t)
(1)
=
t ax (o ) eJ.1
(23a)
Thus, when J.1 > 0 the solution is unstable, while for J.1 < 0 the solution is stable. Next, from Eqs. (20c) and (22), we find stable solutions for both branches of the pitchfork: ax
( 2) (t)
Sx
(3)
( t)
=
Sx
=
Sx
( 2) -2J.1t (o) e
(23b)
(3) -2J.1t ( o )e
(23c)
The pitchfork bifurcation and its solution flow are given in Figure 9. It can be seen that this bifurcation looks similar a saddle point bifurcation, except that both the upper and lower branch of the pitchfork bifurcation have stable fixed points. As a consequence the solution flow on the lower branch is different. Finally, we note that Eq. (19) is a special case of the following nonlinear ordinary differential equation:
to
33 1
� (t) f4 (X(t);�,9) 9 + � - x3 =
(24)
=
where 9 is often referred to as the imperfection parameter. Obviously when 9 0, Eq. (24) reduces to Eq. (19). When 9 0, the fixed points of Eq. (24) are given by: =
:1=
(25)
which has three roots given by [10], X�1) (8 1 + 82 ) =
i� (8 1 -82 ) Xo(2) - "21 (81 +82 )+ 2 =
(26a) 2b
( 6 )
(26c)
Figure 9. Pitchfork bifurcation
332
where, (27a)
(27b) As before, the stability of these fixed points is given by linearizing Eq. (24),
(28)
which is the same as Eq. (21). The solution ofEq. (28) is given by:
(i)
(29)
Thus the stability of the fixed points depends on the value of the three roots . . gIven 1D Eqs. (26) ,
Xo
•
It is interesting to consider the static bifurcation diagram of this two parameter, J.1 and e, one state variable, x(t), diferential equation. We see in " Figure-IO that for e � 0 the pitchfork bifurcation unfolds. Indeed we have a so called cusp catastrophe such that when I e I is large enough, hysteresis causes a sudden change from the one branch of fixed points the other (eg, from the lower the upper branch as e > 0 is increased beyond e· ). The physical significance of the unfolding of a pitchfork bifurcation has been studied previously in connection with the problem of instability in natural convection flows [11]. That is, for the onset of B enard cells in a square pool of fluid heated from below and inclined from the vertical by an angle e. For example, as can be seen in Figure 1 1, when the Rayleigh number (Ra) is increased for a horizontal pool (ie, e = 0°), we have a pitchfork bifurcation (at Ra· ) giving rise two roll cells of opposite polarity. It should be noted that the critical Rayleigh number (Ra· ) is closely related the parameter J.1; indeed, J.1 = Ra - Ra· . As the heating of the lower wall is increased further, we have another pitchfork bifurcation (Ra•• ) which leads the formation of two symetric roll cell pairs of opposite polarity. contrast, when the heated cavity is tilted by e = 2° the pitchfork bifurcation unfolds and the roll cell pairs formed at the second bifurcation, Ra·· (2°), are non- symmetric.
to
to
to
to
In
to
333
UNFOLDED PITCHFORK BIFURCATION (SIDE VIEW, 9 > 0)
UNFOLDED PITCHFORK BIFURCATION (SIDE VIEW, 9 < 0)
9 SOLUTION SURFACE OF FIXED POINTS CUSP CATASTROPHE (TOP VIEW)
HYSTERESIS CURVE (FRONT VIEW)
Figure 10. The unfolding of a pitchfork bifurcation. 3.2
Dynamic Bifurcations
Let us now turn our attention to the analysis of dynamic, or H opf, bifurcations [ 12]. As noted previously, at least two state variables are required for a H opf bifurcation. A simple example of a system having a H opf bifurcation is given by:
(30a)
(30b) The fixed points of this system of equations for real J.L are given by, (xl ,x2 ) = 0 o (0,0). As usual the stability of these fixed points can be determined by linearizing the system of equations about the fixed points:
334
FLUID VELOCITY
� �
�
FLUID VELOCITY
-
Ra
Figure 11. Effect of Rayleigh Number on the Bifurcation for 9=0° and 9=2°.
(31a)
(31b) or, equivalently, in matrix notation:
335
(32)
If we assume a modal solution of the form,
(33)
we find that the only non-trivial solution is for:
[1
(J.1 -
det
H ence,
i.)
-
1
]0
(J.1 - i.)
(34)
_
(35)
thus the eigenvalues are:
Thus,
(36) Equations (36) and (33) imply that we will have an oscillatory solution (with an radls) which is damped (ie, stable) for J.1 < (a angular frequency of (J) stable focus), and unstable for J.1 > (an unstable focus). It is interesting note that (x 1 ,x2 ) is a solution Eqs. (30), and the only one valid for small perturbations. However, Eqs. (30) also have another finite amplitude solution given by: =
to
1.0 0
=
(0,0)
0
to
(37)
336
Equation (37) is a circular orbit in XI-X2 phase space. As shown schematically in Figures-12 for J.1 > 0, and the plus (+) sign, in Eqs. (30) and (37), we may have a supercritical bifurcation, while for J.1 < 0, and the minus (-) sign, we may have a subcritical bifurcation. As can be seen in Figure 12a, for a supercritical bifurcation, all phase plane (ie, xl-x2 plane) trajectories (ie, solution flows) converge to a stable limit cycle of finite amplitude for conditions on the unstable side of the linear stability boundary (ie, J.1 = 0). Moreover, as given by Eq. (37), the amplitude of this limit cycle is In contrast, Figure 12b
�.
STABLE LIMIT CYCLE, fJ. > O
STABLE FIXED POINTS, fJ. < 0
- � fJ.
Figure 12a. Supercritical Hopf Bifurcation STABLE FIXED POINTS, fJ. < 0
UNSTABLE LIMIT CYCLE, fJ. < O
UNSTABLE FIXED POINTS, fJ. > 0
X2
Figure 12b. Subcritical Hopf Bifurcation
337
shows that for a subcritical bifurcation, an unstable limit cycle (of amplitude
{1l)
exists, such that the phase plane trajectories either converge to the negative I.l axis, (0,0), for small perturbations, or diverge exponentially for large enough perturbations. Thus, in this problem there are two so-called basins of attraction which are separated by the unstable limit cycle. The occurence of both subcritical and supercritical bifurcations have been predicted in boiling chanels [13] but only supercritical bifurcations (ie, limit cycles) have been measured to date. It is significant to note that subcritica1 bifurcations are potentially quite dangerous since they imply that divergent instability can occur in the region of linear stability if large enough amplitude perturbations occur in a boiling channel. This may result in a critical heat and physical damage the heated surface. flux The Hopf theorem is an existence theorem which states in essence that a dynamic (ie, Hop£) bifurcation occurs when one has a complex conjugate pair of eigenvalues ) which crosses the imaginary axis with,
(CHF),
Im(A) dl.l
�
to
0
(38a) (38b)
�O
We note that the eigenvalues given in Eq. (36) satisfy the Hopf criteria. The actual application of the Hopf analysis normally involves the use of higher order perturbation theory and a Floquet analysis of the stability of the resultant limit cycle. The application of this analytical method to a boiling channel has been discussed in detail by Achard et.al. [13] and Rizwan-Uddin et.al. [14], and thus wil not be repeated here.
Self-Similarty and Mixed Bifurcations Many bifurcation diagrams exhibit self-similarity. define:
8.3
In particular, let us
(39a)
(39b) As shown schematically in Figure-13, I.ln is the value of the parameter I.l at the onset of the nth bifurcation and An is the maximum amplitude of the oscillation at the end of the nth bifurcation (ie, at the onset of the (n+l)th bifurcation). A cascade of period doubling bifurcations in the phase plane orbits is normaly a precursor the onset of chaos. Indeed, period doubling is often used as an indication of the approach to chaos. It has been observed [15] that for many nonlinear systems,
to
338
Figure 13. A typical Hopf bifurcation followed by a cascade of period doubling bifurcations
a 4.669202 ... nlim �oo n nlim �oo an 2502907 =
=
(40a) (40b)
These results are called the Feigenbaum numbers (or Feigenvalues), and provide a means of assessing numerical results and of estimating where the next, that is, (n+l)th, bifurcation will occur. Not all bifurcations are simple static and dynamic bifurcations of the type previously discussed. Figure- 14a shows an example of a mixed sub critical bifurcation which, at large enough amplitudes, exhibits a stable limit cycle response. Such a system has the features of both a subcritical and a supercritical bifurcation. Moreover, significant hysteresis may occur as shown in Figure-14b. Figure- 15 shows a mixed supercritical bifurcation, however, in this case if the initial excitation is large enough (ie, larger than the amplitude of the unstable limit cycle), or Il > Il· , the solution will diverge with time. Thus, this system of equations has the features of both a supercritical and a subcritical bifurcation. It is also possible to have both static and dynamic bifurcations in a particular system of equations. Figure-16 shows a pitchfork bifurcation (0 < Il < Il · ) which subsequently experiences a supercritical Hopf bifurcation at Il =
339
STABLE AXED POINTS
� ' �I
Figure 14a. Mixed Subcritical Hopf Bifurcation
I I
,.1"
, I
0
..
J.1
Figure 14b. Hysteresis in Mixed Subcritical Hopf Bifurcation J.1*. Physically, this may correspond to the case of a natural circulation loop which begins to circulate at J.1 = (a pitchfork bifurcation) and as J.1 is increased the loop becomes unstable due to a Hopf bifurcation. Naturally, more complicated situations are also possible and depend on the nonlinearities in the mathematical system of equations q,eing investigated. Now that we have reviewed the elements of the mathematics associated with bifurcation theory, let us consider the application of these concepts to the study of chaos in engineering systems.
0
4. CHAOS THEORY
Let us begin with a review of a simple linear oscillator. In particular, a one-dimensional damped spring/mass system which is being excited with a forcing function, F(t). Such a system can be written as: (41a) Dividing through by the mass (m), we obtain: (41b)
340
I I I
I Jl *
STABLE FIXED POINTS
- -
-tI \
",/
I I I
-
- - -
�
-
UNSTABLE FIXED POI NTS
,,� UNSTABLE LIMIT CYCLE
Figure 15. Mixed Supercritical Hopf Bifurcation. where, x = dt ' P = B/m, k = Kim, and, ftt) = F(t)/m.
·
dx
Equation (4 1b) can be written as a system of first order coupled differential equations as: x=y
(42a) (42b)
In matrix form, Eqs. (42) are:
. [0
�=
-k
(43a)
34 1
Figure 16. Combined Pitchfork and Supercritical Hopf Bifurcation. where,
� = (x y)T
(43b)
Now an autonomous (ie, unforced) oscillator has f=O, and is thus given by:
(44) Let us assume a modal solution of the form, (45) Combining Eqs. (44) and (45) we obtain: B
eAt [M -
J
p.]
=0
(46)
where is a matrix having elements given by the Kronecker delta function, aij . The only non-trivial solution to Eq. (46) is given by: (47) det =0 -
That is,
[-A.
det k
JA.]
1 -(j} + A.)]= 0
(48)
342
Obviously A. are the eigenvalues of the system matrix, M. Expanding out Eq. (48) we obtain the so-called characteristic equation: (49) Thus ,
A. = (-� ±�)/2 We see that A. will be complex if, Recalling that, Re [e(O'+ico)t]
�2
-
(50)
4k < O.
= eat Cos(cot)
(51)
we see in Figures-17 that there are four possible solutions. Namely, a stable elliptic attractor, an unstable elliptic repellor (Fig. 17a), and a stable point attractor, and an unstable saddle (ie, turning) point (Fig. 17b). It should be noted that these figures present the locus of the time varying trajectories in the
=
so-called phase plane. That is, a plane defined by the state variables, y(t) i(t) and x(t). Moreover, for the two stable cases, the origin (y x 0) is the stable fixed point of the solution. The discussion given above for a linear damped spring-mass system may seem overly simple. However, it presents the ideas necessary to understand more complicated situations. Indeed, the stability analysis of a nonlinear system of differential equations is just a generalization of what has been discussed. This generalization depends on the Center Manifold Theorem, which states in essence that the linear stability analysis of an N-dimensional nonlinear system can be reduced to the study of an equivalent linear one dimensional problem on the so-called center manifold [ 16]. To understand how the stability of a system of equations may be analyzed, let us consider the following N-dimensional non-linear system:
= =
2
(5 ) where the underbar denotes a matrix vector and Il is a parameter of the system. As before, the stability of the fixed points, x.o (Il) , of this system can be investigated by linearizing the system. Thus, using a Taylor series expansion: Note that the fixed points <xc) are defined by,
(54)
Thus neglecting higher order terms in the Taylor series expansion, we can rewrite Eq. (53) as:
343 •
x
E l l i pt i c Attracto r ({3 > 0 )
x
E l l i pt i c Repel l o r ( {3 < 0)
Figure 17a. Phase Plane Trajectories for Spring/Mass System (�2
P o i nt Att ract o r (fJ >
0)
S ad d l e P o i n t ( fJ <
-
0)
Figure 17b. Phase Plane Trajectories for Spring/Mass System (�2
-
4k < 0)
4k > 0) (55)
where, the so-called Jacobian (go ) matrix of the system is given by:
344
FJ (Jl) = � ax
-0
(Jl) We note that since Xo(Jl) is a constant we
(56)
- �o
can
rewrite Eq. (55) as, (57)
where, the perturbations are defined as: As
(58)
for the one-dimensional case, let us assume a modal solution of the form, (59)
Equations (57) and (59) yield, �At [A! -:0 (Jl)] 0 =
The only non-trivial solution is when, - J-0 (Jl)] 0 =
-
(60)
(61)
Obviously the A are the eigenvalues of the Jacobian, go(Jl). Thus, from Eq. (59) we note that, as for one-dimensional systems, the N-dimensional system, is linearly stable if all the eigenvalues, lj, ofgo(Jl) have negative real parts, ReO"i) < O. In contrast, the system is linearly unstable when any eigenvalue has a positive real part and is said to be marginally stable when the real part of any eigenvalue is zero. For the latter case, the fixed point is normally referred to as a singular point. It is also interesting to note that the Laplace transform of Eq. (57) yields, or,
(62)
(63)
345
Thus, recalling the definition of the inverse of a matrix and for a transfer function, we find that the characteristic equation is given by, -
-0
(1)]
=
0
(64)
Comparing Eqs. (61) and (64) we see that the roots, s, of the characteristic equation are just the eigenvalues, A, of the Jacobian, go (J.l). Hence, we confirm that the linear stability of the system of differential equations is determined by the sign of the real part of the most limiting root(s). Hence, analysis of the stability of the Nth order system gives the same result as if a one-dimensional stability analysis was performed on the center manifold for the most limiting eigenvalue(s). Let us now extend some of the ideas that have been discussed for a linear oscillator to a non-linear oscillator. Historically, one of the most important nonlinear oscillators is the Van der Pol oscillator. This autonomous oscillator can written in the form,
be
(65) Comparing Eqs. (65) and (41b), we find that the most significant difference is that for the Van der Pol oscillator we have a nonlinear damping term, � = J.l(1-x2 ), which changes sign with the value of the state variable, x(t). The response of the Van der Pol oscillator depends on the sign of the parameter J.l. As shown in Figure-19a for J.l < 0, one has a supercritical Hopf bifurcation. That is for this negative damping case, � < 0, when I x(t) I < 1, the system behaves as an elliptic repellor. In contrast for, � > 0, we have positive damping when I x(t) I > 1 , and the system behaves as an elliptic attractor. In general, all phase plane trajectories converge to a stable limit cycle for the case shown in Figure- 1Sa. In Figure- 1Sb we see the case in which J.l > o . This case is called a subcritical bifurcation, and is characterized by the response of an elliptic attractor for I x(t) I < 1, and an elliptic repellor for I x(t) I > 1. The limit cycle shown is clearly unstable and will not persist. The mechanical analogy for this case is a ball oscillating in a bowl. For small amplitude perturbations, the ball will oscillate and come to rest at the center of the bowl. For large enough perturbations, the ball will jump over the side of the bowl and will fall out. If the perturbations is such that the ball is perched on the rim of the bowl (the unstable limit cycle) it will not remain there since any minor disturbance will cause it either to fall out of, or into, the bowl. As noted previously, subcritical bifurcations are potentially very dangerous occurrences since the system is linearly stable and yet finite amplitude perturbations may cause it to become exponentially divergent. Let us now turn our attention to the analysis of chaotic, or "strange", attractors . In order to understand chaos, let us again consider an autonomous second order oscillator of the form:
346 .
X
x
F IG U R E
-
1 8a
FIG U R E
-
S u percritical Bifu rcation (/1 <
1 8b
0)
Bifurcation (/1 > 0)
Figure 18. Van der Pol Oscillator, x + � (1 - x2)i + kx = 0 x- ax+ x = 0
(66)
This equation can also be rewritten in system form as: x = -y
(67a)
y = x + ay
(67b)
If the damping parameter is positive (ie, a > 0), we find that Eqs. (66) and (67) will have negative damping and are thus unstable. Indeed, we have an elliptic repellor in the phase plane, (y,x).
347
In order to limit the amplitude of x(t), we can modify the system in Eqs. (67) by introducing a new state variable (z). The resultant system is: x = -y - z
(68a)
y = x + ay
(68b)
z = b + z(x - c)
(68c)
We see that if a, b and c are all positive when x(t) becomes greater than the
parameter c, then z > 0 and thus z(t) will increase, causing x to decrease. This can produce a limit cycle or even a strange attractor. Equations (68) are a form of the equations which yield the R6ssler band attractor [17]. It is well known that the occurrence of strange attractors require at least three state variables, thus the R6ssler band attractor is a simple example of a far more general result. It is instructive to analyze Eqs. (68) using a methodology which will apply to the most general case. The first thing that one must do is to find the fixed points (ie, the steady-state solution) of the system. Thus, if we set the time derivatives in Eqs. (68) to zero we obtain: Yo = Zo -
(69a) (69b)
z0 1,2 = (c ± c2 - 4ab )l2a
(69c)
where subscript-o denotes the steady-state and subscripts 1,2 denote the positive and negative root, respectively, of Eq. (69c). Obviously, we have two fixed points in the three-dimensional (x,y,z) phase space. The next step is to linearize Eqs. (68): Sx = -Sy - Sz
(70a)
Sy = Sx + aSy
(70b) (70c)
These equations can be written in matrix form as:
348
(71) where,
� = (ox oy oz)T
(72a)
and,
(72b)
As before, if we assume a modal solution of the form, (73)
[
]
Equations (71) and (73) yields a non-trivial solution for: det � or,
"A
�- "A)
z0 1,2 0
�
1
(X o c
There are three roots are of the form:
��
"A
= 0(
1) ± ioo( 1)
"A�) = e( 1) -
-
-
"A)
("A) to
(74a)
=0
this equation for zO l ' and three for z 02
(74b) '
These
roots (75a) (75b)
and,
(76a)
349
(76b) We see in Figure-19 that the roots in Eqs. (75) yield the elliptic repellor and point attractor shown on the left of the figure, and the roots in Eqs. (76) yield the elliptic attractor and point repellor shown on the right of the figure. As we shall see shortly, the interaction between these two fixed points produce a phase space vortex which causes a folding of the orbits in the phase plane, and a resultant inability to predict the future response of the deterministic system. This property will lead to what is known as BelUlitivity to initial conditiolUl (SIC). That is, smaU differences in initial conditions will be exponentially magnified as the process continues. Let us now consider the numerical evaluation of the nonlinear system in Eqs. (68). If we fix the value of two of the parameters to be, b = 2.0 and c = 4.0, and then vary the value of parameter-a, we obtain the phase plane response shown in Figure-20. It is significant to note the cascade of even bifurcations (ie, period doubling) as the parameter-a is increased from a = 0.3 to a = 0.3909. When a = 0.398 we have a chaotic response in which the stretched and folded orbits never repeat. This strange attractor is caled the ROssler band attractor [17]. It is also interesting to note that as the parameter-a is further increased that we have a reverse cascade of odd bifurcations. Many strange attractors have been found in physical systems. Probably the most famous is one that was found first; the butterfly-shaped strange attractor of Lorenz [18]. This attractor resulted from a study by Lorenz of weather prediction using a simplified three state variable model of natural convection:
Figure 19. Fixed Points of ROssler's Band Attractor
350
Figure 20. Rossler's Band Attractor (b = 2.0, c = 4.0) [17]
� = o(y - x}
(77a)
y = px - y - xz
(77b) (77c)
where, 0, p and � are parameters. The three fixed points of this system of equations are shown in Figure-21, and the strange attractor in Figure-22. It can be seen that the strange attractor is basically comprised of two foci rotating in the opposite direction. Physically this 3-D phase space motion implies that the direction of motion of the Bernard roll cells is changing chaotically in time.
351
One of the most important challenges for the analyst is to determine when a chaotic response (ie, strange attractor) exists and when the response is something else, such as, random noise or the superposition of sinusoids. There are various tests for chaos which can, and should, be used. When one is working with data, then the various fractal dimensions (D C and DH ) should be computed to determine whether there is some underlying structure in the data. In addition, the power spectral density (PSD) function should be computed. The spectrum wil be broad band for chaotic data as well as noise. In contrast, if the signal is comprised of superimposed sinusoids, it will have spikes at the frequency of each sinusoid. It is also often useful to plot the data in a 3-D phase plane. [ie: x(t). x(t+t), X(t+2't)]. to appraise the attractor. Other. more quantitative techniques involve the use of a Poincare section. This important technique will be described shortly. When one is numerically evaluating an analytical model, the approach to chaos is often characterized by a cascade of bifurcations. Such bifurcations are relatively easy to detect since they yield period doubling in the phase plane orbits. In addition, a chaotic attractor will always exhibit sensitivity to the initial conditions (SIC). That is, two nearby points in phase space diverge rapidly as the orbits progress. Indeed. the points are known to diverge exponentially. and this divergence is characterized by a Lypunov exponent. A. This exponent may be defined in terms base-e, or base-2. That is, if we imagine an initial condition filled hypersphere in phase space of diameter do , then as the points in this sphere move through phase space the hypersphere will distort into a hyperellipsoid of major axis, d(t). This distortion can be quantified by the Lypunov exponent:
Phase space
Figure 21. Fixed Points of Lorenz Attractor [6]
352
z
Attractor
Figure 22. Lorenz Attractor [6] (78a) or, alternatively, (78b)
In either case the Lypunov exponent (A or A) implies that the orbits become far apart after sufficiently long time. Indeed, even computer roundoff error will lead to nonpredictability due to SIC. Thus, to verify a chaotic response, one should always check the divergence of the orbits to make sure Eqs. (78) are satisfied. Another excellent way of assessing whether there is a strange attractor or not is to analyze how the phase space orbits pass through a Poincare section. Thus, let us next discuss this valuable technique. A typical Poincare section in phase space of order three is shown in Figure 23. The penetration of the Poincare plane by the phase space orbits (ie, the solution flow) creates a pattern in the plane which is the signature of the attractor under investigation.
353
y
Figure 23. Poincare Section [6] Figure-24a shows the Rossler band attractor in 3-D state space. Figure-24b shows a Poincare section after the trajectories have been stretched and folded after completing one orbit in phase space. It can be seen that the original line segment is now a U-shaped segment. Next, as can be seen in Figure-24c, after a second orbit a double-U-shaped pattern emerges. Figure-24d indicates the third orbit produces a quadruple U pattern. Finally, after many orbits we achieve the Poincare map shown in Figure-24e. This map has a fractal pattern which is similar to a Cantor set. The appearance of a fractal pattern in the Poincare section is good confirmation of a strange attractor. Other interesting information can be obtained from a Poincare section. Indeed, if we keep track of the solution flow and plot where it pierces the Poincare plane on successive orbits we can construct a first-return map, in which we plot state variable Xn ' where the penetration of the plane is now, versus Xn+ l ' where the corresponding penetration will be at the end of the next orbit. Figure-25 gives the first return map for a Rossler band attractor. we note the non-uniqueness implied by the parabolic shape of the first- return map. That is, two different X n can give the same X n + l ' This loss of uniqueness implies nonpredictability. In order to appreciate the importance of a first-return map we note in Figure- 25 that one can iterate the first-return map by taking an initial point (say Xn+ 1 = A) and note that on the next iteration this point will become Xn = A, thus Xn + 1 = B, and so on. It is more convenient to just draw a 45° line and move on a horizontal line from each point, to the 45° line then vrtically to the first return map. This will give the next iterant (Xn+ 1 )' It can be seen that, as expected, the Rossler band attractor is unstable and aperiodic. Such motion in a first return map is the signature of the strange attractor.
Figure 24a.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Figure 24b.
Figure 24c.
355
Poincare Section
..
.
..
..
.. . . ..
. '
Figure 24d.
.
.
.. . .
..
.
.
..
.
.. .
..
.
. .
.'
.. .. .. .. .. ; .
."
�{f�� ..
..
..
.. "
.. ,-
�
: :: '. :: , � : ': '
Figure 24e.
Figure 24a-e. The Stretching and Folding Process for a Rossler's Band Attractor [27] It is also possible to interpret the first-return map in the time domain [9]. Figures-26 show how a record of analog data might appear in a first-return map for a period signal of period T which is sampled on interval T/4. In order to more easily appreciate the iterative procedure in a first-return map, and the stability criterion that controls the motion in this plane, let us consider a simpler problem. In particular, let us consider the so-called Logistic map of population dynamics. The iterative equation for this problem is given by: (79) where the parameter J.1 quantifies the birth rate. The fixed point (Xo ) of this problem is where the 450 line intersects Eq. (79). That is,
356
F
• • • + • •
.
..
. D
+.
\C
•'A
\
• •
Xn
\. G
Figure 25. First-Return Map - ROssler's Band Attractor [17] thus, Xo = 1 - 1IJ,1 The condition for stability is known [17] to be given by, ,
I f (xo) I
<
1.0
(SO)
(81)
Now, from Eq. (79), ,
f (x) = J,1(1-2x) Combining Eqs. (80) and (82),
(82) (83)
357
Figure 26a. Data in the Time Domain for Signal of Period T Which is Sampled On Interval T/4 [9] X n+1 x2
(X 3 , X 4 )
•
(X 1 , X 2 ) •
X3
x1
•
X1
(X 2 , X 3 ) •
X3
X2
Xo
(X O , X 1 )
Xn
Figure 26b. Data on a First Return Map [9]
358
We note that for � = 2.5, the system is stable, and, as can be seen in Figure-27a, the iteration converges to the fixed point (xo )' In contrast, for � = 3. 1 the system is unstable, and results in the "limit cycle" response shown in Figure27b. Interesting, when � = 3.8 the system becomes chaotic (ie, aperiodic), as shown in Figure-27c. This implies that if the birth rate (�) becomes too large the population dynamics can become completely unpredictable. A frightening prospect at best. While there is much more than can be said about the analysis of chaos, we conclude with the observation that it is a very exciting and rapidly developing field.
! I ! i I :
1/ FIGURE
27a
FIGURE - 27b
IJ. '
,
,
,: i l
,!
,!
X.
FIGURE
27c
Figure 27. Behavior of iterated maps: (a) logistic map, showing a transient settling to an attracting equilibrium for � = 2.5, (b) attracting limiting cycle for J.L = 3.1, and (c) aperiodic behavior for J.L = 3.8.
359
Let us now turn our attention to the application of these analytical techniques to problems of interest in multiphase flow and heat transfer. In particular, let us consider the prediction of nonlinear density-wave instability phenomena in single-phase natural circulation loop"s and in boiling chanels. 5. THE ANALYSIS OF CHAOS CONVEC1'ION LOPS
IN
SINGLE·PHASE NATURAL
A thermosyphon is an excellent example with which to demonstrate some analytical procedures that can be used in the analysis of chaos. Thus, let us consider the analysis of nonlinear density-wave instabilities which may occur in a single-phase natural circulation loop. Such phenomena have been previously considered by Bau et.al. [ 19]. The discussion below is based on this interesting piece of work. A quite general thermosyphon loop is shown in Figure-28. It can be seen that the bottom half of the loop is uniformly heated and the upper half is uniformly cooled. For the case of nonsymmetric heating (cp -:I: 0), the heated section would be rotated. Let us begin by deriving the conservation equations which describe fluid motion during natural circulation conditions in the loop shown in Figure-28. Adopting Boussinesq's approximation, Newton's second law implies: (84)
where,
and, iit =
1t
J
Ut
(r) 2"r dr
o The corresponding loop momentum equation comes from integrating Eq. (84) around the loop (ie, from 9=0 to 21t) and noting that p(O) = p(21t). The result of this integration is: Pl
dt
dli
gP � = - 21t
J
2It
o
4t Cos (9 + cp) d9 - %w
(85)
360
HEATED
Figure 28. Schematic of a Toroidal Thermosyphon [19] The corresponding energy equation comes from applying the first law of thermodynamics to a one-dimensional differential control volume which spans the loop: Pl
C
�+ l
aT
at
1 if k aaf H pl ul cI. -� � ao � ao2 - � _
- --
DH
-
(T Tw) l
,0E
'0E
Tw(O) specified q"(O) specified
(86)
In accordance with the Boussinesq approximation the liquid in the loop is assumed to be incompressible but varies (with temperature) in the density head term of the loop's momentum equation. As a consequence the continuity equation is automatically satisfied. It is convenient to nondimensionalize Eqs. (85) and (86). To this end we define the loop's time scale as, (87a) the loop's Prandtl number as, PL = 8 PrlNu = 32 'U tlD2H
(87b)
and the loop's Rayleigh number as, (87c)
361
where, lirl is the instantaneous temperature difference in the liquid from one side of the loop to the other (actually, any two points around the loop may suffice). Similarly, the Biot number of the loop was defined as, (87d) We can now define the following nondimensional quantities: t* � th
Thus, Eq. (85) becomes: du- * �u* 1 .. P dt* == = i Ra L
f
2�
o
T* Cos (9
+
4»
* �w
d9 - (D
H/1O
(88)
It is interesting to note that for laminar flow:
hence, *
4 'tw
P * (DH/1O = L u
(89)
Let us next derive the nondimensional form of the loop's energy equation. Recalling that,
362
Equation (86)
can
{- (r* - )
be written as,
_.
aT· + u if· - B alf· aa at· aa2 _
q"*(a)
T'; , a E Tw(a) specified •
a E q"(a) specified
(90)
Equations (88) , (89) and (90) comprise the conservation equations needed for the analysis of a single-phase thermosyphon undergoing laminar natural circulation flow. In order to use the mathematical machinery which has been developed for the analysis of nonlinear deterministic systems, it is necessary to convert the partial differential equation, given in Eq. (90), into an equivalent ordinary differential equation. Because of the nature of this particular problem it is convenient to use spectral methods. In particular, to decompose the various temperature fields into Fourier series. Thus we assume:
T: (a,t) = wo(t) + L wn(t) Sin(ne)
-
(91)
n=l
T* (a,t) = L [Sn(t) Sin(n9) + Cn(t) Cos(na>]
(92)
n=O where we have used the fact that the normalized wall temperature (Tw) is an odd function of e. Introducing Eq. (92) into Eq. (88), and, for simplicity, assuming the validity ofEq. (89), we obtain:
.
fo n=Oi 8,(t) Sin(nO) 21t
;'; = Ra PL
[
+ Cn(t) Cos(nO)] Cos (0 + �) dO · PL u·
Recalling the following orthogonality relations,
f
21t
o
Sin (nO) Cos (mO) dO =
{ � ,n=m
•
(93)
363
f Sin (nB)
21t
o
Sin
(mB) dB =
{ : ,n=m
f Cos (nB) Cos (mB) dB = { : 21t
,n=m
o Equation (93) yields,
(94)
Next, we introduce Eqs. (91) and (92) into Eq. (90):
i [Sn(t) Sin (nB) + Cn(t) Cos (nB)] + i [n Sn(t) Cos (nB) - n Cn Sin (nB)] ii'
n=O
n=O
+ B L [n2 Sn(t) Sin (n9) + n2Cn(t) Cos (n9)] n=O q"(9)
,9 E q"specified
wo (t) + I. wn (t}Sin(n9) - I.[Sn (t}Sin(n9) + Cn (t)Cos(n9)] ,9 E Twspecified n=l n=O 00
00
(95)
We now multiply Eq. (95) through by Cos(9) and integrate to obtain: •
_*
C 1+ B C 1 + u
Sl =
21t I q"(9)Cos(9)d9
,9 E q"specified
-C 1
,9 E Twspecified
0
Similarly, we multiply Eq. (95) through by Sin(9) and integrate to obtain:
(96)
364
_*
•
8 l+ B8 l + u C l =
21t I q"(9)Sin(9)d9 0
, 9 E q"specified
,9 E Twspecified
(97)
For simplicity let us now consider the special case where the wal temperature (Tw) is specified for all 9. For this case, Eqs. (94), (96) and (97) reduce to: (98) �. = Ra PL [ C l Cose!> - 8 1 Sine!>] - PL u·
C l + (1+B)C l + � 81 = 0
81 + (1+B)Sl -� C l = WI
(99) (100)
It is convenient to make a change of variables as follows:
Ra
.. (1+B2) =.1 Ra
(lOla) (101b)
8 =.1 Ra 8 l/(1+B) u � U*/(1 +B A
t � t(l+B) Making these transformations, Eqs. (98)-(100) become: � = [C Cose!> - 8 8ine!>] P - Pu
C + C + u8 = 0
(lOlc) ( lOld) (lOle) ( IOU) (102) (103) (104)
For the special case of a constant wall temperature, we may let: (105)
365
thus, Eq. (104) becomes, •
S + S - uC + RaA = 0
(106)
order to reduce Eqs. ( 102), (103) and (106) to a more recognizable form we define,
In
II
x=u
where, R � ARa. Hence Eqs. (102), (103) and (106) can be rewritten as, ; = (y C os(�) - [z - R] Sin (�» ) P - Px
y = - x[z - R] - y .
(107a) (l07b) (107c)
z =o- z + xy
We note that for the special case of symmetric heating (ie, � = 0) that Eq. (107a) reduces to: ; = P[y - x]
(107d)
The system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations given by Eqs. (107b), (107c) and (107d) is a special case (ie, = P, P = R, 13 = 1.0) of the well-known Lorenz System [18] given in Eqs. (77). Let us now investigate the system of equations given by Eqs. (107a), (107b) and (107c). First of al the fixed points of the system are given by setting the (J
time derivatives to zero (ie, ; Y = ; =0). This yields, Xo = Yo Cos(�) - [zo - R] Sin (�) =
(10Ba) (l08b) ( lOBe)
Combining Eqs. (108) we obtain, x! + [1 - R C os (�)]xo - R Sin (�) = 0
(109)
366
It is important to note that for the nonsymmetric heating case there are no non-motion (ie, Xo Uo = 0) solutions. Indeed, the formula for a cubic equation implies that there is only one (motion) solution for Xo Uo when R S; R l ' where R l comes from the solution of: ==
·2 [1 - R l Cos (�)]3 + 27 4" Rl Sin2(�) = 0
==
(110)
In contrast, when R > R l there are three (motion) solutions for xo ' however, only two of these solutions are stable. A bifurcation diagram for the case in which � > 0 is shown in Figure-29. This type bifurcation represents an unfolded pitchfork bifurcation, in which the upper branch is for counterclockwise (CCW) loop flow and the lower branch is for clockwise (CW) loop flow. Clockwise motion implies downflow against the effect of buoyancy (due to nonsymmetric heating). Such steady flows do not occur unless special provisions are made to establish them. Moreover, above a certain generalized Rayleigh number (R2 ) the loop flow becomes unstable and reverses direction in going from the lower (CW) branch to the upper (CCW) branch. Such a transition is known as a "catastrophe". It should also be noted in Figure-29 that the upper (CCW) branch will also become unstable as the generalized Rayleigh number is increased to Ra . Moreover, due to the hysteresis inherent in a subcritical Hopf bifurcation, a chaotic response may occur in the region R2 < R < Ra . Let us next consider the case of symmetric heating (� =o). For this important case, Eqs. (l08) imply that the fixed points are given by, (111a) Xo = Yo (ll1b) (1nc) Thus we find that for symmetric heating we may have either nonmotion solutions (ie, Xo = Yo = Zo = 0) or motion solutions given by, Xo = Yo
(l12a) (l12b)
Equation (112a) yields the pitchfork bifurcation diagram shown in Figure-aO. It can be seen that the upper branch implies counterclockwise (CCW) loop flow, while the lower branch is for clockwise (CW) loop flow. Naturally for the case of symmetric heating either flow is possible. Also, it should be noted that for both flow directions a subcritical bifurcation and a chaotic response may
367
x
=
u (t)
(
>
0)
, \'
, I
", .. I
I
\"",-
'
-- ---
..
R
CW
Motion
Figure 29. A Bifurcation Diagram for an Asymmetrically Heated Loop (Dashed Lines Represent Unstable Conditions).
x
=
u (t)
-----
Motion R
=
1 .0
R
- --- -
Figure 30. A Bifurcation Diagram for a Symmetrically Heated Loop (Dashed Lines Represent Unstable Solutions).
368
occur for sufficiently high generalized Rayleigh number (ie, as Rb < R S Rc = Moreover for R > Rc a chaotic response with so-called "windows of periodicity" is found. A typical time trace for R > Rc is shown in Figure-31a. It can be seen that deterministic chaos is quite complicated, involving occasional reversals in the direction of the flow. Also, Figure-31b shows that there are no distinctive fre quencies in the corresponding Power Spectral Density function. This implies that the time signal shown in Figure-31a is aperiodic. In order to gain more insight into the properties of Eqs. (107d), ( 107b) and ( 107c), let us perform a linear stability analysis. If we linearize these equations we obtain:
ai = p[ay ax] ay = - [zo - R] ax xoaz ay -
-
(113a) (113b) (113c)
Equations (113) can be written in matrix form as,
a! = £ ay
(114)
[
(115)
where, the state variable vector is given by,
and the so-called Jacobian matrix is,
£
=
-p
p
(R-zo )
-1
Yo
Xo
(116)
Let us now assume a modal solution of the form,
(117) Combining Eqs. when,
(117) and (114) we find that the only nontrivial solution is p
-(1+1.)
(118)
369
u(t)
0 ---
t
o
Figure 31a. The Velocity in the Thermosyphon Loop as a Function of Time (for R � He) [19]
PSD
{(Hz)
Figure 3 lb. The Power Spectral Density (PSD) Function of the Time Series Shown in Fig. 31a [19].
370
For the nonmotion solutions (ie, Xo = Yo = Zo = 0), Eq. (118) implies, A 1,2
-(1+P) ±
2
+ 4PR
(119a) (119b)
For convenience, we refer to this set of roots as those of fixed point C o ' Comparing Eqs. (117) and (119) we see that the system is stable (ie, Aj < 0) for R < 1.0. For R = 1.0 we have neutral stability (ie, 1. 1 = 0.0), while for R > 1.0 the system is unstable (ie, 1. 1 > 0.0). Using the loop motion solutions given by Eqs. (112), Eq. (118) implies:
(120) ",3 + (2+P) ",2 + [(1+2P) + x� - P(R-zo)] 1. + P[1 + x� - (R-zo) + XoYo] = 0 This cubic equation gives two sets of three eigenvalues depending on which value (ie, ±) is chosen for the Xo = Yo in Eq. (112a). Because these roots are algebraically complicated we shall not write out the set of roots for the fixed points C - and C + Figure-32 shows the fixed points, Co ' C- and C+ for the Lorenz attractor for R > 1.0. It can be seen that Co behaves as a point attractor (stable manifold) and a point repellor (unstable manifold). In contrast, C- and C+ behave as
�
:�
Unstable Old
Stable
c+
manifold of C'"
Unstable Stable x
manifold
manifold of Ca
Figure 32. The fixed points of the Lorenz attractor for R > 1 in phase space. Also shown schematically are the eigenvectors associated with the linearized stability problem and the associated stable and unstable manifolds [19].
371
elliptic repellors (unstable manifold) and point attractors (stable manifold). A number of phase space trajectories are possible. One which starts at the unstable manifold of a given fixed point and returns to the stable manifold of the same fixed point is called a homoclinic orbit. In contrast, orbits which connect different fixed points are called heteroclinic orbits. Figures-33 show the time response of the Lorenz system for Ra < R < Rc (see Figure-30). It can be seen that since the system can no longer be at rest (ie, with higher density fluid over lower density fluid) an oscillatory response from the unstable manifold of C o occurs. This solution may converge to steady flow + in the CW direction (C stable manifold) or in the CCW direction (C· unstable Rc a homoclinic explosion occurs. The manifold). In contrast, at R resultant strange attractor is shown in Figures-34, where the famous butterfly-shaped Lorenz (strange) attractor can be noted. It should be noted that hysteresis occurs when going into and out of chaos. For example, when the generalized Rayleigh number ( R) is increased we have the onset of chaos when R = Rc (see Figure-3D). In contrast, when the generalized Rayleigh number is reduced chaos will persist until we have reduced it to Rb [5]. Figure-35 shows a Poincare section of the Lorenz attractor. It can be seen to have a very distinctive fractal signature (and as an aside, has a correlation dimension of D c 2.06). If we zoom in on one of the "line segments" shown in Figure 35 we would find that it consists of a vast number of closely packed sheets, each of which also consist of a large number of sheets. Moreover, the well-known sensitivity to initial conditions (SIC) of the Lorenz attractor (actually for any strange attractor) is clearly shown in Figure-36. Bau et.al . [ 19] have also shown that for a forced time-periodic wall temperature case rather than the time-independent wall temperature case just discussed, that chaos does not suddenly occur after a homoclinic explosion but rather at the end of a cascade of Hopf bifurcations (ie, period doubling bifurcation). As discussed in this chapter, this property is also characteristic of the onset of chaos in autonomous boiling natural circulation loops. A typical bifurcation diagram for a single-phase thermosyphon which is being forced by a periodic wall temperature (with period T) is given in Figure-37. It can be seen that there are bands of deterministic chaos for several different ranges of the generalized Rayleigh number (R). Interestingly the onset of chaos for the forced case is at a slightly larger generalized Rayleigh number than for the unforced case. That is, for heating from below, forcing the wall temperature has a stabilizing effect. =
=
6. APPLICATIONS OF CHAOS THEORY - THE ANALYSIS OF NONLINEAR DENSITY-WAVE INSTABILITIES IN BOILING CHAN
The phenomena of density-wave instabilities in boiling channels is well known [20]. These oscillations may be found for certain operating conditions of boiling systems which become unstable due to lags in the phasing of pressure-
372 10.0
5.0
x(t) E u(t) 0.0
-5.0
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
Figure 33a. Time series exhibiting the approach to the steady-state solution (C+ ) for R 7 and initial conditions on the RHS unstable manifold of Co [19]. =
10.0
5.0
x(t) iR u(t) 0.0
-5.0
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
Figure 33b. Time series exhibiting the approach to the steady-state solution (C-) for R 8 with initial conditions similar to those in Fig. 33a. Note that the change in the Rayleigh number (R) causes trajectories with similar initial data to end up at diferent fixed points. =
373
=
=
Figure 34a. Lorenz attractor in phase space for R 20 and P 4. Sufficient time has been allowed for the initial transient to die out [19]. 15.0 10.0 5.0 y
0.0 -5.0 -
10.0
-10.0
-8.0
6.0
4.0
-2.0
0.0 x
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
Figure 34b. Pr.ojection of the Lorenz Attractor in x-y Phase Plane [19]
374 35.0 30.0 25.0
z
20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 -10.0
-8.0
-6.0
-4.0
-2.0
0.0
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
x
Figure 34c. Projection of the Lorenz Attractor in the x-z Phase Plane [19] 20.0 16.0 12.0 8.0 4.0 Y
0.0 -4.0 -8.0 -12.0 -16.0 - 10.0
-8.0
-6.0
-4.0
-2.0
0.0
2.0
4.0
6.0
Figure 35. Poincare Section Through the Plane z = R-l [19]. X
8 .0 .
10.0
375
10.
x(t)
=
u(t)
-10 .
Figure 36. Sensitivity to initial conditions (SIC). Two solutions with slightly different initial conditions (black & gray lines) exhibit vastly different behavior after sufcient time [ 19]. 8 6
2 x
h:>
0
�:: :': .�
I,
-2 -4
-6 -8
0
2
6
7
8
9
10
R Figure 37. The upper half of a bifurcation diagram for a single-phase thermo syphon with a modulated wall temperature. The x values were stroboscopically sampled every period T [19] .
376
drop feedback mechanisms. The most common manifestation of density-wave instabilities are self-excited oscillations of the flow variables. The analytical tool which is often used to study the problem of density-wave instabilities is linear frequency-domain stability analysis. Presently rather accurate and reliable models are available for the linear stability analysis of complicated systems such as boiling water nuclear reactors (BWRs). The study of the non-linear behavior of density-wave instabilities has attracted considerable interest recently. In particular, Hopf bifurcation techniques have been used to study the amplitude and frequency of the oscillations [2 1,22]. A numerical analysis of the nonlinear dynamics of a steam generator has been performed by LeCoq [23]. Similarly, a numerical analyses was also performed by Rizwan-Uddin & Doming [22], where a chaotic attractor was indicated for periodically forced flows. Let us now consider a non-linear analysis of autonomous density-wave instabilities using a lumped parameter model. The model is based on a Galerkin nodal approximation of the conservation equations for a boiling channel. We start the boiling channel model description by considering the following assumptions made concerning the flow: • • • • • •
•
the flow is homogeneous (ie, no phasic slip) the system pressure is constant the heat flux is uniform both phases are incompressible the two phases are in thermodynamic equilibrium viscous dissipation, kinetic energy, potential energy and flow work are neglected in the energy equation the channel inlet temperature is constant
For these assumptions, the one-dimensional conservation equations can be written as [24]: (121a)
o
at ( ph ) + (121b)
0
q ( phu) = A"PH x-s
a 0 � (pu) + oz (pu2) =
-
[DfH +
l� - pg - oz 2
and the corresponding equations of state are: , for h � hr p = Pf
�
(121c)
(122a)
377
, for h > hf
(l22b)
The single-phase region of the heated chanel extends from the channel inlet to the boiling boundary (ie, the location where bulk boiling begins). As can be seen in Figure-3B, this region is subdivided into Ns nodes, having variable length. The partition of the single-phase volume was found necessary to properly describe the propagation of enthalpy waves. These waves are of importance in determining the dynamics of the boiling boundary. The enthalpy increase from the inlet, hi , to saturation, hf, is divided into N. equal intervals, (hf-hi)/N s . Therefore, the boundary, Ln, between subcooled node-n and node-Cn+ l) is defined as the point where the fluid enthalpy is: (123)
It should be noted that this enthalpy (hn ) is a constant, while its spatial location is a function of time. P..... ,.
PR ' P• . h. Pf ·h ,
qN
h. +
- - - - -- -
-- -----
- - - ---
-- ---
LA/N .
L�
L · L...
N. - 1 - - - --"" b. h..
h. +
b. h'.b N.
- - - - --
w I/)
0
... = �
L L.... ,
0 w en C w � -< w
�
h. u1
Figure 3B. Schematic Diagram of the Boiling Channel.
378
The differential equations governing the evolution of the node boundaries. L n . can be derived using a Galerkin technique by assuming a linear shape function (ie: enthalpy profile) inside each node. That is. (124)
Integrating the energy equation. Eq. ( 12 1b), between Ln- 1 and Ln, we have, using Liebnitz's rule: (125) It is convenient to choose the channel mass (Mch ) as a state variable. Its corresponding conservation equation can be derived by integrating the continuity equation over the heated channel's length, which gives: (126) The two-phase mixture's exit velocity, \le, can be calculated by first combining Eqs. ( 121a), (121b) and (122b), which yields: dU dZ
q" PH .!f.g � 0 A x - s h fg -
(127)
Then, integrating Eq. (127) between the boiling boundary (A = LN s ) and some location z in the two-phase part of the heater gives: -
u = ui + O(z - A)
(128)
In particular, at the exit of the heated channel: ue = ui + O(L-z)
(129)
The exit density, P e , can be expressed in terms of the total heated channel's mass, Mch . by also assuming a linear enthalpy profile inside the two-phase region. Combining Eqs. (121a) and ( 122b), and integrating between the boiling boundary and the channel exit, yields: M 2, = Ax-s(L-A) P f
pf7'Pe 1 -
(130)
379
and the total mass of the heated channel, Mch , is given by: Mch = Pf Ax-s
A. + M2q,
(131)
adiabatic riser was also included in the model. It was found that for low flow conditions the presence of the riser can effect the dynamic characteristics of the system. The riser was divided into NR fixed axial nodes of equal length, as can be seen in Fig. 38. Integrating the continuity equation over node-r, gives:
An
(132) The riser's node-r mass, Mr, can be expressed in terms of P r- l and P r using a procedure analogous to that used in the derivation of Eq. (130). This yields: _ AR Mr - N R
1.
(133)
-
P r Pr-l
At this point we have N s + NR + 1 equations (ie, Ns Eqs. ( 125), NR Eqs. ( 132) and one Eq. ( 126» , and Ns + NR + 2 unknowns (ie, Ln, Mch ' Mr and �p). The model is closed by imposing the external pressure drop ( �P ext ) boundary condition on the boiling channel and riser. The momentum equation, Eq. (121c), was integrated using the assumption of linear enthalpy profiles inside the various nodes. The result is: �Pext = �PI + �P g + �Pf + �PR + �P a
(134)
where:
L d L a f J pudz �PI = - ( pu)dz = dt at -
o
0
thus, (135) Similarly,
3&0
f
L
&Pg = pgdZ =
A x-s
o
where,
(�
g � Pf E - h L A X-S cpfA x-s n= l n f N s
Ln
+
En = A x-s I hdz = Ax-s {Ln - Ln- 1){hn hn-1 )/2
Ln 1
)
(136)
(137)
The irreversible hydraulic losses are given by: �Pf =
L
n
dz
(138)
o
thus, considering only inlet and exit losses,
(139) Next the spatial acceleration term is given by: &Pa =
L
J-o
opu 2 dz = Peue2 - Pfu.2 1 oz
Finally, the riser pressure drop is given by:
(140)
38 1
where, MR =
f
N
Mr ' r=l We now have derived the model. Let us now consider the results of its evaluation. The boiling channel and associated riser are described using Ns + NR + 2 independent differential equations. The system of equations was numerically integrated by means of the IMSL library subroutine, DGEAR. For certain operating conditions of boiling channels, it was found that the system evolves to limit cycles near the linear stability boundary. Indeed, this nodal model allows the simulation of self-sustained oscillations in excellent agreement with a more detailed distributed parameter HEM model [14]. A particularly interesting behavior was found for low Froude (Fr) numbers. Physically, this means operating the boiling channel at low inlet flows. A number of runs were made for the parameters given in Table-I. In these runs only the phase change number (Npch ) was varied. Figure-39 shows a projection of the limit cycle in the aut -ap plane,
�R
�R
is the normalized inlet velocity. For P N /P f' and, Uj+ = R this condition the fluid velocity tends to drop as the boiling boundary approaches the end of the heated length, due to an increase of the density head in the channel and thus a decrease in the net driving head. As can be seen in Figure-40, by reduci ng the channel power a period doubling bifurcation occurs. On further reduction of the channel power a cascade of bifurcations takes place which leads to a chaotic response. This where, P
=
1. 0
aui
0. 00
-0. 10
0. 00
O. 10
+
�R plane
Figure 39. Limit Cycle Projection in the aUj - ap
382
Table 1 Parameters Used in the Analysis of Chaos NSUB = 100
Fr = 0.0016
b = 0.OO2
KIN = 84 AR = O
KEXIT = O
A=O
+
zD = O
Kr 1 = Kr2 = 0
Kr =30 3
zR = 30
AR = 4
+
+
Ns = NR = O interesting behavior has been encountered for a large variety of non-linear differential equations (Moon, 1987). The most common manifestations are 80called strange attractors, which are asymptotic orbits of the system (ie, the solution flow) describing fractal trajectories in hyper-phase-space. One important property of strange attractors is the inability to predict future events due to the exponential magnification of any uncertainties. This feature, often known as sensitivity to initial conditions (SIC), may be a source of concern if an accurate knowledge of the system evolution is required, as in nuclear reactor safety problems for example. A projection of the strange attractor which was found is shown in Figures41. This attractor has a correlation dimension [6] of De = 1.8 and an imbedding dimension of six (6). Next, Figure-42 shows the corresponding temporal evolution of the inlet velocity. It can be seen that these aperiodic nonlinear oscillations are extremely irregular. Significantly, rather similar chaotic oscillations have been reported for experiments in natural circulating boiling loops having a riser [25,26]. A type of Poincare map was constructed in which strobed points are plotted in the ut - PN R plane each time a pre specified characteristic time is reached [6]. In this case the time to lose subcooling, 'U , was chosen as the appropriate characteristic time. Figure-43 shows the resultant mapping. The fractal structure of the strange attractor is evident. 7. CLOSURE
It is hopefully clear to the reader that single-phase and boiling natural circulation systems may exhibit a chaotic response. Moreover, the occurrence of such nonlinear instabilities may be very detrimental to the operation of power production or process equipment (eg, CHF may occur). Hopefully this brief introduction to the theory of fractals and chaos will be sufficient to allow some of the readers to begin to do work in this exciting and rapidly expanding field of scientific analysis.
383
N pCH
6u t
1 07.6
0. 00 -
6PNA 0. 00
-0. 1 0
Figure
..
40.
Period Doubling in the
out
-
O. 1 0
OP�R Plane
6u t 0. 00
-1.
Figure
41.
0
-0.05
0. 00
The Strange Attractor for Density-Wave Instability
0.05
384
r I
1. 0
Su�
0. 00
I+ . VU
6. 0
7. 0
B. O
9. 0
10.
Figure 42. Temporal Evolution of Inlet Velocity for Chaotic Density-Wave Oscillations.
Su�
-o.os
� OO
Figure 43. Poincare map for strange attractor
Ax.s AR
NOMENCLATURE cpr
Heated channel cross sectional area Riser cross sectional area Liquid specific heat
�
385 D Dc: E f g h h rg hr K L M M2 Ns NR PH p �p q q t u I I
Vf Vfg w z
Channel diameter Correlation dimension Energy Friction coefficient Gravity Specific enthalpy Latent heat of vaporization Liquid specific heat Loss coefficient Channel length Mass Two-phase mass in the heated channel Number of nodes in the subcooled region Number of nodes in the riser Heated perimeter Pressure Pressure drop Heat flux Total power Time Velocity Specific volume of the liquid Liquid to vapor specific volume difference Mass flow rate Space variable
� 13
P Pf n
BX
Liquid thermal expansion coefficient,
�p
Perturbation, X(t) Xo Density Liquid density Characteristic frequency Boiling boundary Channel pressure drop
a ch D e ext f i I g n r
Acceleration head term Channel Downcomer Channel exit External Friction head term Channel inlet Inertial head term Gravity head term nth subcooled node rth riser node
A
-
-
��
386 ref R
Reference value Riser Two-phase Steady-state
241> o
Npch = Qo � W o hfgVf N sub Fr =
(hf - hi) � h fg Vf
Froude number
gLH
N
--
fL
A= 2D
� Cpf Vfg
t+ =
Subcooling number
10
u�
L u = Nsub - = Aolui pch ui
b=
Phase change number
o
0
Friction number
Thermal expansion number
tiu
z+ = z/L
1 2 3
4
5 6
J. Feder, Fractals, Plenum Press, New York, 1988. B . B . M andelbrot, Fractals , Form, C hance and Dimension, W.H . Freeman, San Francisco, 1977. M. Bamsley, Fractals Everywhere, Academic Press Inc., 1988. M.F. Barnsley, R.L. Devaney, B.B. Mandelbrot, H-O. Peitgen, D. Saupe and R.F. Voss, The Science of Fractal Images, Springer-Verlag, 1988. P. Berge, Y. Pomeau and C. Vidal, Order Within Chaos, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1984. F.C. Moon, Chaotic Vibrations, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1987.
387 7 8 9
10 11 12 1.3 15
14 16 17 18 19 ID
21 22 Z3 24 25 20 'Zl
N.H. Packard , J.P. Crutchfield, J . D . Farmer and R.S. Shaw, Philadelphia Review Letters, 45 ( 1980). A. Ben-Mizrachi and I. Procaccia, Physical Review A, 29, No. 2 ( 1984). J. Dorning, AIChE Symposum Series-269, 85 ( 1989). M. Abramowitz and LA. Stegun (Editors), Handbook of Mathematical Functions, NBS-AMS. 55 , 1968. Y.Y. Azmy and J.J. Dorning, ( (Eds. - Taylor et al), Proc. 3rd Int. Conf. Num. Meth. for Nonlinear Problems, Pine ridge Press, Swansea, U.K (1986). J. M arsden and M. McCracken, The H opf Bifurcation and Its Applications, App. Math. Series Vol-18, Springer-Verlag, 1976. J.L. Achard, D.A. Drew and R.T. Lahey, Jr. , J. of Fluid Mech., 155 ( 1985). M.J. Feigenbaum, J. Statistical Physics, 19( 1) ( 1978). Rizwan-Uddin and J.J. Doming, Nuc. Eng. & Des. , 93 ( 1986). B .D . Hassard, N.D . Kazarinoff and Y-H. Wau, London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series-4 1, Cambridge University Press, 1981. J.M.T. Thompson and H.B. Stewart, Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1986. E.N. Lorenz, J. Atmos. Sci., 20 ( 1963). H.H. Bau and Z.Y. Wang, (Ed. C.L. Tien), Annual Reviews of Heat Transfer, IV, Hemisphere Publishing, 1991 . RT. Lahey & M.Z. Podowski (eds . G.F. Hewitt, J.M. Delhaye and N. Zuber), Multiphase Science and Technology, Vol . IV, Hemisphere Publishing, 1989, 183-370. J.L. Achard, D.A. Drew and R.T. Lahey, Jr., J. of Fluid Mech., 155 ( 1986) 213-232. Rizwan-Uddin and J.J. Dorning, Nucl. Sci. & Eng., 100 ( 1988) 393-404. G. LeCoq, Proc. 3rd. Int. Topical Meeting on Nuclear Power Plant Thermal-Hydraulics and Operations, Seoul, Korea, 1988. RT. Lahey, Jr. and F.J. Moody, The Thermal-Hydraulics of a Boiling Water Nuclear Reactor, Chapter 7, ANS Monograph, LaGrange Park, 1977. A. Clausse, Efectos no Lineales en Ondas de Densidad en Flujos Bifasicos, PhD thesis, Instituto Balseiro, 8400 Bariloche, Argentina, 1986. D.G. Delmastro, Influencia de la Gravedad Sobra la Estabilidad de Canales en Ebullici6n, M.S. thesis, Instituto Balseiro, 8400 Bariloche, Argentina, 1988 . RH. Abraham and C.D. Shaw, Dynamics, The Geometry of Behavior, Aerial Press, Inc., 1984.
389
ELEMENTS OF BOILING HEAT TRANSFER
A.E. Bergles School of Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180-3590 USA Abstract The fundamentals of pool boiling and forced convection boiling heat transfer are described in this chapter. Typical correlations for the various boiling modes or flow regimes are presented. The emphasis is on simple geometries such as a single tube in a large pool and a single vertical circular tube. Mention is made of practical problems such as boiling curve hysteresis resulting from difficult nucleation, shifts in the boiling curve due to dissolved gas, and surface or fluid contamination. A section on two-phase flow and heat transfer under microgravity conditions is included.
1. INTRODUCTION The phase-change heat transfer coefficients and pressure loss factors required for the design of boilers and evaporators involve some of the most complex thermo-fluid phenomena. Out of necessity, and additionally because of the intellectual challenge, research in this area has exploded during the past 50 years. The patron of the science and art of boiling heat transfer is confronted with an accumulated literature of about 30,000 publications, about 50 text and reference books, and an output of another 1000 papers each year. Clearly, it is no longer possible to digest or even summarize this information. Nevertheless, the designer must have predictive methods for heat transfer and pressure drop. The relations used need not always be theoretically based, but they must be reasonably accurate. It is important to have an understanding of the physical phenomena and the mechanisms so that the correlations can be used appropriately. The emphasis in this chapter will be on the heat transfer characteristics of simple geometries such as a single tube in a large pool and a single vertical circular tube. In most cases, as will be seen in subsequent chapters, the correlations for complex geometries, e.g., horizontal tube bundles and multiple vertical channels, are based on the experience for the simpler configurations. The present discussion focuses on pure fluids; mixture boiling and fouling will be the subjects of other chapters in this volume. Boiling processes respond differently to the traditional boundary conditions of constant heat flux or constant wall temperature. The former boundary condition is associated primarily with systems having essentially fixed heat dissipation such as an electric boiler or a nuclear reactor core. This situation also occurs with liquid cooling of high power density devices such as electron
390 accelerator targets or computer chips. A constant wall temperature is frequently encountered in two-fluid heat exchangers with phas� change, but . there are situations, e.g., fossil boilers, where the heat flux IS essentIally constant.
2. POL BOILING Pool boiling represents the traditional starting point for discussion of heat transfer in boiling systems. With pool boiling, it is possible to minimize the number of variables that must be considered in an experimental apparatus or analytical formulation. Due to extensive research effort, the mechanism of pool boiling is relatively well understood . H owever, it is still not possible to predict the heat transfer characteristics for this simplest of boiling systems with the precision associated with single-phase systems. This was evident at the Engineering Foundation Conference on Pool and External Flow Boiling held in Santa Barbara, CA, 1992. An inherent difficulty is to quantitatively characterize all the important surface and fluid characteristics, and to describe vapor and liquid flows in the complex geometries found in practice.
2.1 The Boiling Curve
The first complete characteristics of pool boiling were reported by Nukiyama [1]. The popular version of his "boiling curve" is chosen here as the basis of discussion because it is still the most meaningful representation. As shown in Figure 1, the boiling characteristics are generally represented as a log-log plot of heat flux versus wall superheat - the heater surface temperature minus the saturation temperature .
Melting �oint Electric Heating
b_ _
=
10
:1
_
_
N
".a OJ
1: :
C7
10
4
I
10
Tw - Tsot
10
OF
Figure 1 . Typical boiling curve for saturated pool boiling of water at atmospheric pressure.
39 1
The data represent saturated pool boiling of degassed liquid, which provides a suitable reference case because it involves the least number of system variables. For saturated boiling, the heat transfer coefficient is given simply as the heat flux of interest divided by the corresponding wall superheat. The coefficient is obviously a strong function of the superheat. The boiling curve can be traced out entirely by heaters with constant wall temperature (high temperature fluid or condensing vapor as the heat source) or partially with constant heat flux heaters (electrical heating). The basic regions and points on the boiling curve are now described. Conduction with convection occurs at I. the heated surface. There is then convective transport to the vicinity of the free liquid surface where the energy is transferred by conduction, with convection, and evaporation. (a) Incipient boiling. The first bubbles form at the heated surface, depart, and rise to the free surface. In practice, the initial bubbles may consist largely of air trapped in surface cavities. It is also difficult to maintain a saturated pool at low heater power without the use of auxiliary heaters; thus, vapor bubbles may condense before reaching the surface. Bubbles form at many favored sites on the surface. II. At lower heat flux, individual bubbles can be distinguished, and there is little interaction between bubbles generated from adjacent sites. At higher flux, the bubble generation rate is so high that nearly continuous columns of vapor appear, with apparent interaction among these columns. At still higher heat flux, vapor masses result from the coalescence of vapor columns, and boiling occurs in a thin liquid layer beneath a vapor mass. The surface may become partially and intermittently dry, whereupon the average surface temperature rises substantially (departure from nucleate boiling). (b) Peak nucleate boiling heat flux condition. The vapor generation rate becomes so high that there is restricted liquid flow to the surface, whereupon the surface becomes essentially completely blanketed with a vapor film. III. The vapor film is unstable, collapsing and reforming under the influence of convection currents and surface tension. Large vapor bubbles originate at the outer edge of the film and at the random locations where liquid contacts the surface. As the surface temperature is increased, the average wetted area of the surface decreases and a lower heat flux is obtained. (c) Minimum film boiling condition. A continuous film just covers the heated surface at this condition, frequently referred to as the Leidenfrost point.
An orderly bubble discharge occurs from the edge N. of the vapor film covering the surface; however, the shape of the interface varies continuously. At higher surface temperatures, radiation supplements film conduction.
392
All regions of the boiling curve can be exhibited with an appropriate constant temperature heating system. For instance, condensing steam. at various pressures might be used to generate the curve of Figure 1 up to the lower region of film boiling. The transient calorimeter or quenching technique has also been used for some systems (Merte and Clark [2]); however, significant alterations in the curve due to transient effects have been noted (Bergles and Thompson [3]). With a nearly constant heat flux system, such as electric heating, it is not possible to operate in Region III. When the power is increased to point b, a first-order instability ensues, and the operating point shifts rapidly to the film boiling region. For many systems, this new operating point corresponds to a temperature greater than the melting temperature; hence, point b is commonly referred to as the "burnout point". If operation in the film boiling region is achieved, the power may be increased to actual burnout or reduced to the Leidenfrost point, where the system reverts back to operation in the nucleate region. Successful attempts have been made to develop electrically heated systems with appropriate feedback control so that Region III can be studied (Sakurai and Shiotsu [4]). A summary of present concepts regarding the various regions of the pool boiling curve is now presented. The discussion is oriented toward providing representative data and correlations that might be used for design. No attempt is made to incorporate all of the available analytical models or experimental observations. 2.2
Natural Convection
The initial portion of the boiling curve is predicted by standard correlations for heat transfer with free convection. Once the heat-transfer coefficient is obtained, the curve for Region I can be obtained, because q"
= h(Tw - Tsat)
(1)
The heat-transfer coefficient for natural convection thus governs the entry into boiling conditions. A typical graphical representation of the Nusselt number as a function of Rayleigh number is given in Figure 2.
2.3 Nucleation
In nucleate boiling we observe two separate processes - the formation of bubbles (nucleation) and the subsequent growth and motion of these bubbles. In general, nucleation may be either of the homogeneous or heterogeneous variety; both types involve superheated liquid, which is a metastable state. Figure 3 depicts the superheated liquid state A where the liquid is heated above the saturation temperature TI for the constant system pressure P l . This is referred to as (T2 - TI) degrees of liquid superheat. The corresponding subcooled vapor state B, which is also a metastable state, has (TI - T3 ) degrees of vapor subcooling. Nucleation theory and experience are concerned with finding the superheat required to initiate vapor formation. Several theories based on statistical mechanics have been proposed to account for homogeneous nucleation in a pure liquid. One approach using classical rate theory, e.g. , Volmer [6] , presumes that numerous molecules have the activation energy
393
required for existence in the vapor phase. These energetic molecules could combine through collisions to form a cluster, which is then a vapor bubble. Theories of this type yield extremely high liquid superheats for nucleation in a pure liquid, for example, 50°C for water at 1 atm. Such high superheats are contrary to experimental observations with most engineering systems. 1000 Horllonlal FacillQ Upward
100 Nu
10 1.0 0 1 10 • 2 Figure [5].
2.
Pial.. ( L'
012 )
and Horizonlal r
10 2 104
10'
( G, · Pr J
10 8 10 10 1012
Correlation of natural convection data for typical boiling surfaces
Figure 3. lllustration of metastable states for liquid and vapor.
394
In a real system, of course, the liquid contains foreign particles and dissolved gas that could act as nuclei. The predicted nucleation superheats would be considerably less in the presence of a preexisting gas phase. This form of homogeneous nucleation implies that vapor formation would be noted at random points where the nuclei happen to be located. In actual practice, however, bubbles form at specific locations associated with the heated surface, not the fluid. It has furthermore been found by microscopic observation that these locations are small imperfections or cavities on the heated surface (Clark et al. [7]). For practical boiling systems, then, one is forced to discard homogeneous nucleation theories and concentrate upon heterogeneous or cavity nucleation. Consider an idealized conical cavity with a pre existing gas phase, presumed to be pure vapor for the moment, as shown in Figure 4. A wetting situation, or contact angle � � 90° is presumed. For a segment of a spherical bubble, mechanical equilibrium requires to a close approximation that (2) Thermodynamic equilibrium requires that Tl - Tv . At equilibrium, then, it is evident that the liquid temperature is superheated with respect to the liquid pressure, for a finite radius of curvature. In other words, the traditional property tables and charts for liquid and vapor are applicable only when a flat interface separates the phases. In order to arrive at a general expression for the superheat required for nucleation, it is necessary to relate T and p along the saturation line. It is most convenient to employ the Clapeyron relation:
!!L VfgT
=
�
(3)
dT
One popular set of approximations assumes that the quantity hfg/vfgT is constant, with T = Tsat. Integration then yields P - Pl =
hfg
(Tv
- Tsat)
(4)
Substituting Eq. (4) in Eq. (2), the following relation for the equilibrium superheat is obtained:
Tv - Tsat =
Tsat hfg r
=
Tl
-
Tsat
(5)
As the superheat is raised, the radius of curvature decreases, from (1) to (2) in Figure 4, for example. It is noted, however, that the minimum radius corresponds to the hemispherical state (3), with the radius equal to the cavity mouth radius. With further increases in superheat (4), the bubble is no longer
395 stable, because its radius must increase in violation of the requirement for mechanical equilibrium. The bubble "nucleates" and grows at a rate dependent primarily upon the rate of heat transfer from the surrounding liquid, shortly becoming visible the naked eye. It is particularly significant that the superheat required for incipient boiling is dependent on a single dimension of the cavity, the mouth radius. The validity of Eq. (5) has been established by Griffith and Wallis [8], who manufactured cavities of a known size on a copper surface and produced nucleation by uniformly superheating the water pool.
to
L iquid
Figure 4. Vapor bubble in a conical cavity with �
=
90°.
It is evident that Eq. (5) will not be generally valid for predicting the incipience of boiling in the usual pool with a submerged heater where a temperature gradient exists in the liquid adjacent to the heated surface. Nucleation cannot take place from a cavity unless the environment surrounding the bubble is sufficiently high in temperature. Basic assumptions must be made regarding the liquid temperature profile and the relation of the liquid temperature to the vapor temperature. The following illustrates how this problem might be handled. Assume that the liquid temperature profile is linear: (6) Further, assume that the liquid at all points adjacent to the bubble must be at a higher temperature than the required vapor temperature. Referring now
396
T,e
Eq .
Figure
Conditions required for nucleation in a temperature gradient.
5.
to Figure follows: =
Tl
5,
it is seen that the liquid and vapor temperature are related as
Tv and
Utilizing Eqs. _
r -
dTl dy
=
(5), (6),
"'Ci'r at y
dTl
=
rc
(7)
and (7), the cavity size at incipient boiling is
20 hfg q"
sat
(8)
and the heat flux - wall superheat relation is
q -
,, _
kl
8Tsat Vfg O
(Tw -
(9)
To apply this criterion, it is convenient to plot Eq. (9) using the coordinates of Figure 1; the intersection of this equation with the convection relation, Eq. (2), defines the point of incipient boiling. In practice, however, the large cavities called for may not be available as nucleation sites. They may simply not be present or may not contain the necessary vapor nucleus. The appropriate equation is then q"
=
T
rmax
Tsat 20 k - h fg(rmax )
( 10)
397 where rmax is the radius of the largest initially active nucleation site. Figure 6 schematically depicts the incipient boiling loci for a range of maximum active cavity radii. For typical free convection behavior, the incipient boiling point would occur at a superheat corresponding to the intersection with Eq. ( 10 ) rather than Eq. (9), i . e . , (lBP)real rather than (ffiP)ideal.
"a01 o
I I I I I I I
" I I
, I I I
rc • ( rmax ) .
Figure
6.
(T -T ) 'w sat q " � o
•
Determination o f incipient boiling point for various values o f rm ax .
Inert gas is frequently present in boiling systems, either in solution or trapped in surface cavities. It is quite possible that homogeneous nucleation can occur with a large dissolved gas concentration. The gas is essentially driven out of solution near the heated surface, presenting the appearance of normal boiling. The previous analysis can be modified to account for the presence of an inert gas. Equation (7) becomes (11) where Pg is the partial pressure of the inert gas in the homogeneous or heterogeneous nucleation site. Following a similar development, the equilibrium superheat is obtained:
398
Tv - Tsat
=
T sat h fg
20'
( r - Pg)
(12)
-
The inert gas thus reduces the superheat required for nucleation; in fact, nucleation can occur for temperatures below saturation. Unfortunately, it is virtually impossible to determine Pg, so only a qualitative assessment can be made. It is appropriate to examine under what conditions a surface imperfection becomes a nucleation site. When the pool is filled, air can be trapped in a cavity when the advancing liquid touches the far side of the groove or pit before touching the base. The criterion can be stated in terms of the contact and cavity angles shown in Figure 4 as p > cp . Nucleation proceeds according to the previous analysis; however, the point of incipient boiling shifts to higher wall superheat as the air becomes depleted. Eventually a steady-state condition is reached where there is only vapor trapped in the cavity. Boiling systems are normally operated so that there are repeated cycles of heating and cooling. If the air in a conical cavity has been exhausted, and the temperature is reduced below the saturation temperature, the requirements for equilibrium can no longer be satisfied and the interface recedes steadily into the cavity until there is no vapor left. The nucleation site has then been deactivated or " snuffed out". Re-entrant cavities, either natural or artificial, can remain active for considerable subcooling. As indicated in Figure 7, the square re-entrant cavity retains vapor for a subcooling which depends on the inner mouth radius in accordance with Eq. (5). Note, however, that the degree of sub cooling is reduced as the contact angle becomes smaller. For the alkali liquid metals or refrigerants, where p- 0, the cavity of Figure 7a will flood for any sub cooling. The doubly re-entrant cavity shown in Figure 7b has been suggested to remedy the notorious nucleation instability of these fluids because the cavity will sustain subcooling to the indicated radius of curvature. The stability of cavities containing non-condensable gases is discussed by Mizukami [9].
Liquid
a. Square re-entrant.
Liquid
b. Doubly re-entrant.
Figure 7. Re-entrant cavities used to improve boiling stability.
399 Cavity stability is much enhanced if nonwetting conditions are present. From Figure 8, it is seen that the cavity can retain vapor for virtually any amount of subcooling ( 1), (2).
4
Figure 8. Vapor bubbles in a conical cavity with � > 90°. It is noted, however, that the cavity radius no longer defines the point of incipient boiling, because the bubble becomes unstable (3) before reaching the hemispherical state. The boiling process is generally erratic due to the tendency of the bubble to cover a large portion of the surface (4). Such behavior is encountered with mercury or when boiling water from teflon or oily surfaces. As noted in the following section, all theoretical models of nucleate boiling need input data on the size distribution of active cavities. Visual observation of the surface during boiling is not reliable because the bubbles obscure the surface, except at very low heat flux. Post boiling observations of deposits surrounding nucleation sites, e.g., Heled and Orell [10], are likely to be suspect due to modification of the nucleation sites by the deposits. It is difficult to obtain quantitative information by analyzing surface roughness parameters or by studying photographs such as those obtained by a scanning electron microscope (Nail et a1. [ 1 1]), as it is not clear which "pits" represent potential active nucleation sites. Gas diffusion experiments patterned after that of Brown [ 12] have also been attempted, but also with limited success (Lorenz et a1. [ 13], Eddington et al. [ 14]).
400 2.4 Saturated Nucleate Pool Boiling
Upon reaching the incipient boiling condition, further heat transfer promotes bubble growth, due to the excess vapor pressure that is no longer balanced by the surface tension forces. The growth of bubbles is a dynamics problem coupled with a heat transfer problem. Considerable effort has been devoted to examining the behavior of single bubbles. These isolated bubbles, which are amenable to analysis, are found at low heat flux. In general, heat is transferred from the wall to the liquid so as to establish a superheated layer. This layer involves free convection heat transfer, perhaps augmented by "bubble agitation", over that portion of the surface not directly affected by the bubbles. Transient free convection is observed prior to nucleation or in the vicinity of the bubble after nucleation. After nucleation, bubble growth is promoted by heat transfer from the superheated layer and, especially in the case of highly wetting liquids, vaporization of a "microlayer" of liquid between the bubble and the wall. There may also be evaporation at or near the base of the bubble and condensation at the top of the bubble ("latent heat transport"). Eventually, the bubble grows to the point where it departs due to buoyancy, carrying with it a substantial portion of the superheated li quid l ayer ( " bubble pumping" or "microconvection" ). A miniature thermocouple or thin film sensor, e.g. , Cooper and Lloyd [ 15], installed near a nucleation site, records temperature fluctuations, Tw (t), that would not be noted by the usual instrumentation, which records merely Tw . These temperature fluctuations and associated bubble states are shown schematically in Figure 9. We start with the condition subsequent to incipient boiling where the bubble is growing rapidly outside the cavity. The microlayer vaporizes, producing a drop in surface temperature (1). When the layer has evaporated, the surface rises in temperature (2) because heat transfer to the vapor is poor. During this period,. the bubble is also growing due to evaporation at the interface between the bubble and the superheated liquid layer. When the bubble departs, the surface is quenched by cooler bulk liquid and there is a sharp drop in temperature (3). The thermal boundary layer is then re-established and the surface rises in temperature until conditions are again suitable for the incipience of boiling (4). The temperature oscillations depend strongly upon the system; for instance, a glass heater would produce substantial fluctuations, while the fluctuations would be small for a high conductivity metallic heater. The relative importance of these energy transport mechanisms varies according to the boiling system. Graham and Hendricks [ 16], for example, estimated that microlayer evaporation accounted for about 50% of the wall heat transfer in the case of methanol but only about 25% of the wall heat transfer in the case of water. Numerous attempts have been made to formulate and solve reasonable mathematical models for the growth of vapor bubbles. The classic formulation of Rayleigh, originally applied to cavitation bubbles, has been utilized to examine the initial stage of bubble growth that is controlled by surface tension and inertia. During the latter stage of growth, the problem can be formulated relatively simply in terms of heat transfer,
40 1
be�use �e growth rate is controlled by the rate of evaporation at the interface, whIch, In tu�n, depends on heat conduction from the surrounding su�erheat�d hqUI. � layer . . Expressions derived by Mikic et a1. [ 17, 18] satisfactonly .de�cnbe expenmental results for bubble growth in a uniformly superheated bqwd or at a heated wall. The predictions and data are shown in nondimensional form in Figure 10.
S u perheated Liquid
(I)
M i cro layer
Figure 9. Surface temperature variation in vicinity of a nucleation site, with corresponding bubble states. The bubble departure size is an important parameter in the study of pool boiling, because it has a direct bearing on the heat transfer characteristics. Fritz [ 19] utilized the theory of capillarity to get an equilibrium bubble shape, and formulated a differential equation representing a balance of gravity and surface-tension forces. An approximate solution to this equation yielded the bubble diameter at departure: Db
=
0.0148J3 g(
[
P I - Pv) 2a
(13)
where � is in degrees. This equation has been verified for numerous systems, including steam and hydrogen bubbles in water. The contact angle presents a problem in applying this equation, because a dynamic contact angle seems to be required rather than the static contact angle that is normally measured.
402
• o
{
Experimental data Water, pressure range 0.18 to 5.6 psia
Figure 10. Predicted bubble growth curves compared with experimental data. (Mikic, et al., [17, 18]). With the preceding information, it is possible to combine the individual processes of bubble inception, growth, and departure to predict the heat transfer performance of a boiling surface. It is instructive to outline the method of Han and Griffith [20, 2 1], even though it will become apparent that the procedure cannot be used for engineering calcu ations. The model is formulated for the isolated bubble regime, as indicated in Figure 11. An idealized grid of nucleation sites is postulated that defines the so-called bulk convection area. The mechanism of heat removal from the surface consists of two parts: 1) the enthalpy transport represented by the repeated removal (bulk convection) of the superheated layer in the vicinity of the bubbles, and 2) continuous removal of heat by the usual free convective process in the area uninfluenced by the bubbles. Referring to the earlier discussion of the mechanism of nucleate pool boiling, it is seen that only Regions 3 and 4 of Figure 9 are considered. At Stage 1 the bubble departs, carrying with it a section of the superheated transient thermal layer. Colder liquid from the bulk of the pool quenches the heated surface, and the transient thermal layer is reformed. A waiting period is required before the layer is superheated sufficiently to activate the cavity
403
(Stage 2). The bubble then grows (Stage 3) until the departure diameter is reached (Stage 4), at which point the cycle is repeated. A simple experiment indicated that the area from which the superheated liquid is pumped away corresponds to about twice the bubble departure diameter. Assuming only pure conduction to the superheated liquid layer in the area of influence, the problem was modelled as conduction to a semi-infinite body with a step change in temperature at the surface. The superheated layer is replaced at a rate corresponding to the frequency of bubble departure.
Bulk �BUble convection -l ayer
,
Staqe I�
�
' ral conv4ct jon
51 09e :3
No. of
slaQI. I
2 3
•
r/ j rj
WoilinQ period j
I'.
�1Pld'di
�1" '4� 'od
p e r io d
Figure 11. Model for nucleate boiling in the isolated bubble region (Han and Griffith, [21]). In somewhat simplified form, the final expression for the heat flux is (14) (15) 2 [x(kpchf
w
]O.5Db 2n(T
- 1b)
(16)
where an average departure frequency is presumed to be valid for the bubbles issuing from the n active sites per unit area of the heating surface. To use this equation, it is necessary to specify f, Db, and n(rc). Han and Griffith [20]
404
obtained the frequency from transient conduction calculations, in essence, getting the time required for nucleation of a specified cavity (tw ) and the time required for the bubble grow to departure size (tci). The departure diameter was obtained from the Fritz relation, Eq. (13); the contact angle was taken as the dynamic value (measured from motion pictures) at the average bubble growth rate. The cavity size distribution was inferred from the wall heat flux and wall superheat at which incipient boiling was observed. The formulation thus represents a "two adjustable parameter" model. The agreement between measured and predicted heat transfer rates was quite satisfactory.
to
Modifications of this basic model were employed by Mikic and Rohsenow [22] as shown in Figure 12, and Lorenz et al. [23], with similar success. Judd and Hwang [24] extended the model to include microlayer evaporation, as shown schematically in Figure 13 and given by Eq. ( 17). (17)
IIEE CONVECTION
�IIIEDI CTED :
0'
.. ..I T;T ••,
Irf
10
10
T.- T
)
1. 5
102
•• , 0 ,
Figure 12. Comparisons of measured (Gaertner and Westwater [25]) and predicted (Mikic and Rohsenow, [22]) data for nucleate boiling of water. This term introduces still another experimentally determined parameter, the average microlayer volume. The total heat flux was predicted quite well if the area of influence was reduced from that corresponding to twice the diameter of the bubble at departure to 1.3 times the diameter.
405 It is evident that the prediction of the boiling performance is an elusive undertaking. The models proposed to date provide insight into the physics; however, the requirement that microscopic data be available for specific systems renders these models useless for engineering calculations. The preceding discussion has given some idea of the variables that have an effect on nucleate boiling. A more complete summary is given below. Fluid state - the fluid properties p, Vfg , hfg , cr, k, p, c, and the fluid-surface property � are important parameters for the semi-analytical treatment of nucleate boiling. In addition, the dissolved-gas concentration affects nucleation, as noted earlier. Surface condition The material properties k, p, and c are important in certain cases. Mechanical properties have a bearing on how a particular finishing operation produces the characteristic cavity size distribution. The amount of gas trapped in the cavities also affects nucleation, particularly when the system is first started up. Surface coating, oxidation, or fouling can markedly affect the surface wettability and, therefore, the effective cavity sizes. Heater and pool geometry - These variables determine the pool convective conditions, which have an important bearing on the natural convection heat transfer coefficient as well as the bubble motion. Body forces - Significant differences in boiling behavior have been noted in fractional-gravity and multi-gravity situations. The former is discussed in Section 4. Method of heating - The heating method is immaterial except for the case of a.c. resistance heating, which may cause bubble generation in phase with the power supply.
BY
TRANSFER
SlR"ACE AREA AT
Figure 13. Schematic representation of boiling heat transfer model including microlayer evaporation (Judd and Hwang, [24]).
406
History - Due to the peculiarities of nucleation, hysteresis behavior may be noted where the boiling curve is different when the heat flux is increased than when it is reduced. An aging phenomena can also occur as the surface becomes degassed or contaminated. Several sets of data illustrate certain of these effects. Figure 14 demonstrates the effect of relatively large-scale surface roughness (5), oxidation (2), and aging due to surface degassing (4,6,7).
Wall' .
I A' ''
HOfl l ontal S u , ' a c .
-+-oJ "H s. ..c: -. ::I -+-oJ l:Q
C'I
104
-0"
103
I
ACkl9h.".d by . a n d b l a , 1
2
Sand b l a s t . d a v a i n
3
4
,
6
So", •
So"' ••
10"9.'
RCklqh". . .
2 4 ."
So", •
7
•
So". ••
24 w
• o.,diud
sat
T -T
,
••
o.cn.n added u
4 h, boolinq . l o a k inq
a ."
h,
bai l i nq .
laakinQ
OF
Figure 14. Boiling curves for surfaces with various surface treatments and operating history (Jakob and Fritz, [26]). Additional roughness effects are illustrated in Figure 15, where it is seen that a four-fold increase in the boiling heat transfer coefficient for this system (evaluated at constant heat flux) can be obtained by choosing a lap over a mirror finish.
407
• R u n 31 : E m e ry 3 20 x R u n 32 : E m e ry 6 0
o R u n s 1 7 So 22 ' Lap E D R un s 2 a 3 : Mirrar Finish
+>
C'I
� +> CQ
Figure 15. Effect of surface finish on boiling curves for copper-pentane (Berenson, [27]). Data that demonstrate hysteresis are presented in Figure 16. These data were taken from a small vertical copper plate that was indirectly electrically heated. The temperature overshoot is due to the deactivation of large nucleation sites, which 'was discussed earlier. Between runs, the power was shut off so that the deactivation reoccurred. The boiling curve hysteresis with a highly wetting liquid is evidently large and repeatable. It is apparent that neither a precise description nor a universal correlation will be possible for nucleate boiling due to the number of variables, in particular, those that might be termed nuisance variables. Numerous attempts have been made to correlate the portion of the boiling curve that is log-linear. The most successful models are semi-analytical and involve a form of dimensional analysis. The most widely used correlation, developed by Rohsenow [29], is described here. Adopting the argument that the major portion of the heat is transferred directly from the surface to the liquid, a conventional combination of dimensionless groups is sought: Nu
=
f(Re, Pr)
(18)
The forced-convection turbulent flow groups are pertinent because the bubbles are "pumping" the liquid.
408
The Reynolds number represents the ratio of bubble inertia to frictional forces on the bubble: (19) Use of Gb is permitted because Gb mass flux is given by
=
Gl, by continuity. The bubble superficial
(20) A bubble Nusselt number is given by (21) The latent heat transfer of the bubbles is represented as
qb
=
hfg
1;Db3 f Pv n
(22) RUN
INCREASING
DECREAS I NG
2
v
•
6
1
H
•
Tsat
5 . 0 nvn
•
0
3
PLA I N COPPER
•
\I
46 . 4 °c
=
I
S
4 . 9 nm
:�
•
• • 4
�
.' .J9 1.!
I
I
6
�
S
.9 v
v
10
]
0.1
:o·
."
10
1 00
Figure 16. lllustration of boiling curve hysteresis with boiling of Refrigerant 1 13 from a copper surface (Kim and Bergles, [28]).
409
Experiments indicate that for a wide range of conditions, (23)
q" - n Thus, q" =
Cq qb
(24)
The Prandtl number of the liquid is appropriate: (25) Introducing Eq.
(13) for Db, and formulating the functional relationship as (26)
]n [ --L
the final correlation can be obtained as hfg
c l (Tw - Test)
_
-
Cq
[
2 X 0.0148P
Cq
hfgll1
] [ C�Jm g(Pl - Pv) 0"
n
k
1
(27) The collection of constants preceding the slightly redefined Reynolds number function is designated as C sf, a constant reflecting the condition of particular fl uid and surface combination. B ecause all properties are evaluated at the saturation temperature, this expression is analogous to the general expression for fully established boiling: q" = f (p, fluid, surface) (Tw T sat)lln -
(28)
It was possible to correlate data for a wide range of fluids at different pressures utilizing n = 0.33 and m = 1.7, where C sf has a different value for each fluid-surface combination, as listed in Table 1. An example of the extent to which the data are correlated is shown in Figure 17. This "one adjustable constant" correlation with a value of Csf from the table is useful in preliminary design. It is, of course, desirable to have some data for the actual system at hand to establish the appropriate C sf. This testing might be done in a simple pool at atmospheric pressure; the correlation then permits extrapolation to high pressure. Note that a subsequent re-evaluation of the data indicated that m = 1.0 is more accurate over the entire pressure range for water. This is a consequence of the Prandtl number for water not being a monotonic function of pressure.
410
a&li-
100
rt»
-
> C-
a: bo I
--0'I .! �
L.
10
.7 Dala
J •
0 &· 4
i
o
o
1.0 0
0.1
aal- 4 /4 • • ," 4
/
_
4
0.01
�
u
of :
Addoms Pool BOiling Plotlnum
Wire - Woter 0.024· dlom.
0 6 A x a
Cf
,g
..
lit
1 4.7
�;� :�::
1 2 05 1 60 2 2465
P S IA PSIA PSIA PSIA
0.1
0'
..(5
�'i
.-�
U I:
)
I - Tsot PrL7
Figure 17. Correlation of pool boiling data for water (Rohsenow. [29]). TABLE 1. Constants in the Rohsenow Nucleate Boiling Correlation, Eq. (27) [30]. Surface-Fluid Combination
C sf
Water-nickel Water-platinum Water-copper Water-brass Carbon tetrachloride - copper B enzene-chromi urn n-Pentane-chromium Ethyl alcohol - chromium Isopropyl alcohol - copper 35% Potassium carbonate - copper 50% Potassium carbonate - copper n-Butyl alcohol - copper
0.006 0.013 0.013 0.006 0.013 0.010 0.015 0.0027 0.0025 0.0054 0.0027 0.0030
41 1
It should be noted that the slope of the log-linear portion of the boiling curve may be different from that assumed in the correlation. In actual practice, a range of n = 0.04 to 1.0 has been reported. However, in order to use the correlation's pressure prediction capability, which is really the only reason for using the correlation, the exponent n = 0.33 must be retained, because the property groups are afected by this exponent. At this point, it is apparent that the designer is still at a loss to predict nucleate boiling without direct information on the fluid and surface of interest. A natural question is: In view of the vast amount of data accumulated on nucleate boiling, isn't it possible to get a useful correlation by purely statistical means? The early study of Armstrong [3 1] was not v�ry encouraging, as shown in Figure 18, there is a large variation in the wall superheat for a given heat flux for organic liquids. However, according to the study of Stephan and Abdelsalam [32], the answer is a qualified "yes". They identified the physical properties and variables characterizing the process and developed a possible set of 13 independent dimensionless groups. A product relation among these groups was postulated, and a linear regression analysis was used to obtain the lead constant and the exponents of the most important groups. The fluids were divided into four categories: water, hydrocarbons, cryogenic fluids, and refrigerants; about 5000 data points were considered. While only 8 of the groups were ultimately utilized, and only 3-5 groups appeared in the correlation for a given category, the correlations were quite involved.
I�
Tw-Tsat
=
1 1 .48
(q"/ lOOO) O . 2 9 3
_-
-
_c
80
80
o
� 40
o o
q" , Btu/hr ft 2 2
4
6
8
105
Figure 18. Compilation of nucleate pool boiling data of various organics at 1 atm together with a statistical correlation (Armstrong. [31]).
412
Accordingly, a simple set o f heat transfer coefficients were proposed a s h
=
c(p) (q" )n
(29)
where the exponent was fIxed for each category and the pressure function is given graphically for each fluid or group of fluids. For water, for example, the expression is h q"
= =
Cl(p) (q" )O.673
(30)
[ cl(p) (Tw - Tsat)]3· 06
(31)
which is in excellent agreement with Rohsenow's recommendation of an exponent of 3.03 in Eq. (27). The pressure function Cl(P) is shown in Figure 19. It is important to note, however, that the surface roughness appears in only the correlation for cryogenic fluids, even though surface finish and material are known to afect boiling of all fluids. Cooper [33] has proposed an alternative correlation procedure for saturated nucleate boiling utilizing reduced properties. While the pressure dependence is taken care of quite satisfactorily, there is considerable scatter in thl� data due to surface effects. 1 02
-
8
6 4
c,
I
100
2
4
6
10 2
2
4
6 B
8
10'
2
10-'
2
4
bor 4
-p
8
102
6 B
100
6
bor 2
Figure 19. Pressure factor for water (Stephan and Abdelsalam, [32]).
413
2.5 Peak Nucleate Boiling Heat Flux
In spite of intensive research effort, there is still disagreement regarding the actual mechanism of the peak nucleate or critical heat flux. Two interpretations of this condition are The number of nucleation sites becomes so numerous that neighboring bubbles or vapor columns coalesce, causing a vapor blanketing of the surface (Figure 20), e.g., Rohsenow and Griffith [34]. Their correlation is given by:
(iY
Pv
(hCg in Btulbm and
·25 B tulhrft2
(32)
Pv in Ibmlft3)
where a/g is a term added later for fractional gravity and multigravity situations. The comparison with data is shown in Figure 21.
Figure 20. Bubble·packing (Rohsenow and Griffith, [34]).
.
model of critical heat flux in pool boiling
At high heat flux, the number of sites is so large and the vapor generation rate so high that the area between the bubble columns for liquid flow to the surface is reduced, as shown in Figure 22. The relative velocity is so large that the liquid-vapor interface becomes unstable, thus essentially starving the surface of liquid and causing the formation of a vapor blanket, e.g. , Kutateladze [35], Zuber [36], Chang and Snyder [37], and Moissis and Berenson [38]. This has also been visualized as a flow pattern transition where the liquid filaments break up into drops that are suspended or "fluidized" by the vapor stream (Wallis [39]). The Zuber [36] correlation is given by
414
Figure 2 1 . Comparison of bubble-packing correlation with data (Rohsenow and Griffith, [34]).
Vv
t
� I
Figure 22. Simple visualization of jets for hydrodynamic instability model of critical heat flux.
. - 0 . 131 hfg q"cnt
Pv [O(P IPv-2
(33)
The constant in Eq. (33) is generally considered to be low; the value of 0. 18 has been recommended by Rohsenow [30], as shown in Figure 23.
415
ITMAMOL. C'CHIL.LI A M O aO.ILL.A.
... .. ' .. '.MI. IlfIlI"I.
. •
.
·
. •
.. n .....O L • •' I T . "" ' _ ", ,. 0 •• "T ..... ILO w.. Tta. AODOln .. f . _ . oa.,.
•
Figure (Zuber,
,Q
23. Comparison [36]).
o f hydrodynamic instability correlation with data
If the heaters are small in a hydrodynamic sense , i.e., a tube with R' = R[g( P l · p v)/cr]O.5 < 0.5, the critical heat flux is increased, e.g. , Sun and Lienhard [40] . For saturated water at 1 atm boiling under standard gravity, the value of R' at the point where the critical heat flux increases corresponds to a 0.5 in. diameter tube. This is depicted in Figure 24.
L'
=
L
(g(P t pv)/a)o . 5 -
Figure 24. Adjustments to flat plate correlation for various geometries (Lienhard and Dhir, [41]).
416
A s shown i n Figure 2 5 , the vapor removal patterns are di�erent for vari�us geometries. Accordingly, the critical heat flux correlations change wIth geometry, as shown in Figure 24. Infinite flat plate
Sma ll sphere Sphere or cylinder cross - sec'ion
R i bbon with one side insula ted
Figure 25. Vapor removal patterns postulated near critical heat flux (Lienhard and Dhir, [41]). The hydrodynamic theory breaks down at small values of the dimensionless size. Figure 26 illustrates this for a cylinder, where the critical heat flux is poorly defined for R < 0.1. The rather random behavior is associated with the way in which large bubbles behave shortly after nucleation occurs. This region has been studied by Bakhru and Lienhard [42]. A recent, very comprehensive review of critical heat flux behavior on cylinders is given by Lienhard [43]. A growing number of challenges to the hydrodynamic theory are noted. From a practical point of view, however, the various mechanistic corrleations, such as Eqs. (32) and (33) are quite similar. This is because the empirical constants have been adjusted to fit the experimental data. Additional effects not accounted for in the critical heat flux correlations items that been observed are usually a reduction in q�rit with
417
vertical orientation of long heaters non-wetted surfaces restriction of the liquid circulation to the heater mechanical or metallurgical defects in the heater thin, low thermal conductivity heaters and an increase in q�ri t with small amounts of certain additives use of d.c. power instead of a.c. power rapid increases in power certain types of surface fouling
20
.., ..,
r.:I
0-
:r -0" '"'
-0"
1·5
10
v
v
• •
t
I /
}
13 Ethanol data G) Water data 'V'.�.O.� data
g /g� � I .O
for R ' � 0.07
OimenslOl1less r adius.
R'
20
Figure 26. Breakdown of hydrodynamic theory at low R' according to Sun and Lienhard [40]. These factors do not seem to be involved in the aforementioned studies carried on by Lienhard and co-workers; however, they are expected to be reflected in data from a wide variety of sources. Figure 27 presents a composite of data for tubes from 47 separate investigations that demonstrate the actual variability of the critical heat flux. The generally accepted baseline of Eq. (33) and the correlation of Sun and Lienhard [40] are close to the averages for R' > 0.1; however, the variation in the data is seen to be quite large. The spread is due to inherent statistical fluctuations in the phenomenon itself (±15%) as well as the factors mentioned above. Accepting this variability and adopting a statistical approach, the following equation is recommended (Park and Bergles [44]):
41 8
q"crit, Eq.
=
( 33 )
1.235 - 0.687X - 0.590X2 -H>.987X3 + 0.673X4
- 0.296X5 - 0.330X6 - 0.090X'7 - 0.OO8X8 where X
=
log R'.
• S
Z.S
!AI
Co
� -0' _U
0' 10 u
•
z.o
0.5
"' 1(1 + ISOPIPAI X II[TIWIl 1' fTIWC.
• liz· Oz .
1 .5 1 .0
(34)
R·m . R· I I
Eq. (33) • x I . 10 1 R'
I • 10 1
Figure 27. Critical heat flux data for cylindrical heaters [2377 points] (Park and Bergles, [44]).
2.6 Transition and film boiling
Film boiling is the most tractable regime analytically, because the flow pattern is relatively simple. Exact solutions can be obtained for laminar film boiling in a saturated pool by solving the momentum and energy equations separately, and then relating the solutions by means of a heat balance. The relation of Breen and Westwater [45], which accounts for interfacial shear and curvative effects, is h
=
Ac (0.59 + 0.0069 D
[
kv
�v (Tw - Tsat) Ac
3g
( P I - Pv)
where the minimum wavelength for Taylor instability, Ac, is given by
(35)
419
Ac = 21t
[
a
g(Pi
-
Pv)
(36)
change in film boiling behavior, apparently analogous to the transition to Aturbulence, has been noted at a critical value of a modified Rayleigh number according to Frederking and Clark [46]:
(37) The correlation for the turbulent regime,
Nu = 0.15
(Ra*) 113
Ra*> 5 x 107, is (38)
which is apparently valid for vertical plates, horizontal tubes, and spheres. The temperature level is generally quite high in film boiling, and it is necessary to account for radiation. simple superposition of heat transfer coefficients is not adequate, however, because the radiant heat transfer results in an increase in the film thickness. The following equation is recommended for the resultant heat transfer coefficient:
A
(39) where
(40)
F
LO.
and the interchange factor The lower limit of stable film boiling corresponds to the breakdown of the continuous insulating film and the onset of liquid-solid contact. Numerous analyses have been made to predict this condition, generally based on hydrodynamic stability theory similar to that employed in determining the critical heat flux. The result for large tubes in terms of the minimum heat flux is (Zuber [36], Zuber, et a!. [47], Berenson [48]) " n qmi
=
C hfg Pv
[
(Pi ( Pi + Pv)2
ag
(41)
where C ranges from 0.09 to 0.177. The higher value is recommended because the usual liquid impurities and surface contamination tend to raise the minimum heat flux. Due to the transient character and ill-defined flow pattern of transition boiling, no theory has been formulated for this regime. An accurate representation of the average heat transfer characteristics can be
420 obtained by linearly interpolating between the peak nucleate heat flux point and the Leidenfrost point on the boiling coordinates Oog-log).
2.7 Influence ofSubcollng on the Boiling Curve
Subcooled pool boiling is generally a transient condition observed as the pool is heating up. In certain cases, however, the system heat loss may be high or some cooling means is employed so as to achieve a subcooled bulk condition. Subcooling may be visualized as a perturbation of the saturated pool boiling curve discussed in detail in the preceding sections. In the natural convection region, the procedure of Section 2 . 1 can be utilized where now
(42) Fully established boiling may deviate from saturated boiling with a similar system. The boiling curve for a horizontal cylindrical heater shifted to the right (Bergles and Rohsenow [49]), as shown in Figure 28. However, the opposite trend was observed for a horizontal flat heater (Duke and Schrock [50]). In the absence of definite guidelines, it is suggested that this effect be ignored. 106 9 8 7 6
4
..
�
.;:
=
is
C'
= -
2
lOS 9 8 7
6
Pol Boiling 16 90 55 P '" 29 Ib,. /in�obs
5
a
,
D
4
2 10
20
30
(Tsat - T},)
3 OF 71 149
40 50 60
80 100
T w - Tsat , o f
Figure 28. Reported trends of subcooling on nucleate boiling curve for water (Bergles and Rohsenow, [49]).
42 1 The critical heat flux is strongly dependent upon the degree of subcooling. The data are usually represented as a linear function of the subcooling, as exemplified by the simple expression recommended by Ivey [5 1]:
sub = 1 + 0.1 qcnt, sat
[
{ClPl
-
Pv
(Tsat
h fg
(!.)0.273
(43)
g
Ponter and Haigh [52] found that the following equation is accurate for water at subatmospheric pressures:
0.474
sub = 1.06 + 0.015 (Tsat qcri t, sat
(44)
P
where (Tsat-Tb is in °C, p is in torr. Eq. (33) is used as the reference in both Eq. (44) and Eq. (43). More recent work by Elkassabgi and Lienhard [53] indicates that the
influence of subcooling is negligible at very high subcooling. As shown in Figure 29, they found that the critical heat flux ratio is essentially linear up to the point where the highly subcooled boiling region begins. 3.0 2 .5
!
'6
-�.. -0' .0
-0'
2 .0
1.5
1 .0
reoion
01
mod.r.,e aubcoollng
0.5
iloproplnol d.,.
o e
0.11 1 3 mm dl•.
(I
1.215 mm dla.
"•• ,.rl h••,.r. h•• ,.r. dlL "•• '.r.
•
1.524 mm
1 .042 mm dl••
Figure 29. The effect of subcooling as the critical heat flux for heaters of various size in isopropanol (Elkassabgi and Lienhard, [53]). Subcooled film boiling has not been investigated extensively; however, general experimental evidence indicates that heat transfer coefficients are increased in the stable film boiling region as the subcooling increases. Quantitative predictions can be obtained from the analysis of Sparrow and Cess [54] for an isothermal vertical plate. The analysis predicts that the heat
422 transfer coefficient for large subcooling will be identical to that obtained for free convection of the liquid alone. Subcooling increases q;in and transition boiling heat fluxes; however, no reliable data appear to be available to quantitatively establish this region of the boiling curve. 2.8
Comtruciion of the Complete Bolling Curve
In recapitulation. it is appropriate to develop the complete boiling curve from the preceding equations. The result is shown in Figure 30 for a stainless steel tube in water. This is the approach that would be taken to predict the performance without performing tests on the actual equipment. As emphasized in the preceding discussion, significant deviations are possible in all regions of the boiling curve. The generated curve, however, represents a typical estimate based on the current state of the art.
2
x 10
6
10
b
6
b
Eq . ( 4 3 )
Eq . ( 3 2 )
n
Eq . ( 2 7 )
..
10
5
.t:.
I
TABLE 1
IY
Eq . ( 4 2 )
..
.=
F I G. 2
II
- -
10
' DEGASSED WATE R 1 1 at m HOR I ZONTAL S TA I N L E SS T U B E 0.5 IN . DI A . --
10
S A T U R ATE D Tb = 2 1 2 O F
- - - S U S CO O L E D Tb = 1 00 O F
3 3
10
1 0 00
3 000
Figure 30. Prediction of boiling curve for saturated and subcooled pool boiling.
423 2.9 Crosow Efects on Boiling from Cylinders
It has been demonstrated experimentally that pool boiling heat transfer is influenced by any of the schemes that impart a velocity to the bulk liquid, including propeller-type stirrers, pumps, and injected vapor (e.g. , Pramuk and Westwater [55]). As might be expected, heat transfer in the nonboiling convective region is improved, there is little effect on fully developed nucleate boiling, the peak heat flux is elevated, and coefficients in the transition and film boiling regions are increased. Quantitative prediction of these effects is difficult, however, due to the inability to describe the velocity field in the vicinity of the heater. Numerous experiments have been devised to study boiling heat transfer from single horizontal cylinders with an established crossflow velocity. The data are useful for anticipating the heat transfer characteristics of tubes in a bundle when the velocity arises from the gross natural circulation. The single-phase portion of the boiling curve can be obtained from well-established relations for flow over cylinders. The transition region between incipient boiling and fully established boiling can usually be ignored, especially given the usual uncertainty of quantifying the established boiling.
700 500 300 200
<='>e -- �
t -
><
-0"
100 70 50 30 20
o
20
40
100 80 60 T -T , K w
sat
120
140
Figure 31. Effect of crossflow velocity on nucleate, transition, and film boiling (R-113 subcooled 4.5 K at 1.12 atm flowing normal to a 6.4 mm OD cylinder). Adapted from Yilmaz and Westwater ([56]).
424 There is some disagreement how the imposed velocity, which is higher than the natural circulation rate in free convection from a single tube, affects the boiling curve. Yilmaz and Westwater [56] suggest that there is a substantial shift in the nucleate boiling curve with velocity, as shown in However, close examination of the actual data o n log-log Figure 3 1 . coordinates indicates that the shift is pronounced only at low heat fluxes and is due to the accentuated knee of the boiling curve in the presence of both velocity and subcooling. Thus, the data are in accordance with most observations of forced convection subcooled boiling. The peak nucleate heat flux, seen in Figure 31 to increase with increasing velocity, was correlated by Yilmaz and Westwater [56]:
q�ri t
PvhfgU
=
(45)
cr
Gravity has a significant effect at low flow velocities, as demonstrated for low velocities in the horizontal plane by Sadasivan and Lienhard [57]. As shown in Figure 32, the critical heat flux ratio, where the denominator is a term. similar to Eq. (45), tends to unity at low values of the parameter involving gravity. The film boiling heat transfer coefficient increases with velocity and subcooling, and is further elevated by radiation effects at higher temperature. Correlations are discussed by Yilmaz and Westwater [56]. 2.6 2.5 . 'tl Q) � 0.
2.0
� -rt 1 .5 � 0
o isogroganol ; Ungar CJ isogroganol ; Ha.an et al. • methanol : Huan e t al. o Freon : Yllmaz & We.t.ater Brou••ara & We.twe.er .. Freon ; Cochran & Andrecchio
o
Data:
o Water ; Ungar • Water ; Vlie' & Leggert
I I
d
,�o I • 1 • 1 0 00 I I I
=0"
"
"" 'M � U
1 .0
'0"
0.5
1 + 0.0000 20
(PI/Pv) 1. 7/Fr
0 1 00
Fi �re 32. Critical . heat flux �atio shOwing regions of gravity influence and nonmfluence (Sadaslvan and LIenhard, [57]).
3.
FLOW INSIDE TUBES
425
When flow occurs in a channel, as in in-tube boilers and evaporators, the hydrodynamic and heat transfer behavior becomes, in effect, three dimensional. For instance, in low velocity horizontal evaporative flows, the heat transfer coefficient varies around the channel periphery as well as along the length of the tube. The designer requires circumferentially average, but axially local, coefficients in order to accurately size or rate heat exchangers. The emphasis will be on the internal flow in circular tubes that is so common in heat exchanger equipment. It is recognized, however, that heat exchangers with other configurations, e.g., plate-and-frame, spiral, and tube and-plate fin, are accounting for an increasing percentage of the market.
3.1 Flow Patterns
The local hydrodynamic and heat transfer behavior i s related to the distribution of liquid and vapor, referred to as flow pattern or flow regime. It is helpful to briefly discuss flow patterns even though experience has been that reasonably accurate correlations for pressure drop and heat transfer coefficient can be obtained without consideration of the flow pattern. The traditional picture of a once-through boiler is shown in Figure 33. The flow enters as subcooled liquid and exits as superheated vapor. Subcooled boiling is observed before the fluid reaches a bulk saturated condition; the flow pattern is The "bubble boundary layer" thickens because of the accumulation of uncondensed vapor, which is promoted by the decreasing condensation potential. The fluid is in a non-equilibrium state, with superheated liquid near the wall and subcooled liquid in the core, and the vapor would condense if the flow were brought to rest and mixed. At some point, the bulk enthalpy is at the saturated liquid condition (x = 0). As the vapor volumetric fraction increases, the bubbles agglomerate and is observed. (Slug flow may also be observed in the subcooled region.) Agglomeration of the slug flow bubbles leads to a transition regime termed where the nominally liquid film and the nominally vapor core are has the in a highly agitated state. The subsequent flow pattern, phases more clearly separated spacewise. However, the film may contain some vapor bubbles and the core may contain liquid in the form of drops or streamers. The film thickness usually varies with time, with a distinct wave motion, and there is an interchange of liquid between the film and core. There is a gradual depletion of the liquid due to evaporation. At some point before complete evaporation, the wall becomes nominally dry due to net entrainment of the liquid or abrupt disruption of the film. Beyond this dryout condition, prevails. A non-equilibrium condition again occurs, but in this case the vapor becomes superheated to provide the temperature difference required to evaporate the vapor. Eventually, beyond the point where the bulk enthalpy is at the saturated vapor condition (x = 1), the liquid evaporates and normal superheated vapor is obtained. The fluid and wall temperature profiles shown in Figure 33 pertain to uniform heat flux, as might be approximated in a fired boiler with complete vaporization. The temperature difference between the wall and the fluid is inversely proportional to the heat transfer coefficient. The normal single-
426
\
I
x-I Vapour core temp
' Oryout '
Wall
+
temp
t D
Liquid temp x -o Fluid temp
f
Figure 33. Flow patterns and temperature profiles in a vertical evaporator tube (Collier,
[58]).
phase coefficient is observed near the entrance of the tube, perhaps with an increase right at the inlet due to flow and/or thermal development. The
427
coefficient increases rapidly as subcooled boiling is initiated, because of the intense agitation of the bubbles, but levels off in established boiling in the subcooled and low quality regions. The coefficient is usually expected to increase in annular flow because of the thinning of the liquid film. At the dryout point, the coefficient decreases rapidly as a result of the transition from a basically solid-liquid heat transfer to a solid-gas heat transfer. Droplets striking the surface elevate the heat transfer coefficient above what it would be for pure vapor. Flow patterns in horizontal tubes have the Bame general characteristics; however, the phase distributions are asymmetric because of gravity. There is the possibility of intermittent drying and rewetting of the upper surface of the tube in slug or churn flow and dryout of the upper surface in stratified annular flow. At high mass fluxes, the gravity is less effective, and the flow patterns are reasonably close to those shown in Figure 33. Because the single-phase coefficients are generally known quite accurately, the design or rating calculation hinges on knowledge of the nucleate boiling coefficient (or boiling curve) and convective vaporization coefficients together with incipient boiling and dryout information. The problem may be reduced in complexity by ignoring the knee of the boiling curve at incipient boiling. Subcoled Boiling A typical set of boiling curves for forced convection subcooled boiling of water in an annulus is shown in Figure 34. It is seen that there is a rather pronounced transition from incipient boiling to fully established boiling. the nonboiling region responds to the usual change in heat transfer coefficient with velocity and the effect of subcooling according to Eq. (412. Established forced convection subcooled boiling is subject to the same surface and fluid variables as pool boiling. However, it was shown by Brown [12] that the surface effects become less pronounced as the levels of velocity and subcooling increase. A correlation of the form of Eq. (27) is usually sought. For example, Jens and Lottes [60] suggested the following equation for water boiling from stainless steel or nickel surfaces: 3.2
-
q" = 3.91 x 105eO.065p (Tw TsaV"4
(46)
where p is the absolute pressure in bar, Tw - Tsat is in K and q" is in MW/m2• No correlations based on a variety of surfaces are available for other fluids. The pressure effect has not been established for other fluids; however, Eq. (27) has occasionally been used for this purpose. In view of the rather large transition region or knee between single-phase force convection and established subcooled nucleate boiling, procedures have been developed to estimate this region. The most accurate procedure involves the establishment of nucleate boiling, essentially using Eq. (9), and the use of the following interpolation formula (Bergles and Rohsenow, [49]), as shown in Figure 35. q"
=
qf{l+{�l -�)T
(47)
428 3 2
1 0" 8
6
S
4
3 2
��
"' ..
,9 ","
I
I
8 6
S
4
I I I
3
-----
2
10
Annulul 1.1 p ' 60 p.'. V ' I III ... a 4 . 12 0 - - T -T • 20'f ___ s b SO 1 00 I SO
20
30 w
40 sa.t
T -T
Figure 34. al., [57]).
50 60
, OF
eo
100
Typical data for forced convection subcoiled boiling (McAdams et
The boiling curve knee is likely to be important for high heat flux systems cooled by subcooled nucleate boiling; however, the knee is much less important for evaporators, because that region usually covers only a small part ' of the tube length.
429
4
:3
2
a •
V
'lbV
•
•
11.0 flsee
6. 8 flsee
1 25 OF
106
Eq. (47)
8
� a5
-c:r
: Eq. (9) 2
in. 10
Sleel p . 22 IbF/ in,2 obs • V • 1.7 flsee
I
I
•
5
4 3
Tw
- Tsat,
of
Figure 35. Interpolation formula for knee of boiling curve (Bergles and Rohsenow, [49]). Hysteresis effects are present in subcooled boiling of highly wetting liquids, as illustrated by the data of Murphy and Bergles [61] shown in Figure 36. For this low velocity boiling of R-113, the temperature "overshoot" at incipient boiling is large for degassed liquid, but becomes even larger as the gas content is increased. The outgassing has a substantial effect at lower heat fluxes; however, at high heat flux the effect of gas is negligible. The enlarged boiling curve knee has erroneously led to the impression that established subcooled boiling is significantly afected by gas content. The critical heat flux for subcooled boiling has been the subject of numerous investigations and the parametric trends have been well established. Some reasonably accurate correlations are available [63]. Thistopic will not be pursued further here because of the emphasis in this chapter on vaporization.
430
z/D
23
=
e·_ · - ·
KEY Xa Xa
. 0.06 )1 -10-4 moles/mole a
8.57 )1 10-4 moles/mole 10 T -T w
sat
, OF
Figure 36. Hysteresis and dissolved gas effects on forced convection subcooled boiling (Murphy and Bergles, [61]).
8.3
Foro Convection Vaporimtion
The more popular correlations for vaporization heat transfer incorporate both low quality and higher quality behavior in additive fashion. The widely used Chen [63] correlation, for example, is htp
=
hmic + hmac
(48)
where the microscopic contribution is obtained from a pool boiling correlation and the macroscopic contribution involves a single-phase convective correlation. The former term has a correction factor that suppresses the nucleation at higher quality and the latter term is corrected by another factor that incorporates two-phase effects. Much effort has been directed recently toward the development of more accurate correlations for specific orientations and specific classes of fluids. The equations of Kandlikar [64] are given for illustration:
43 1 Vertical flow
(49) Horizontal flow
(50)
where
(51) and for Frl > 0.04, D5 = 0 and D6 = O. The convection number, boiling number, Froude number, and Prandtl number are defined in the Nomenclature. The constants D 1-D6 are optimized for high and low ranges of Co. The final factor Fn is a fluid-dependent correction factor that takes care of the vagaries of nucleate boiling. The empirical parameters for Eqs. (48) and (49) are given in Table 2. Kandlikar's correlation is more accurate than other correlations for a wide range of data for water, refrigerants, and cryogens. TABLE 2 Constants in the Kanclikar Correlation, Eqs.
D1
(49-51)
0.809 -0 .891 387.53 0.587 0.096 0.203
1.091
D2 D3 D4 D5 D6
-0.948
887.46 0.726 0.333 0.182 Fluid Water
R-11 R114 R-12
Nitrogen Neon
Fn
1.0 1.35 2.15 2.10 3.0 3.0
432
A true test of any correlation, of course, involves comparison with data not used in the development of the correlation. Such a comparison was prepared by Reid et a!. [65]. As shown in Figure 37, the data are characterized by high coefficients in the entrance region and a slowly increasing coefficient in the downstream high quality region. None of the correlations noted follow this trend but several of the correlations, including Eq. 50, predict the average behavior quite well. In general, the prediction of heat transfer in the quality region is an elusive business that requires much more attention. 1 0000
o
Experimental date
8.11 mm Smooth Tube Mass Velocity - 248 to/m2 Heal Flux - H!383 W/m2 In let Pressure - 346 kPa
S!n_ _ _ _ £!1a!do,£k-.!ru!!.e ,,!n!:!
�- . .-...-
8000
s
_ _
�';I!!9.�!:���!!'!.t.��
��!,�!i�!,!_ . _ _ _ _ _ • • _ .
•••..
6000
4000
0
- '"
o
.
0
. • • •• • • • • • •• . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • . • . . . . .
2 000
. -- -
-- --
o
o
0.0
0.1
-
-
--
0.2
- �-
� . ::-: . • . . . • • • • t> • • -G- . - • •a. _ • . . -
-- -
0.3
x
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
Figure 37. Evaporation of Refrigerant 113 (Reid et aI., [65]). 3.4
Critical Heat Flux or Dryout
The problem of critical heat flux, also referred to as dryout, in the quality region has received a great deal of study. As noted by Collier [58] and Bergles [62, 66], the technical importance of the dryout condition has led to a bewildering variety of correlations. The majority of the work has been empirical, and, with few exceptions, the correlations apply only to water. As an example, the Bowring [67] expression for water flowing vertically upward in circular tubes is " qcrit
A' - DH =
where
C'
xol4
(52)
433
2.31 A'
C
I
{�JFl
1 .0 + 0.143 F21l0.5 G
=
0.077 F300 1.0 + 0.347 F4 (G11356)n
n = 2.0 - 0 . 00725p
(53) (54)
(55)
Here D is in m, G in kglm2s, hfg in J/kg, and p in bar. The constants Fl - F4 are presented as functions of system pressure from 1 - 200 bar. There are many geometrical and flow effects that influence the critical heat flux, as summarized in [58], [62] and [66]. Collier [58] provides a comprehensive list of references to studies of fluids other than water. Very little work has been done with horizontal or inclined tubes, but premature dryout due to stratification has been documented. 3.5 Transition and Film Boiling
Transition and film boiling have been widely studied, and many elaborate procedures are suggested to account for the very complex phase change behavior in these regimes. The treatment of drop of mist flow is particularly difficult due to the problems in determining the drop size spectrum, the drop wall interactions, and the degree of thermal nonequilibrium. Further information can be found in Collier [58] . For purposes of preliminary (and conservative) design of high quality evaporators and once-through steam generators, the heat transfer coefficient can be presumed to be single-phase vapor immediately after the dryout point. 4. TWO-PHASE FLOW AND HEAT TRANSFER UNDER MICROGRAVITY CONDITIONS 4.1. Introduction
Body forces are often critical to the success of systems involving boiling heat transfer and two-phase flow. For example, gravity drives boiling in simple pools, horizontal shell-and-tube heat exchangers with shellside boiling, thermosyphon reboilers, etc. Also gravity can affect forced flow by causing stratification in in-tube condensers and evaporators (Figure 38). On earth, gravity is exploited or accommodated with design rules developed from extensive experience. These rules may not hold in the " microgravity" of outer space. This is usually considered to be aJg = 10 4 • Various space vehicle systems are shown in Figure 39. It is evident that these systems will have fluid management problems in a weightless environment. For example, in Figure 39a, if liquid is not available at the pump inlet, the engine will not restart. Also, venting will be required during prolonged storage, and the frequency of the venting will depend on the heat transfer mechanism.
434
� 1I
Singl Bubbl flow phas� liquid
Plug flow
Slug f low
X=o
Figure 38. Flow patterns in a horizontal tube evaporator (Collier, [58]). "EAT GAIIII ..nOAD S""�OfITS
Ot ..
ATTITUM COIlTIIOl
' OUTFLOW
( a) Propellant tank system.
EVA,.A"",
COI IIKII
( b ) Space power system. 'OWE. T O
"UT
1.0. �"
( c) Life support system.
_Ttll
( d)
MCEIVlII
1. 11 . SWPLY
Fuel cell system.
Figure 39. Fluid Management problems in space vehicle systems (Otto, [68]).
435
The problems encountered in microgravity environments encompass four areas: Interface configurations, i.e., shape and location of the interface, and liquid-vapor separation, Interface dynamics, Pool boiling mechanisms, and Forced convection evaporation and condensation phenomena. 4.2 Interface Configuration and Dynamics
Surface tension forces are important in determining the interface configuration and interface dynamics. This leads to predominance of the dimensionless groups Bond number and Weber number: accleration forces surface tension forces
=
_ _ inertia forces - We surface tension forces
2
L aJa
(56)
p LU2 /a
(57)
Bo = P
It is possible to use these groups to define hydrodynamic regions as shown in Figure 40. Here, the Froude number, Fr = (We/Bo)O.5, is introduced to define the boundary between the inertia-dominated regime and the acceleration dominated regime.
I
1000
I NERTIA DOMINAT � D 1 00
U/..
10
We
=
=
1
--
ACC E L E RATION OR G R AV I TY D O M I NATED
pLU2/a .1
C A P I L L ARY DOMINAT E D
.0 1
100
1 00 0
Bo = Figure 40. Hydrodynamic regions for gas-liquid flow ( Otto, 1966). In the capillary-dominated regime, the interface configuration can be predicted analytically for the simpler geometries. For instance, Figure 4 1
436
shows the weightless (Bo = 0) configura�ion fo: c�linders and spheres as a function of contact angle and volwne fraction of liqwd.
180 160 1 40 1 20
�
DEG
1 00 80 60
o
20 o
o
0
20 40 60 80 PERCENT VOLU ME
Figure 41. Weightless configurations in spheres (Otto,
100
[68]).
Because the location of liquid and vapor is often undesirable from the standpoint of pumping and venting, much effort has been directed toward obtaining reliable phase separation. Referring to Figure 42, capillary control is a possibility, and one embodiment is shown. The pump inlet would be located at the bottom of the tank and the vent at the top of the tank. Screens with small mesh are another possibility to position the liquid. The dynamic behavior of the interface as it undergoes transition from high acceleration to microgravity, or in response to altitude control accelerations or overflow disturbances, is also of importance to pumping and venting. For large acceleration disturbances, the stability limit of the interface may be exceeded. Several types of facilities have been utilized to create a microgravity environment to confirm theoretical expectations and uncover problems with fluid management: drop towers, airplanes flown on a ballistic trajectory, and ballistic rockets. Respective test times are about 2s, 158, and 1205.
437
(a) l - g con,igu ration.
(bl
Zero-g configuration.
Figure 42. Capillary tube for fluid control in microgravity (Otto. [68]). 4.3 Pool Boiling Pool boiling has been subject of much attention because of its occurrence in several of the systems shown in Figure 39. Earth-based correlations suggest difficul ty:
Free convection h
_
g 1l2
(laminar theory)
Established nucleate boiling q" Peak nucleate or critical heat
_
g 1l6
flux q;'rit
(Rohsenow model) _
g1l4
(Zuber model)
Our intuition does suggest that if there is no buoyancy to remove bubbles. the surface will quickly be blanketed with vapor. On the other hand, early experiments with drop towers suggested that nucleate boiling is unchanged with microgravity. as shown in Figure 43. The explanation is that bubbles are removed from the surface by acceleration of the surrounding liquid during the growth of the bubbles. This is certainly a possibility for subcooled conditions. It seems. however. that even quasi-steady equilibrium can be questioned when small transient calorimeters (and test times of only about 1s) are used. In general. the dependence of critical heat flux on local acceleration does seem to follow the 1/4-power dependence. as shown in Figure 44. Because ck'rit � 0 as a/g � 0, the concept of a saturated nucleate boiling curve seems to lose meaning under microgravity. With subcooling, a steady boiling curve can be established, provided, of course. that there is some way to keep the pool subcooled. This is illustrated by the more recent experiments conducted during rocket flight by Weinzierl and Straub [69]. The relatively long test period allowed setting the heat flux to the wire at three different levels. as shown in Figure 45. Although established
438 , I 1
D
," D'A . • " 0 ' l i Z " O'A. OI,o, , " D ' A . 0. 01 ( .,, ( O . D S 'I2"OIA .O.OI ( . , < O . O S
..
OATA 0' I_UY
•
•
•
6 •
• • •
DATA
0' I! U Z I C IIA
," O'A . • ,, 0 0. 2 0 , " OIA • i . - o. "
DATA 0' MSU • WlIT.AlIl!
' · D.... • ,, - 0. 10
•
Figure 43. Boiling curves for saturated nitrogen boiling on a copper surface (transient calorimeter at standard and near-zero gravity) [2]. boiling corresponded only to the highest heat flux, it is evident that the microgravity data are identical to the standard gravity data. There is still a general air of uncertainty surrounding the nucleate boiling mechanism; however, it is agreed that the effective utilization of pool boiling is sustained microgravity would require a means to remove the vapor from the vicinity of the heating surface. Pool boiling experiments are being planned for a space shuttle mission. It is intended to investigate the onset of saturated and subcooled nucleate boiling and confirm model(s) for bubble growth [70]. 4.4. Forced Convection Phase Change Forced convection phase change is the time-honored way to compensate for lack of gravity, as suggested in Figure 40. Reasonable velocities and pressure drops will impose shear control, permitting operation in microgravity and the resisting of adverse accelerations. Early solutions to potential problems with evaporators noted were tapered tubes, swirl flow devices, helical coils, and even rotating boilers. Activity in this area has intensified because future spacecraft will have greater power requirements and correspondingly greater heat dissipation needs. Two-phase systems are still highly desirable because they can transfer large amounts of energy over useful distances with a small weight penalty.
439 o. X
o.
T
I
0.7
�
q"crit/ q "crit, e = (a/ge)O . 25
0.6
I I
I .1
'6 0.5
� -0" :y C" ..
X
X
0.4
INVE5TIGATION UaiakJn &Dd Siegel 0 Lyon et al. 6 Merte aDd Clark 0 Sherley X Papell aDd Faber 0 Clodfelter I Siegel aDd Howell I
0.3
FACILITY FI.UlD Drop Tower Water 1.02 Magnel Drop Tower LN2 Drop Tower LI� Colloid Magnet Drop Tower Water Drop Tower Water Ethyl Alcohol Sucro8e Solution
DURATION 1 sec 55 1.4 sec 1
58
sec
1.8 aec
1
sec
0.2 0
0. 1
0
0. 1
-0. 1
0.2
0. 6
0. 5
0.4
0.3
0. 7
0. 8
0.9
1.0
a/ge Figure
44. Dependence of critical heat flux on local acceleration [2]. 10.
0
c
I
a/ge = 10 -4 a/ge = 1
-0"
-
.r:r" /
.
Figure
Tw
Tsat
45. Boiling curves for subcooled R-113 at nonnal and microgravity [69].
440
A typical example of recent results with aircraft is shown in Figure 46. Flow regimes for in-tube condensation of water were visually observed and depicted in a simple flow regime map. The flow regime transitions are different; flows that were stratified under normal gravity immediately reverted to slug flow upon inception of near-zero gravity. The modeling of flow pattern transitions, with data obtained from drop tower and aircraft experiments, is discussed by Dukler et al. [76].
•
Dispersed Flow Annular Flow : S lug Flow
I "
III
6
X
1 00 0 0 . 0 1 00 0 . 0
.! 1 00 . 0 bO :f
c5
ANNULAR SLUG DISPERSED
X
�
1 0. 0 1 .0 0. 1 0 . 00 0 1
0.001 0
0 . 0 1 00 x
0 . 1 000
1 . 0000
Figure 46. Flow regimes for condensing water at standard and low gravity [71].
5. CONCLUDING REMARKS
This chapter has presented the basic understanding of pool boiling and forced convection boiling that is required for the design of boilers and evaporators. While the emphasis has been on simple geometries, the material presented provides the background for the more complex geometries encountered in actual heat exchangers. It is shown that variations in surface and fluid conditions may result in large changes in boiling performance; accordingly, the prediction of boiling and evaporation is subject to considerable uncertainty. Various aspects of boiling heat transfer are treated in subsequent chapters.
44 1
6. NOMENCLATURE A', C' parameters in Eq. (52) acceleration, m/s a constants, C, C q , C sf pressure functions (see Eqs. (29) - (31» c, constant pressure specific heat, J/kgK c tube diameter, m D DI, D2, etc. constants in Eqs. (49) and (50) bubble departure diameter, m Db equivalent diameter. m De radiation interchange factor, F FI, F2, etc. factors in Eqs. (52) and (53), fluid dependent correction factor in Eqs. (49) and (50), f frequency of bubble formation, s-l mass flux, kg/m2s G acceleration of gravity. m/s2 g ge earth gravitational acceleration, rn/s2 H height of heater, m heat transfer coefficient, W/m2K h hmae convective contribution to two-phase heat transfer coefficient, W/m2K h mie nucleate boiling contribution to two-phase heat transfer coefficient, W/m2K heat transfer coefficient for natural convection, hn e W/m2K hfg latent heat of vaporization. J/kg h fg' adjusted heat of vaporization, J/kg radiation heat transfer coefficient, W/m2K hr hT resultant film boiling heat-transfer coefficient, W/m2K two-phase heat transfer coefficient, WIm2K htp thermal conductivity, W/mK. k L characteristic length - cylinder radius. plate height, etc., m heater length, m m, n constants, n number of nucleation sites per unit surface area, m l p pressure, N/m2 partial pressure of noncondensable gas in bubble, N/m2 Pg q" heat flux, W/m2 heat flux due to bubble-induced bulk convection. W/m2 qbe ck'rit critical heat flux, W/m2 heat flux due to microlayer evaporation, W/m2 ch;. e minimum heat flux for stable film boiling, W/m2 ch;.in heat flux due to natural convection, W/m2 �e tube or sphere radius. m characteristic length.
Cl
Ffl
R R'
R[g(Pl - Pl)/cr]O.5, -
442
Rj r rc rmax T .1T 'rb
Tsat Tw t 11, tw U v Vfg W X
x y z
Bo
Co Fr Gr Nu Pr R+ Ra* Re t+
We �
a A.c A.d ,A.H 11
cp
P 0'
jet dimension in Figure 25, m bubble radius, m cavity radius, m radius of largest cavity available for nucleation, m temperature, °C wall-fluid temperature difference, ° C bulk fluid temperature, °C saturation temperature, °C temperature of heated surface, °C time, s characteristic bubble times (noted in Figure 1 1), s external flow velocity, mls internal flow velocity, m/s specific volume, m3/kg specific volume change for vaporization, m3/kg width of heater, m log R', flowing equilibrium mass quality, nonnal distance from heating surface, m distance along heated channel, m boiling number, Eqs. (49-50), q"/Ghfg, Bond number, p L2a/0', convection number, [(1 - x)/x]O.8( Pv/Pl )o . 5 , Froude number, U/.. , Froude number, Eq. (50), G2/P 1gD, Grashof number, g�L3.1T/v2 , Nusselt number, hD/k, or hIlk, Prandtl number, clJ.lk, dimensionless radius in Figure 10, Rayleigh number, defined by Eq. (37), Reynolds number, GD/Il, dimensionless time in Figure 10, Weber number, pLU2/0', contact angle, deg bulk modulus of expansion, K- l vapor film thickness in Figure 26, m wavelength defined by Eq. (36) jet spacing in Figure 26, m dynamic viscosity, Ns/m2 angle of conical cavity, deg density, kg/m3 surface tension, N/m Stefan-Boltzmann constant, W/m2K4 -
-
443
b
Subscripts e
in
sat sub
o
v
based on bubble characteristics relative to earth gravity inlet condition liquid condition based on outlet conditions based on saturation conditions based on subcooled conditions vapor condition
REFERENCES 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
S. Nukiyama, translation of 1934 article in Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 9 (196) 1419. H. Merte, Jr. and J.A. Clark, J. Heat Transfer, 86 (1964) 351. A.E. Bergles and W.G. Thompson, Jr., Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 13 (1970) 55. A. Sakurai and M. Shiotsu, Proc. 5th Int. Heat Transfer Conf. , IV, Hemisphere, Washington (1974) 81. W.H. McAdams, Heat Transmission, McGraw Hill, New York (1954). M. Volmer, Kinetik der Phasenbildung, Steinkopf, Leipzig; Edwards Bros., Ann Arbor ( 1945). H.G. Clark, P.S. Strenge and J.W. Westwater, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, 55, 29 (1959) 103. P. Griffith and J.D. Wallis, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, 56, 30 (1960) 49. K. Mizukami, Review of Kobe University of Mercantile Marine, 27 (1979)
10 Y. Heled and A. Oren ,' A., Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 10 (1967) 553. 11 J.P. Nail, Jr., R.I. Vachon and J. Morehove, J. Heat Transfer, 96 ( 1974) 132. 12 W.T. Brown, Jr. , Ph.D. Thesis in Mech. Eng., M.LT., Cambridge, Mass. (1967). 13 J.J. Lorenz, B.B. Mikic and W.M. Rohsenow, J. Heat Transfer, 97 (1975) 317. 14 R.1. Eddington, D .B .R. Kenning, and A.I. Korneichev, Int. J. Heat Transfer, 21 (1978) 855. 15 M.G. Cooper and A.J.P. Lloyd, Proc. 3rd Internatinal Heat Transfer Conf., 3 (1966) 193. 16 R.W. Graham and R.C. Hendricks, NASA TN D-3943 (1967). 17 B.B. Mikic and M.W. Rohsenow, Progress in Heat and Mass Transfer, Part II, Pergamon Press (1969) 283. 18 B.B. Mikic, W.M. Rohsenow, and P. Griffith, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 13 (1970) 657. 19 W. Fritz, Physikalische Zeitschrift, 36 (1935) 379. m C.Y. Han and P. Griffith, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 8 (1965) 887. 21 C.Y. Han and P. Griffith, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 8 (1965) 905. 22 B.B. Mikic and W.M. Rohsenow, J. Heat Transfer, 91 (1976) 245.
99.
444 Z3
24 25 � ?:l 2B 2} :J)
31
32
33 34 35 $ m 38 :B 40
41
42
43 44
45 46
47 48 49 50
51 52 53 54
J.J. Lorenz, B.B. Mikic and W.M. Rohsenow, Proc. 5th Int. Heat Transfer Conference, IV, Hemisphere, Washington (1974) 35. R.L. Judd and K.S. Hwang, J. Heat Transfer, 98 (1976) 623. R.F. Gaertner and J.W. Westwater, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, 56, 30 (1960) 39. M. Jakob and W. Fritz, Forschung auf dem Gebiete des Ingenieurwesens, 2 (1931) 435. P.J. Berenson, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 5 (1962) 985. C .J. Kim and A.E. Bergles, Heat Transfer Laboratory Report HTL-36, ISU ERI-Ames- 86220, Iowa State University (1985). W.M. Rohsenow, Transactions ASME, 34 (1952) 969. W.M. Rohsenow, Handbook of Heat Transfer, McGraw-Hill, N.Y. ( 1973) 13-1. R. Armstrong, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 9 (1966) 1 148. K. Stephen and M. Abdelsalam, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 23 (1980) 73. M.G. Cooper, Advances in Heat Transfer, 16, Academic Press, New York, N.Y. (1984). W.M. Rohsenow and P. Griffith, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, 52, 18 (1956) 47. S.S. Kutateladze,Izv. Akademia Nauk Otdelenie Tekh. Nauk, 4 (1954) 529, AEC-tr-1441. N. Zuber, Trans. ASME, 80 (1958) 711. Y.P. Chang and N.W. Snyder, Chemical Engineering Progress Symposium Series, 56, 30 (1960) 25. R. Moissis and P.J. Berenson, J. Heat Transfer, 85 (1963) 22l. G.G. Wallis, AEEW-R 103 (1961). K.H. Sun and J.H. Lienhard, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 13 ( 1970) 1425. J.H. Lienhard and V.K. Dhir, J. Heat Transfer, 95 (1973) 152. N. Bakhru and J.H. Lienhard, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 15 (1972) 2011. J.H. Lienhard, J. Heat Transfer, 1 10 (1988) 1271. K.A. Park and A.E . .Bergles, Energy R & D, Korean Inst. of Energy and Resources, 9, 4 (1986) i6. B.P. Breen and J.W. Westwater, Chemical Engineering. Progress, 58, 7 (1962) 67. T.H.K. Frederking, and J.A. Clark, Advances in Cryogenic Engineering, 8, Plenum Publishing Corporation, New York, N.Y. (1962) 50 l. N. Zuber, M. Tribus and J.W. Westwater, Int. Developments in Heat Transfer - Part II, ASME, N.Y. ( 1961) 230. P.J. Berenson, J. Heat Transfer, 83 (1961) 351. A.E. Bergles and W.M. Rohsenow, J. Heat Transfer, 86 (1964) 356. E.E. Duke and V.E. Shrock, Proc. Heat Transfer and Fluid Mechanics Institute, Stanford University Press (1961) 130. H.J. Ivey, Chartered Mechanical Engineer, 9 (1962) 413. A.E. Ponter and C.P. Haigh, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 12 (1969) 429. Y.Elkassabgi and J.H. Lienhard, J. Heat Transfer, 1 10, 2 (1988) 479. E.M. Sparrow and R.D. Cess, J. Heat Transfer, 84 (1962) 149.
445
F.S. Pramuk and J.W. Westwater, Chem. Engng Progress Symposium Series, 52, 18 (1956) 79. 56 S. Yilmaz and J.W. Westwater, J. Heat Transfer, 102 (1980) 26. 57 P. Sadasivan and J.H. Lienhard, ASME/AIChE Heat Transfer Conf. , Pittsburgh, PA ( 1987). 58 J.G. Collier, Convective Boiling and Condensation, 2nd Ed., McGraw-Hill Int., N.Y. (1981). m W.H. McAdams, W.E. Kennel, C.S. Minden, R Carl, P.M. Picornel and J.E. Dew, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, 41 (1949) 1945. ro W.H. Jens and P.A. Lottes, Argonne National Laboratory Report ANL-4627 (1951). 61. R.W. Murphy and A.E. Bergles, Proc. of Heat Transfer and Fluid Mechanics Inst., Stanford University Press, Stanford (1972) 400. 62 A.E. Bergles, Nuclear Safety, 18 (1977) 154. 03 J.C. Chen, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, Process Design and Development, 5 (1966) 322. 6l S.S. Kandlikar, Heat Exchangers for Two-Phase Flow Applications, ASME, N.Y. ( 1983) 3. m RS. Reid, M.B. Pate and A.E. Bergles, ASME Paper No. 87-HT-51 (1987). ffi A.E. Bergles, Nuclear Safety, 20 (1979) 671. 01 RW. Bowring, Atomic Energy Establishment Report AEEW-R-789 (1972). ffi E.W. Otto, Chem. Engng. Progress Symposium Series, 62, 61 (1966) 158. m A. Weinzierl and J. Straub, Proc. 7th Int. Heat Transfer Conf. , 4, Hemisphere, Washington, D.C. (1982) 21. 70 NASA Pool Boiling Experiment Conceptual Design Review, NASA Lewis Research Center (1988). 71 L. Kachnik, D. Lee, F. Best and N. Faget, ASME 87-WAJHT-12 (1987). 72 A.E. Dukler, J.A. Fabre, J.B. McQuillen and R. Vernon, Int. Symp. on Thermal Problems in Space-Based Systems, HTD-83, ASME, New York, N.Y. (1987) 85.
55
447
NONEQUILIBRIUM PHASE CHANGE--2. Relaxation Models, General Applications, and Post-Dryout Heat Transfer Owen C. Jones Professor of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 1 2 180-3590 Abstract A generalized model for phase change in steady, flowing, quasi-one-dimensional, two-phase mixtures is developed. Based on the vapor conselVation equations for actual and equilibrium conditions, a first order, inhomogeneous differential equation having one parameter is developed to describe the behavior of the nonequilibrium potential. This equation has one parameter, the relaxation number, which itself is a local variable and represents the ratio of actual vapor genera tion rate to the equilibrium value per unit potential. It is thus shown that nonequilibrium phase change is an initial value problem which itself is path dependent and which is also strongly depen dent on the initial conditions.
The concepts developed for nonequilibrium phase change are then applied to the case of post dryout heat transfer. It is shown that the use of the relaxation equation describing the behavior of the nonequilibrium potential provides an accurate method to calculate the actual rates of phase change quality and temperature for equilibrium qualities between 0. 1 3 to over 3.0. 1. INTRODUCTION
This chapter expands on the original nonequilibrium concepts first introduced in Nonequili brium Phase Change--l. A general relaxation model for nonequilibrium phase change is developed. It is shown that phase change in real fluids occurs as a first-order, forced relaxation process. The forcing function is the equilibrium path taken by the process. That is, the path which the fluid would take if heated or cooled, or if pressurized or decompressed, if in equilibrium. The actual path taken is restricted by the rate processes for nucleation and interfacial heat and mass transfer. These processes are local variables but the overall path taken, being described by an initial value problem, is path-dependent. The actual conditions achieved during a noneqiuli brium phase-change process, then, is very dependent on the initial conditions, as was seen in the previous chapter on nonequilibrium. The general theory for nonequilibrium phase change is discused in relation to both subcooled boiling and for post-dryout.
448 2.GENERAL NONEQUILIBRIUM RELAXATION THEORY
Figure 1 . Multiphase flow region.
The starting point for this development will be a finite vol ume as shown in Fig. 1 within which there may be interfaces and more than one phase. This is different from the approach usually encountered using a differential volume, since no as sumptions need be made as to the size of the discreteness. The only requirement is that each phase itself can be n'eated as a con tinuum. Averaging takes care of the rest. It will be shown that the nature of the phase-change process evolves naturally, rather than being assumed.
At the expense of some rigor, the multiphase conservation laws are written in averaged form without detailed delivation (cf. Truesdel and Toupin 1960, Vernier and Delhaye 1 968, Ishii 1 97 1 , 1975, and Kocamustafaogullari 1 97 1 among others). For the cur rent case of steady state heat transfer, the results are reasonably well accepted so that considerable effort is saved on this assumption. As a reference, all the one-dimensional field equations may be taken for the area-averaged local phase balance equation
(1)
where Cl.k. i s the volume fraction for phase-k, 'V k is the property being conserved for phase-k at a point in space-time (x,t), volume ( I), mass (Pk), momentum (PkVk), energy (Pkek ), or entropy (PkSk), Vk is the velocity of phase-k and Vs is the velocity of the interface, and cj)k is the flux of 'Vk . The density of phase-k is Pk o the entropy is Sko and the energy is ek. Table 1 gives appropriate val ues for 'V, cj), and s. All properties are intensive. Vector English characters are identified in bold face whereas vector Greek characters are identified with the "hat. The shear stress tensor is idenII
Table 1 . Identification of equivalent volume intensive quantity, its flux and production terms for conserved quantities in equation ( 1 ). Note: e u + 1/] v2 =
Quantity Conserved
'V
cj)
s
mass
P
0
0
momentum
pv
energy
pe
i
-'t
pg
-
-1 ' v + q
"
pg '
V + qlll
449
tified with an overbar. Also V is the volume under consideration and over which the field equa tions have been averaged as, < f(x, t) > ==
� V
f
(2)
f(x' , t)dV.
v
Also, z represents the flow direction and Aok is the outer wall area of phase-k in V. If, on the other hand, the balance equation is averaged over the interface in dV=Adz the result is (3)
The generation of one phase at the expense of another is, in a single-component system, tradi tionally considered as the result of a quasistatic, thermodynamic equilibrium process wherein rate processes are not considered. The traditional thermodynamic definition used to define a ther modynamic equilibrium process in a system requires equilibrium of all potentials during the pro cess--chemical, mechanical, thermal, etc. Thus no temperature differences are allowed between points in an equilibrium thermodynamic system. In what follows, it will be shown that this repre sents a paradoxical point of view when contrasted with the phenomenological description of the phase-change process. From a local viewpoint, phase change can only occur at an interface or with the production or elimination of interfaces such as occurs in the nucleation process. The intelfacial balance equa tion, Eq. ( 3), when applied to a local interface yields the Kochine relation (Truesdel and Toupin, 1 960),
L 1/Jknk ' (Vk vs) + nk 'rpk = 0
(4)
k=1.v
Equation (4) , then, represents the interfacial conseIVation equations for ", which must be applied in any complete description of a discontinuous field having intelfacial structure: i.e., two-phase flow fields. They are necessary to provide closure by coupling the phases at their inter facial boundaries. The surface formulation of Ishii ( 1 975) is used including sulface tension ef fects but ignoring surface storage. The assumption oflocal thermodynamic equilibrium shaU be adopted so that all properties are logically defined by only two state variables. This implies that molecular relaxation times are much shorter than any encountered in the specification of system time constants and resultant derivation of any phenomenological time constants. Thus, i{ � and iv ig, the respective saturation values. =
=
Since the subject of this chapter is phase change, the focus will be on this quantity throughout. The mass flux going as phase change into phase-k, is due solely to the difference between the
nk is the unit � nonnal to phase-k at an interface, the phase-change rnass flux producing
nonnal velocities of the phase itself and the interface, directed inward to the phase region. Thus, if phase-k is given by
(5) Equation (4) rnay thus be used in conj unction with (5) to express the evaporative rnass flux, given by Glv , in tenns of rnass, rnornenturn and energy conservation for the interface, to achieve
G1v =
I q{ 'nk + aVs 'Vs - I (ik ·nk)(Vk - V�)
k=1.v
�ifg
k=l.v
+ t v, I (v, - Vs) .
(6)
k=1.v
where Qk" is the heat flux in phase-k, :; is the shear sn'ess tensor, and the r-subscript on the veloc ity is the relative velocity between the vapor and the liquid. v, = (vv VI) Note that "rnechanical energy" tenns were obtained by scalar product of the interfacial velocity with the rnornenturn equation. Also, with (j being the surface tension, -
(7) and is the surface-divergence of the interfacial velocity field, ta being the surface unit vector in the a-direction and a a� being the rnetric tensor for the surface (Aris, 1 962). Thus, the surface tension tenn in the denominator is simply the energy which shows up due to stretching of the in terface. The kinetic energy transfer shows up in the small effect due to relative velocities in the denorn inator of Eq. (6) in cornparison with the latent heat. For sorne low latent heat fluids such as hydro carbons or fluorocarbons, this relative kinetic energy transfer effect may be as rnuch as approxi rnately 10% of the latent heat. For water, however, this effect is generally srnall, less than 1 %. The preceding paragraphs and Eq. (6) express the local concept of the fundamental paradox. That is, phase change generally can not occur without net interfacial heat flux which requires the phases to be at different temperatures away from the interface. In the next section, this concept will be extended to the case of a quasi-one-dimensional. heterogeneous rnixture of phases and interfaces. If we also neglect dilatational surface tension and shear work. the evaporative rnass flux is then given by
(8) which is the usual approxirnation of interest in thennal systerns.
45 1
Since heat transfer, 'It", can only occur due to a temperature diference, Eq. ment of the •
fundamental paradox:
(8), then, is a state
phase change can occur only due to temperature gradients, the net result of which is a non vanishing discontinuity in the interfacial heat flux, and cannot occur when a system is in thermodynamic equilibrium. Since the description of heat exchange is by means of the rate processes involved in the trans
fer of thermal energy, we see that equilibrium thermodynamics occupies no place in this concept except through the local definition of the fluid state. Instead, the local phase balance equations or suitable approximations must instead be used to determine the energy flux to the interface form each phase. Furthermore, since the net heat flux implied by the summation in
(8) requires a tem
perature difference, and the entire equation was developed from first primciples by applying con servation laws to an interface, two additional restJlctions apply to phase change in real systems: •
Phase change can only occur when the two phases in contact are at different mean temper
•
Phase change in the absense of nucleation can only occur when there are two phases sepa
atures.
rated by an interface. These principles state that continuous phase change (to discriminate between evaporation and nucleation) can not take place in a single-phase fluid region regardless of the degree of supersatu ration. Similarly, phase change can
() V v + - dz (/z
not take place in a uniform tempera ture, two-phase mixture, regardless of the extent of the interfacial area density. Both are required simulta neously. It shall be shown that the degree of coupling between the two
A A + () dz ()z Figure
2. Sketch of a differential stream tube.
phases, i .e., the degree of thermal nonequilibrium which must exist for phase change of a given amount to occur, is controlled by the combi nation of the energy transfer rates and the interfacial area density.
Adz, within which there are interfaces,
(Fig. 2). Also. take the case of mass conservation where Eq. ( 1) is written for this stream-tube as Take V as an incremental-length, stream-tube volume,
<
ol
> () OZ
< ()tVtz »
= -
dinA 1 (at < () tVkz » --dz A
f
�'�o.I.
dA ! (Vt - vs) + tPkf OOt dz
(9)
452
where � and J;ot are the interfacial and outer boundary perimeter associated with phase-k in A . Note that � accounts for the mass transfer due to phase change while l;., k accounts for mass addi tion at the boundaries. The latter shall be dispensed with in what follows. Note that in this case, where the focus is on a differential volume of finite area nonnal to the stream direction, the defini tion of the space-average becomes
< f(x, t) > ==
( to)
..!. f(x' , t)dA. A
f
A
Consider now the integration of Gj: over all interfaces in V. This integral shall be defined as (11) where Gk is the net mass flux into phase-k. Note that ( 1 1) defines 1k as a volume-average of a more locally defined, spatially-dependent n (x,l) through the integral over all interface Ai. Ob viously, rk is the rate of generation ofphase-k per unit volume: the volumetric source of phase-k. B ut, as shown in Eq. (5), the mass flux at the intelface is simply the difference between the nonnal components of the interface velocity and the phase-k velocity at the interface so that ( 12) where the negative sign accounts for the fact that if the normal phase velocity is in the same direc tion and exceeds the interface velocity there is net efflux of matter from the region. Combination with (8) now yields
r
v(t)
=
V6.ZJg
f
Aj E V
(I
k=l,v
)
qk" O Ot dA .
( 1 3)
Now since dAj dsd�, where ds and d� are incremental interfacial arc-length and perimeter, a change of variables can be performed from oS' to zresulting in dA/ = (dsldz)d�dz, where ds/dz is the reciprocal of the direction cosine of the interface in the plane A . Thus, since dz is independent of �, integration inA and resultant cancellation of dz yields the quasi-one-dimensional equivalents of Eqs. ( 1 2) and ( 13) as =
rk(z, t)
and
=
f
1 -�t(Vk A �i
dA v�.) o nk dz
( 1 4)
( 15)
453
where l;t is the entire intelfacial perimeter in A. Thus, the mass conservation equation for quasi one-dimensional flow of phase-k can be written as ( 1 6) For the purpose of use in models of two-phase flows, it is thus desirable to obtain an expres sion for rk . Equation ( 1 4) simply identifies the source tenn in tenns of the mass fluxes whereas Eq. ( 15) identifies the fact that there are energy transfers involved which must be specified and provides the key to modeling the source term for vallous geometries. In general, Eq. ( 1 5) verifies the fundamental paradox for the area-average case. .
It is seen from examination of Eq. (15) that both the total quantity of interracial area and the net heat flux for evaporation are required to calculate the volumetric vapor generation rate from first principles. This calculation involves detennining the initial distribution of vapor in a given vol ume as well as the evolution of this vapor with phase change.
If two phases having initially different temperatures are brought into intimate thermal contact with each other and allowed to coexist for an infinite time, heat exchange would occur between the two at a rate governed by the laws of heat transfer which would occur at interfaces. The two phases would eventually come into thermal equilibrium with each other. A basic description of the process can be seen by examining the mass conservation equation for the vapor Equations ( 1 ) and (3) with Table 1 allow generation of all the field equations germane to this discussion. Equation ( 16) is the resultant quasi-one-dimensional mass conservation equation. The following assumptions are now made: 4. The area of the cross section is time invaIlant;
5. There is no mass addition at the boundaIies; 6. There are no covarient interactions; 7. Processes are steady state; 8. Properties including pressure are constant.
Since the mixture continuity equation shows that dG/dz -Gd(lnA)/dz, where G is the mass flux through the sO eam-tube, the actual and equilibrium vapor continuity equations become =
( 17) rv and re are the actual and equilibrium-path volumetric rates of vapor generation. Putting Eq. ( 17) into dimensionless terms and subtracting the space derivative for actual quality from that for equilibrium quality yields
454
( 18)
A nonequilibrium potential is defined as Q (Xe x). As shall be shown below, (and also shown in Chapter 1), this potential is directly related to the mean temperature difference between the phases in the diferential volume under consideration. Thus, Q may be considered as the di mensionless temperature difference between the phases. =
-
Now, it is recognized that the actual vapor source. rv, is due to the diference between the ac tual and equilibrium (saturation) temperatures. Since this difference is directly related to the dif ference between equilibrium and actual qualities. one may write ( 1 8) as
dQ - + N,Q
dxe
=
( 1 9)
1
where (20)
Note that since r" is dependent on the temperature difference between the phases, and since this temperature difference is directly dependent on the quantity difference Q. the parameterN, is in dependent on the nonequilibrium potential Q . The inhomogeneity is th e forcing function dxeldxe equal to unity and is due to the equilibrium path the pressure takes causing the equilibrium quality to change. The relaxation number, NT. is related to the actual vaporization rate relative to the equilibrium rate, and is responsible for allow ing the phase change to occur and the actual quality to approach the equilibrium value. Equation ( 19) shows that the behavior of the quantity Q, dimensionless nonequilibrium poten tial for phase-k. is similar to that of a first order relaxation process. H the relaxation number. N,. that atXe Xeo . Q were to be constant, the solution to this equation. subject to the ini.tial Qo, becomes =
=
(2 1 )
'This result shows that the initial condition effect dies out as the difference between the equilibli urn quality and its initial value increases. as to be expected. The dimensionless phase change pa rameter Nr is responsible for relaxing the nonequilibrium potential towards zero. Thus, as the re laxation number increases indicative of an increase in the actual vapor generation rate, rv , Q would tend towards the equilibrium value of zero; if the vapor generation rate diminishes relative to the equilibrium value, the nonequilibrium potential would become quite large, with Eq. ( 1 9) indicating that dQldxe tends toward unity.
455 Eq. (19) shows several important things relative to nonequilibrium phase change: 1 . Development of nonequilibrium is an initial value problem;
2. Development of nonequilibrium is path (history) dependent with history effects dying out as the process moves away from the initial conditions. 3. The relaxation number is a local variable, dependent on the interface area and thermal field
distributions and on the resultant rate limitations for phase change. It is important to realize that there are no assumptions in the development, and thus going into these three points beyond those inherent in the description of conservation of mass by itself.
Changes in the energy content of a mixture are governed by the first law of thermodynamics. Reviewing the results of the introductory chapter, the mixture enthalpy is given by (22)
where the subscript e on the quality indicates the equilibrium value under which circumstances both phases have the same temperature, the saturation temperature, and the f- and g-subscripts indicate saturation values for the liquid and vapor enthalpies. Considering that the actual bulk liquid and vapor temperatures differ from saturation, then there will be a difference between the actual quality, X, and the equilibrium value 'h , given by rewriting Eq. (22) as
(xe - x) =
xCiv - ig) - (1 - x)(ij - i1)
l[g
6, '
.
(23)
Thus, only if there is a difference between the actual temperature of the liquid and/or vapor, and saturation temperature, can there be a difference between actual and equilibrium qualities. In fact, even if there are differences, the actual and equilibrium qualities may be identical ifthe effeCts of vapor superheat and liquid subcooling cancel each other. From (23), if the vapor is superheated and the liquid is at saturation, the vapor temperature is given by (24) On the other hand, if the vapor is at saturation and the liquid is subcooled, the liquid temperature is
(25)
456 In the fonner case, vapor superheat would result in the equilibrium quality exceeding the ac tual quality while in the latter case, liquid subcooling would result in the actual qUality exceeding the equilibrium value. In all cases, it is generally assumed that the phases have identical temperatures at an interface. Furthermore, energy continuity is generally assumed at an interface since, without the ability to store mass, an interrace can not store energy if surrace tension is ignored. The assumption of iden tical interracial phasic temperatures, then, simultaneously with nonequilibrium , means that tem perature gradients must occur in one or both phases. This is, of course, a dynamic situation which would result in relaxation of both phases to a mutual equilibrium condition without the addition or rejection of heat from the mixture.
3. APPLICATION TO POST-DRY OUT HEAT TRANSFER
Studies of liquid-deficient cooling in two-phase heat transfer equipment assumed a role of major importance due to the increasing use of equipment where conditions Beyond the Critical Heat Flux (BCHF also telmed "post dryout") are encountered. For instance. sub-critical once tlrrough steam generators may require operation in this region intermittently or continuously (Baily,
1973). In fact up to one-third of the evaporation surface may operate in the liquid-defici 1962) has been considered which would
ent region in design of Fog-Cooled reactors (Collier,
operate almost exclusively in this region. Regenerative cooling of liquid-propellant rockets stim ulated considerable interest in this area as has the increasing use of cryogens in other fields. Stu dies of off-normal, hypothetical accident situations recent renewed interest in this area both from the standpoint of understanding the Loss of Coolant Accident (LOCA) sequences and the Emer gency Core Cooling System (ECCS) perrormance. To place the overall topic of post-dryout into perspective, consider that early attempts to pre dict thermal performance were based on the general understanding that liquid in the beyond criti cal heat flux (BCHF) region could no longer yield a primary heat transfer mechanism through contact with the wall. As a result, a number of correlative attempts were made to predict heat transfer rates with various modifications of existing single-phase methods as summarized by Groeneveld
( 1 968). All were of the form
(26) where NUv . Rev . and Pry were the vapor Nusselt, Reynolds, and Prandtl numbers and a,
b, and c
were correlation coefficients. At the time these were reviewed, the best appeared to be that of Miropolskii.
(1963). Based on these models, Groeneveld proposed a form similar to (26) but add
ed terms to get
(27)
457 where the subscript w represents properties evaluated at the wall temperature and where Y was
due to Miropolskii
( 1963) given by
(28)
Using computer regression techniques, values were determined for the coefficients a - e. Plummer et al.
( 1 973) showed, however, that this correlation did not accurately predict the trends
because it was not developed as a local correlation where equilibrium qualities much exceeded
100%. Additive approaches were attempted for instance by Stein et al. Grosh
( 1 961 )
( 1 962)
and by Parker and
including droplet impingement effects, but these methods were generally un
successful. It was later shown that droplet impingement is of negligible importance as a heat transfer mechanism in all but minor circumstances (Iloeje et aI. ,
1 975) since even when droplets
can wet the wall the contact time and areas are comparatively small. The two-step approach to dispersed for heat transfer, developed in this country mainly by
1964, Forslund 1 966, 1 968, Hynek et aI., 1 969) and in England by workers at Harwell (Bennett et aI. , 1 967, 1968, and Bailey et al., 1973a/b) has been shown to accurately predict the trends of ex isting data. While Laverty and Rohsenow ( 1 964) appear to have initiated this method, it is inter workers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Laverty and Rohsenow, and Rohsenow,
esting that the effects in non-equilibrium vapor superheat were not accounted for in this study, even though the work of Parker and Grosh
( 196 1 )
had earlier indicated the importance of this
effect on the overall heat transfer process. By the late
1 960's and early 1970's, however, it was recognized that the loss of coupling be
tween the heat input and the direct vaporization process that occurs in post-dryout flow necessi tate significant degrees of vapor superheat in order that the liquid evaporate by convection. (For slund and Rohsenow,
1966, Benett et al., 1967, Bailey et ai, 1 973) The two limits
of frozen flow,
(low mass velocities), and equilibrium flow, (high mass velocities), have been shown to bracket the heat transfer data. (Bailey et aI .,
1973a/b) Unfortunately, this two-step method
generally re
quires the simultaneous solution of several differential equations expressing axial quality and temperature gradients, droplet acceleration, and droplet size gradient as well as several additional empirical correlation equations in order to obtain the desired results. While this method can be readily applied by itself, its incorporation into larger design calculation sys terns is cumbersome at best. Several more recent works recognized that the nonequilibrium component of the total energy
tual-vs -dryout quality difference expressed can be attacked separately. Plummer et al.
( 1 974) as
assumed a linear relationship between the ac
(29)
458 and found that K appeared to vary directly as the logarithm of the group
G(dlpv rJ)1 12 but did not
(1 - K) for a given set of condi
correlate the three fluids tested on a single line. As will be shown later in this chapter, Eq. (29) is not accurate in that it implies a constant derivative d(xe - x)ldxe
=
tions, a linear, first-order, nonrelaxation process. Groeneveld and Delonne
( 1 975), on the other
hand, assumed that the quantity (x) - x) was given by
(30)
where Xl =
min(xe,
(3 1 )
1 ).
They used computer regression techniques to eliminate insignificant vaIiables from
(30) and ob
tain
(Xl - X)
=
(32)
e tamJI
where
(33)
or
1/J -
{
0 for
11:/2
1/J < 0
1/J
(34)
> 11:/2
and the homogeneous flow Reynolds number is defined as R ehorn
==
Gd
Xl
(35)
--
I-lv ahorn
The void fraction anom was that calculated for the actual quality neglecting slip. The advantage ofEq. (33) was that it correctly predicted the asymptotic trends of quality and non-equilibrium as
Xe is increased above 100%. Also the inverse mass velocity effect on the nonequilibrium was in
cluded. The disadvantage was similar to that for any empirical correlation in that care must be
exercised in its utilization outside of its developedrange of conditions. Unlike phenomenological models, its utility, for instance, in transient conditions is questionable. Considerable effort was undertaken by Chen and his coworkers (Chen et aI . , 1 979; Webb, et
al., 1982) in the development of correlations for the local heat transfer coefficient based on the momentum analogy.
A parallel effort in development of methods for measurement of actual va-
459
1983)
1979. 1980;
has resulted in por temperatures in post-dryout (Nijhawan et al Evans et aI ., definitive new data which is invaluable in development of theoretical models. .•
(1977)
Saha et al. developed two separate cOlTelations for the actual vapor generation rate in stearn-water mixtures which were similar to that of Jones and Zuber but did not recognize the implications in the relaxation approach. The first, termed the K I-correlation, was expressed as
(1977)
(36) where Pr is the reduced pressure (relative to critical). In the second correlation, i.e., their oDo-correlation. the average droplet diameter at the dryout location was given by the relationship
= 1 .47 ·2 �Pfg rv = 6h(Tv-Ts)(1-a) lJ�ifg Qs/g ,DO
j j
(37)
-
where is the density difference between liquid and vapor at saturation. and where the sub script DO means "at dryout." This equation. with the assumption of no droplet breakup. was then used in their expression for the vapor source
(38)
to calculate the rate of vapor generation, and resultant degree of thermal nonequilibrium. They used the drift-flux model to determine the void fraction assuming no distlibution effects. Combi nation with the Heineman correlation fOT steam heat transfer allowed temperatures on the wall to be determined with reasonable accuracy.
(1983)
Building on the two-step model. Yoder utilized differential equations for the axial gra dients of liquid velocity, droplet diameter, actual quality, and vapor temperatures along with nu merous best estimate constitutive relationships and empirical relations required to close the mod el. Results were of the correct magnitude but the detailed behavior indicated that substantial effort relative to the details of the processes need to be undertaken. Differences of over between the predicted and experimentally measured wall temperatures were noted and the trends were not well predicted when the axial wall temperatures were not monotonically changing.
50C
(1986)
More recently, Varone and Rohsenow examined the details of Yoder's model and con cluded that the presence of droplets altered the tW bulent structure of the flow much in the same was as particles afect the ttrbulence in fluid-particle flows. Theresult, they hypothesized, was to alter the wall heat transfer from thatwhich occurs simply due to vapor heat transfer, a key assump tion in many of the previous methods. They detelmined the ration of the Nusselt number with droplets to that without droplets in Yoder's model by comparison wiht the data and found that this
460
ratio correlated with the viscosity ratio between the bulk vapor and that at the wall. By using these correction factors, excellent predictions of the data were obtained. In summary, existing, physically-based models are qualitatively accurate if various factors are evaluated empirically bur can be exceedingly complex for use in large computer systems. Em pirical correlations have thus found prominence in design verification applications but canot be expected to perform outside their domain of applicability. A different approach appeared to be needed: one which would be simpler to apply and yet maintain a working relationship with sound physical principles. The balance of this chapter will present an alternative approach to the problem, and to show that this approach can work well when applied to systems having large degrees of nonequili brium. It is not intended herein to develop or even demonstrate the overall capability of a devel oped correlation. Instead, it is proposed to show that nonequilibrium, two-phase, dispersed-flow beyond the critical heat flux can be physically described as a first-o der, inhomogeneous relax ation process which can be applied to accurately describe the relaxation of the thermal non-equi librium at equilibrium qualities over
3.0.
(15)
In the curent case, equation shall be applied to a dispersed liquid, the droplets assumed to be spherical in shape, and at saturation temperature. The point of view similar to the two-step process (Bennett et all, Forslund and Rohsenow, 1 968) will be taken. Since the concentra tion of droplets in dispersed flow has been shown to be uniformly distIibuted in space (Cumo, the one-dimensional approximation appears valid. The implication is that the two dimen sionalities in the vapor heat transfer can be properly accounted for by standard heat transfer corre lations but neglecting the laminarization effects of the droplets on the vapor velocity profile (Gill et aI, Momentum transfer transients are ignored thereby ignoring droplet acceleration and flashing due to pressure loss.
1967;
1973), 1963).
Since the liquid is assumed at saturation, the only heat flux is through the vapor phase to the relative velocity. In terms of a droplet heat transfer coefficient, yields
y = ho(T!l.yit-Tsg ) 1 f 1.f dA = 6(1 -a) 6 <
r
>i
A
�i
hEl' Eq. (15)
dA dz
(39)
where <�>i indicates an interface-averaged value and where
A
�i
dz
(40)
is the interfacial area density assuming uniformly-shaped spherical droplets. Here, 5 is the drop let diameter. The volumetric vaporization rate thus becomes r
y = 6ho!l.6T!l.ysif(l-a) g
(41)
46 1
where IlTys is the superheat. The application of (41) will occur through the calculation of variations in actual quality under post-dryout conditions. Considering Eq. (22), since the liquid is at saturation, the result for (41 ) is
r 6h6(1 a) -
_
y -
(Xe _ X)
(42)
where the specific heat of the vapor must be averaged over the superheat. Recalling (24), this equation confins the phenomenological notion that vapor cannot be generated under equilibri um conditions and that the relaxation number is truly independent of the nonequilibrium poten tial, Q.
Considering again Eq. ( l ), for the previous assumptions the actual and equilibrium energy equations are
d dz
- {(I - x)el + xey '
'
qw" � \ = --
GA
(43)
and (44) where e
, = ,.
(45)
2
100
For two-phase flows of interest, velocities are generally less than mls so kinetic energies al"e less than 5 kJ/kg compared with latent heats for the vapor of over l OOKJ/Kg and similar for liquid enthalpies near saturation. Similarly, velocities for the cryogenic data curently considered yield negligible kinetic effects. Thus, kinetic energies shall be neglected henceforth. Comparison of ( 17) and (44) for equilibrium gives _ -
qw" �
r Allifg e
(46)
which assumes that all the energy goes directly tlu'ough the liquid from the wall to the interface
without resistance. Comparison with (15) shows this must be a limiting case for vanishing ther mal resistance. From a non-equilibrium viewpoint we have shown by (42) that ry -7 0 as X -7 Xe•
This, however, indicates that dx/dz -7 0 also as x -7 XI." strongly supporting the concept of a relax ation type process.
462
Finally, considering Eqs. (40), (42) and (46), the expression for the superheat relaxation num ber is easily seen to be
_�(M)2/3 kytlfl.ifg
Nsr -
2
6
pv'/w
x
(1 - a
)1 /3
.
(47)
Note that if the local value ofthe relaxation number can be determined, then the local volumet ric vapor source tenn can be calculated from (48)
At this point, no real departure has been made from previously defined concepts utilized in the two-step model such as proposed by Bennett et al. ( 1967, 1968) or Forslund and Rohsenow ( 1 966, 1 967). The arangement of the variables has been acomplished in a fOlm more easily inter preted. Of course, the difficulty now comes on calculating the superheat relaxation number Nsr. Standard procedures as previously defined would have us follow the droplets accounting for the drag, relative velocity, droplet splitting when the accelerative retardation causes the Weber num ber to exceed the critical value, etc. On the other hand. it would be much simpler to use local v81i abIes and to assume that droplets would remain in mechanical equilibrium with the vapor speci fied completely through the fluid properties and the drag coefficient. In addition, the effect of increased droplet residence tending to increase the effective Nusselt number would have to be accounted for separately. Bennettet al. (1967, 1 968) and subsequent workers, have correlated this in their "ventilation factor" incorporated into their droplet evaporation equation. It might be ex pected that neglecting this effect, the values of NSf calculated from (47) might be lower that the actual values, and that an additional mass velocity effect would be omitted. The extensive data of Forslund and Rohsenow ( 1 966) and Bennett et al. ( 1 967) have been cho sen since equilibrium qualities range fonn a low of 0. 13, to a maximum of over 3.0. Unlike Groe is represented by equilibrium qualities greater than unity since neveld and Delorme ( 1 975) the thennal disequilibrium and the relaxation process are Duly driven by the difference between Xe and - �)/Il.itv and not between x and 1 .0. Also, these two sets of data includes a number of different heat fluxes, three tube sizes, a wide range of mass velocities, two fluids, and two widely separated reduced pressures.
i> ig
(i
Vapor heat transfer. In obtaining values for x vs Xe from actual data in the absence of direct measurements, an assumption must be made as to the actual mode of vapor heat transfer. Laverty and Rohsenow ( 1 964) used the Dittus-Boelter correlation based on the vapor velocity and satu
rated vapor properties. Kearsey (1965) used the Dittus-Boelter equation based on the steam mass velocity and the bulk vapor temperature, Quinn (1965) used the Seider-Tate equation based on bulk steam phase except for the thennal conductivity of the vapor which was taken to be at the wall. In addition, he also used the steam velocity Gx/a,p., and the "steam diameter," ad where the
463 void fraction was that due to Polomik (1966) with the slip ratio taken to be the density ratio to the
1/3 power. Bennett ( 1968) et al. chose to use a modification of Heineman's ( 1 960) equation for steam based on film properties and the actual steam velocity. Hynek. Rohsenow, and Bergles
( 1 97 1 ) used the value determined by Forslund and Rohsenow (1966) in their experiments with bulk. vapor properties and actual steam velocity which do not vary significantly from those ob
tained from the Dittus-Boelter relation on the same basis. Groeneveld ( 1 972) on the other had used a modified McAdams correlation similar to Quinn ( 1 965) but all properties were taken to be at the bulk vapor temperature. Different correlations will yield somewhat different results and in the absence of actual mea surements of the local quality, arguments of individual differences appear moot. It does apear, however. that Quinn's ( 1 965) argument regarding the behavior of the specific heat for near-criti cal temperatures is valid so that in the present case, a bulk vapor property correlation was utilized. Since it is desired to eventually achieve some sort of uniformity between different fluid systems, the bulk Dittus-Boelter equation was chosen where it is assumed that heat transfer between the wall and the vapor occurs as if liquid droplets did not exist. This con elation has been shown valid for a wide range of single-phase fluids and geomeoies. Thus. the vapor velocity is given as
GxlOfJv
( Gd )0.8 PrS·4
Vv
=
and the correlation becomes'
Nuv = 0.023 -�
I'-v
a
(49)
This choice has the additional advantage that the reverse procedure of calculating the wall temperature from a predicted actual quality will not depend strongly on film properties so that errors should be similar to the errors encountered in predicting the vapor temperature itself. The vapor fraction was related to the quality in the standard manner through the density ratio and slip ration which is evaluated independently. The procedure of obtaining a vapor temperature and thus the quality based on a measured wall temperature is to some extent an iterative one. The vapor temperature can be assumed which al lows the quality x to be calculated which then allows the heat transfer coefficient to be calculated from
(50)
and the process is repeated until compatibility is achieved.
Droplet size and slip.
A similar aray of choices are available for calculation of droplet size
and slip, as for vapor heat transfer. A maj or simplifying assumption is to allow the drops to always achieve mechanical equilibrium with the vapor. By balancing drag and buoyancy forces one achieves the result that
464 d
=
3CDI2v� ag�
(5 1 )
where the mixture density w as used in calculating the buoyancy i n a manner similar t o that of Zuber and Hench ( 1 962) for bubbles. It is seen that two items must be specified: CD and
( 1 974) has
v,.
Wallis
summarized the. relationship between drop size and terminal velocity and indicated
( 1968) developed an approximate equation representing the drag coefficient up to the velocity-li
that for most real systems containing some impullties, drops behave similar to solid spheres. Ishii
--
mited region given by CD
=
24
Re6,cc
( 1 + 0. 1
7 R�. cc )O . S
(52)
which has been adopted here. A simple formulation which eliminates the transcendental nature of the drag-Reynolds number relationships was given by Jones
{
( ) }
( 1 984).
The terminal Reynolds
number for the droplets is taken as a function of the Archimedes number as:
R..,. �
=
I
1 + 0.0487
J 4
Ar
O.4S2 -
1 .74 ,fA;
A
Ar < 3.227 x 10 5 Ar � 3.227 x 105 Re � 2 x 105
(53)
where
(54) The Reynolds number is based on the droplet diameter and the terminal velocity, taken identi cally as the slip velocity. This fonnulation is a direct one which allows the terminal Reynolds number to be immediately calculated from a knowledge of the droplet size and the thermodynam ic state of the mixture. In order now to tie down a definitive relationship between the velocity and the size we must make some assumption regarding an initial condition. Both Groeneveld
( 1 972) and
Hynek and
Rohsenow ( 1 969) used a critical Weber Number criterion, these being taken as 6.5 and 7.5 respec tively. Forslund and Rohsenow
( 1968) showed that a
value of
7.5
represented their visual mea
surements quite well, and this value is choosen herein. Since droplet acceleration is neglected, the droplets can only change size due to evaporation. The number density,
n. is thus assumed to re
main constant. The initial condition chosen is that the droplet volume at the just equal to half of that given by
Wee
=
CHF
location will be
75 so that
(55)
465 and thereafter
o
=Oc{ 6(7lI_nca) } 1/3 = Oc { I-aac } 1/3 --
(56)
--
I
-
In virtually all cases, the void fraction is very close to unity. Thus, once compatibility is achieved by iteration at the critical quality condition. the void fraction is a lagged quantity. That
is, the void fraction for the previous step is used to calculate the valiabies for the current step. Therefore, given the void fraction, the droplet diameter is calculated from (56) and the Archi medes number is then calculated from (54). Next the terminal Reynolds number is computed fol lowed by the drag coefficient from (52) and the relative velocity from (5 1 ). Knowing the relative velocity the current value of the void fraction is then determined from basic quantities. That is, from the definition of the relative velocity, the slip ratio can be determined as
S=1+
(l-a)etV,
(57)
( l - x)G
which then allows the void fraction to be determined from the void-quality-slip relationship.
Droplet heat transfer. Since no definitive work on droplet evaporation in a mist cunently exists, the simple relation ship given by Lee and Ryley ( 1 968) was used herein where
NU6
=
2+
0.74 1/2 1/3 Red,.,., Prv
Knowing the droplet heat transfer and the other parameters required by Eq.
(58)
(47),
the local value of
the superheat relaxation number can be calculated.
Calculation of superheat relaxation number from experiment. The actual quality at any flux and wall temperature are known may be calculated using the pre
location where the heat
viously described procedure. Once the actual qualities have been calculated, the superheat relax ation numbers may be calculated from (2 1). That is, if the spatial step along the test section is small enough, the relaxation number from one location (initial conditions) to another (current location) can be assumed constant and given through solution for Nj in Eq. (2 1 ) written as
(59) inlet nodej-l and outlet nodej. Experimental data were examined which had a profusion of ther
The values obtained are, of course, the center-weighted values for each cell. Each ceU-j has
mocouples so that the steam temperature at any thelmocouple location could be obtained in con-
466 junction with the calculation of local nonequilibrium. That is, the thermocouple measurement provided the outside wall temperature for the test section. From the power measurement, knowl edge of the geometry of the test section, and calibration for heat loss, the local heat flux at the thermocouple location could be obtained. Knowing the material type and thickness, the inside wall temperature and heat flux could be determined. Then, using Eq. (49) the superheated steam temperature was calculated, yielding the local nonequilibrium. Q. Since the value for both Q and eqilibrium quality for the current thermocouple location node and the previous are thus deter mined, the value of the average relaxation number between the two thermocouple locations can be determined. 'This can then be compared with the values calculated from Eq. (47). The starting point for the computation was the critical heat flux point. determined by an intersection of the best fit straight lines through thermocouple data immediately below and above the CHF locatiop., but ingnoring the slight dip usually obtained in the temperatures immediately preceding the CHF point as well as any hysteresis noted in increasing and decreasing power data.
In applying the method in the suggested manner two things were fround. First. upon examina tion of the extensive data of Forslund and Rohsenow ( a mass velocity effect not accounted for in (47) was encountered. The second thing found was that there were differences between the nitrogen data and the water data. These two findings will be discussed as the data are examined in detail below.
1966),
(a) Data of Forslund and Rohsenow (1966) It can be argued that the mass velocity effect found was due to liquid holdup yielding effective Nusslet numbers higher than that given by (58). similar to the "ventilation" effect postulated by Bennet et al. ( 1967). A ratio of inertial forces tending to carry the drops out of the duct, to the gravitational forces tending to increase liquid holdup would seem to be appropriate to compen sate for these effects. The Boussinesque number Bo represents such a ratio
(60)
so that the experimental values of the superheat relaxation number. NSf, were all divided by this parameter for correlation purposes. The results of comparisons for the MIT 1 .7 4-bar nitrogen data are shown in detail Fig. 3 which include 67 1 data points covering the fonowing range of conditions:
Gd
95 :5 :5 260 kgj� 5 .79 :5 :5 1 1 .73 mm :5 q " W :5 94 kWjm 0. 1 3 :5 Xc :5 3.2 0.6 :5 q " wiq " W,l/vg :5 1 .5
16
467
� o
z
G-95kg/m2
s
-'--- diO. ' 5.79 mm -- d io ' 8. 2 mm .-------- dio : 1 1.73mm
}
REGION
� o
z
o o 6
10-1
S
==
�(mr)2/3 Cpvlw I
NU6( 1 - a)1/3
G -95 kg/m2 5
G - 1 7 5 kg/m2 s G- 260 kglln2 s
10
2 6 x Figure 3. Correlation of the data of Forslund and Rohsenow ( 1 966) for nitrogen. p=1.74 bar; G-95 kglm2s. The range in the ratio oflocal-to-average heat flux was due entirely to variations in the electrical resistivity of the test section rather than intentionally obtained. Data for all mass fluxes are shown together in the lower right of the figure. Several things can be seen from these data and comparisons. First, the data seem quite scat
tered. This is, of course, due to the differential natw'e of the results obtained from the experiment. Note that the procedure previously outlined is equivalent to solving the diferential relaxation equation, Eq. ( 1 9), for the superheat relaxation number if the step-size is sufficiently small. That is, the equivalent calculation is
468
where the nonsubsclipted value of Q is the average of the lagged value and the CUlTent value. Further, it can be noted that the data
G-kg/m2
progress from upper light to lower left in
NOMENCLATURE
dio. mm 5.79 8.20 1 1 .7 3
95 0 0 b.
1 75 � ..
..
the figures as the distance from the CHF
260 • • s
location increases downstream . As the ac tual quality increases, the flows become
..
more dilute and the actual relaxation num bers reduce more rapidly than those calcu lated. This may be due to the "ventilla tion" effect mentioned previously, and the
Figure
4.
COlTelation of the low quality, near
critical quality region for the nitrogen data of Forslund and Rohsenow
(1966).
p=1.74 bar.
lower relative velocity and thus lower heat transfer rates due to the neglect of droplet acceleration effects. Finally, it should be noted that since NSf is a differential param
eter, effects of uncertaintly in its determination are integrated or smoothed during application to determine the local noneqiulibrium.
A reasonable correlation of the data is given which separates the data into three regions. In the
{O. 170S2/ S 0.595 855SI 8 S 0.0595 S -32 ( rm6 )2/3 Ckpvd6.vflwiJ"gx - a) 1/3
first two, droplet flow regimes, the correlation obtained is given by for
Nsr
= Bo
:5
(62)
>
for
where ==
-
(63)
NU6 ( l
In the third, low quality region shown in Fig. 4, it is thought that a different flow regime exists, perhaps rivulet flow or a type of transition boiling region between annular tlow and mist flow, or
(1950), (1959), 2.l5xlO2{-deyG ( ) I/3}7/2 40(0.24 -xc)]S3
maybe even inverse annular flow such as considered by Bromley now
(1963)
or Hsu and Westwater
among others.
A
Doughall and Rohse
simple cOlTelation in this regime,
which really contains very few points and is confined to a very narow region immediately adja cent to the critical heat flux location is given by
N
-2!. =
Bo
..! (} vg
exp[-
(64)
469 1 .0
where Xc is the critical quality at CHF. No attempt to optimize these equations was made since this was only an interim step on the overall process. Note that value of Nsr/Bo to be used is the maximum of those given by Eqs. (62) to (64). The ability ofthe present method to ad equately describe both the magnitude and the trends of data for a single fluid is veri
O.B � <1 0 6 )..
a
04
oJ
;= �
-- CALCULATED
1 .0
fied in Figs. 5a-d. In Figs. 5a-c, data for different mass fluxes are shown, each mass flux having a different clitical quali ty. It is seen that the effect of initial condi
tions is quite pronounced, and persists for a considerable distance in equilibrium quality, especially at the lowest value of mass flux. It is only for the higher mass
0.4
1. 2
DB
1.6
flux effect is clear. In addition, the diame ter effect is also seen in Fig. 5d wherein the middle set of data having a significant ly larger diameter and thus larger relax ation parameter tends toward equilibrium
3.2
2.B
2.4
O.B
�� 0.6 0 oJ
� 04 Iu
CALCULATED
fluxes that the history effects diminish fairly rapidly. At constant clitical quality, the effects of different mass flux are shown in Fig. 5d wherein the inverse mass
2.0
1 .0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
O. B G- 260 kg/m2 s
0.6 04
faster .than the other two sets of data. CALCULATED
All data of Forslund and Rohsenow ( 1 966) were calculated and compared as shown in Fig. 6. All data are predicted with excellent accuracy except, perhaps for the higher quality regions for the low est mass flux wherein the actual quality is slightly higher than the actual value.
(b) Extension to the Data ofBennett et al. (1967)
0.5
1 .0
1 5
2. 5
3.0
OB
G dio. 95 kg/m2 s I I 7 m m 1 75 kg/m2 s S.2mm 256 kg/m2 s S.2 mm
0.6 04
-- CALCULATED
It would be surprising if the "cook book" methods used herein for the various
2.0
0.5
1 .0
15
2.0
2 5
3.0
calculations would include all the effects between thermodynamic systems. Indeed
Figure 5 . Comparison of rutrogen correlation
they don't. It was found that the two fluids
with data of Forslund and Rohsenow; p=1 .77.
EQUI L I B R I U M QUALI T Y
470
08
1:; o
0.6
c; u
& tQ 0.4 ::I
o c; a 0 0.2 -< 0.2
0.4
0.&
0.8
1.0
as
Q8
10
Actual Quality from Data
Figure 6. Comparison of calculated and actual quality for the data of Forslund and Rohsenow using the nitrogen correlation given in Eq. (62) to (64). behaved
differently
when
compared on the basis of the
previous development. Fur thennore, when a correspon ding-states correction was tried, it was found that the re
10
duced pressure, introduced empirically, was able to ac Nsr
Bo
commodate these differences.
1 .0 Nsr Bo
=
1 .23 (S//Pr)
311
0. 1
Also, upon further examina tion, a slightly higher power on in the middle region,
S
3/8
rather than 1/8, was required to bring both sets of data into
reasonable compromise. The results are shown in Fig. 7 for the 1 .74-bar nitro
0.01 s
==
10
1 .0
0. 1
�(M )2/3 C vl/ NUo(l -a)1/3 pw 2
6
x
100 gen data of Forslund and Roh senow (1966) and the 70-bar water data of Bennett et a1. (1 967). The resulting correla
Figure 7_ Superheat relaxation numbers for both nitrogen data (1 .74 bar) and water data (70-bar).
tion based on both the water and nitrogen data is:
47 1 '
Nsr Bo
=
1 . 23
where
) ( S )'" jp;
for
for
j-
S 0.22 S 0.22 Pr
�
(65)
j- > Pr
(66) and where
.! Pr = Pc
(67)
is the reduced pressure, based on the critical pressure, Pc . Futhennore, as before, the value of relaxation parameter to be used is the maximum value of those given by Eqs . (65) and that given by
N Bo
�=
2. 15xlO 2{-G ( )1/3}7/2 �v
� e�
2 ( S )3
exp [- 40(0 . 4 xc)]
(68)
The superheat relaxation number, Nsr, is a differential parameter, obtained by differentiat
Again, with respect to Fig. 7, two things are noted:
1.
ing experimental data. As such, it is expected to have considerable scatter, and it does.
2. The calculation of the actual quality and the nonequilibrium potential using the superheat relaxation number is a forward integration process from the critical heat flux location Thus, the test of the method � in the "goodness" or lack thereof for the Nsr correlation, but wherein smoothing of the scatter in the relaxation number occurs .
rather in the accuracy with which calculations are accomplished for actual nonequilibrium quali ty and ultimately wall temperature.
Typical calculations of actual quality compared with the data are shown in Fig. 8 for each of the three mass velocities tested by Forslund and Rohsenow, ( 1966). Complete comparisons of the calculated actual quality with that obtained from the 67 1 experimental data points are shown in Fig. 9. It is noted that the comparisons are slightly worse than those shown prev iously based on a correlation of these data alone. Furthermore. there is still a slight mass flux effect which is not accounted for in the correlation. Compa.Iisons of calculated actual quality with those derived from the 1 084 data points at 70-bar in water by Bennett et aI. ( 1 967) are shown in Fig. 10. Note that the lower the mass flux,
472
.� O.B -;
0°
6
� 0.4
289 260 259 206
� 0. 2 q 0.8
(;
0 (;
- 175 kg/m2 , SYMBOL CACULATION 0.134 • 0.273 • 0 343 •
0.6
' c
B 0. 4
<
0.2
�
2.0
1 .0
0 0. 8
6 0 °. (; 0 4 E . o
-< 0.2
'c SYMBOl. • 0.229 0.288 0.353 0.393 •
RUN 2 68 293 258
3.0
G - 260 ka/m2, SYM OL CALCULATION : ;.�78 0.254 • 0.308 •
the higher the quality. Each overall quality range is separated from the adjacent range in this figure by altemating the filled circules with the open circular symbols. It should be noted that while these comparisons appear quite good, the higher mass velocities en countered in these expeliments resulted in much less deviation between actual and equi librium quality than for the nitrogen data. In addition, the higher heat fluxes resulted in significant temperature limitations in post dryout condition to avoid test section failure.
A tabulation of the standard deviations in these comparisons is given in Table 2. The overall standard deviation for the MIT data ( 1 966) is 0.035, and for the Harwell data ( 1 967) is 0.020. The overall rms deviation of 0.027 is quite remarkable in view of the ob vious coarseness exhibited in Fig. and the relatively wide range of parameters covered as shown in the table. This is indicative of the smoothing action of the integration process and confums previously stated expectations.
7,
Once the nonequilibrium potential has been determined providing the local bulk va Equilibrium Quality por temperature, it is straightforward to deFigure 8. Selected comparisons of nonequilitermine the wall temperature using Eq. (49). brium qualities calculated from Eq. (65)-(68) Typical results are shown for the developfor the 1 .74-bar nitrogen data of Forslund and mental data base in Figs. l l a and l lb, and Rohsenow ( 1966). for the data of Janssen and Kervinen in Fig. l lc. In these cases, the comparisons are typical of all for the given data base: neither the best nor the worst. The most severe test is probably a comparison of the data of Swenson et a1. ( 1967), with the predictions of ( 19) and (65). These data, taken at a pressure of 207 bar, represent an extrapolation by a factor of three over the range included in Fig. 7 and the development ofEq. (65) . It is found that the rms deviation in the quality was 0.041 and in the wall temperature was 1 3 . 1C, somewhat worse than that previously encountered. The predicted wall temperatures are shown in Fig. 12. The comparisons of Fig. 12 represent a very severe test case because of the very low critical quality and resultant low void fractions encountered even at moderate qualities. Consequently, true droplet flow probably does not occur
473
95 ::5
G
Conditions ::5 5200 kg/nil s
Range kg/m2S
Set
Data Runs
Data Points
Mean Square Deviation
5.79 " d " 12.37 mm
16 ::5 q " w ::5 1 836 0. 1 3 ::5
Xe ::5
3.2
0.6 :5 q " w/q " w.avg :5 1 .5 0. 1 2 1 0.05
::5
L s 0.553m
S Ze
S 0.553m
0.05 S Pr S 0.3 1
a1.
650
B B et aL B et a1. B et al. B et a1. B et a1.
10
1970 2550 3850 5200
16 12 17 16 16 14 6
1.!L. 1 24
171 131 140 1 57 61
0.0229 0.0254 0.02 1 1 0.01 40 0.0084 0.0077
Table 2. S ummary of experimental conditions and nos deviations in the calculation of actual quality when compared with 1 .74-bar nitrogen data of Forslund and Rohsenow ( 1 966. F&R) and 70-bar water data of Bennett et al. ( 1 967. B et al.).
0.2
0"
OA
OA
Actual Quality from Data Figure 9. Comparison of calculated and actual quality for the data of Forslund and Rohsenow using the nitrogen correlation given in Eq. (65)-(68).
474
1.0 0.8
�as 0.6
SYM BOL
except at high qualities. It is not surprising that the low quality comparisons are poor er than those obtained at higher qualities. The one high heat flux, high temperature run showing rather poor comparisons stands apalt from the rest of the data. Cal culations of thermal conductivity and spe cific heat near the critical point proved troublesome and is believed to be largely responsible for the discrepancies noted. It is emphasized that the rod-flow film boil ing regime must be addressed in future work within the framework of the relax ation mode.
MASS VELOCITY kQ Iml ,
390 �
1000 � Z 1 350 ILI Q "' 2000 j : 2550 ffi � 3800 ffi � 5200 6�
U'I
"3 o � u
£ ::I
�
o �
� .a
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
Actual Quality from Data
1 .0
Figure 10. Complete compalison of calculated actual quality with those obtained from the 70-bar water data of B ennett et al. (1967).
The effect of an uncertainty in the ac tual quality of 2% represents -8-1 2°C in the wall temperature if the vapor tempera tures are in the range of 60- 1 200°C. It should be noted that the rapidly diminish ing effects of critical quality along with the inverse mass velocity effect appear to be correctly accounted for in the proce dure. The reader is reminded that no at tempt at optimization of the method has been attempted at this point since it was desired only to demonstrate the adequacy of the correct physics, when combined with a minimum amount of empiricism, to correctly predict the magnitude and trends of the non-equiliblium.
Comparison of the methods ofvalious investigators in calculation of post-dryout heat transfer was given by Richlen et al. ( 1 976). It is noted here, however, that, to the author's knowledge no one, including the originators of the data themselves, has demonstrated the ability to perform even circular calculations within the accuracies herein achieved. It is important to recognize that the analysis described herein conclusively shows that post dryout heat transfer behaves as an initial value problem, as do all relaxation phenomena. Thus, past history is important in determining local changes since it is the history that determines the local degree of non-equilibrium, Q. It is for this reason that single data points providing only local values of wall temperatures, equilibrium quality, mass velocity, heat flux, and pressure are useless for the purpose of providing comparative data for the procedures outlined herein. Rather, complete data describing the entire experiment, and definitively specifying the CHF-Iocation
475 900
G
800
60
BOO
700
700
� � .. ::I
8-
..
�
�
E
300
500
200
400
1 00
E-
�
00000000.00
300
-200
-O.S
0.0
O.S
1 .0
1.5
11.
G 9
0
0
0
0•
400
Equilibrium Quality-x
0.0
2.0
(a) Bennett et al. Figure
CI)
0·
- 1 00
1 00
�
SOO °
0
200
tU Ii3
600
600
1.0
O.S
1 .S
2.0
2.S
0a«ldloO
2 00 -0.4
0.0
0
0
0.4
0
0.8
1 .2
1 .6
2.0
(c) Janssen and KeTvinen (b) Forslund and Rohsenow Comparison with post-dryout data with Eq.(65)-(68) .
G - 1 356 kg /m2 S
: � . 303 kw / m2
q
o
D
o
4 50
300
G= 950 kg/m2 s
o
. 561 kw/m2
o o
o q :, a302 kW/m2
D q:, = 495 kWI m2
0-
�
S
400
D a oo o o o ax
-0.2
0
0.2
�D
0.4
D GJ D D a: D D D
0.6
12.
0.8
1 .0
-02
00
0.2
0.4
0.6
08
1.0
L2
Local Equilibrium Quality
Comparison of calculated wall temperatures with those measw'ed by Swensen and Carver ( 1 967). Water, p=207 bar. along with inlet enthalpy, heat flux, and wall temperature profiles are required to adequately de Figure
scribe the conditions observed. Finally, it is stressed that the success of the methods described herein is due to a reasonable
inclusion of correct physics coupled with a separation of the critical heat flux from the prediction of the post-dryout conditions. That is, the critical heat flux is specified only as the initial condi tons wherein the actual and equilibrium qualities were taken as identical. The reader is pointedly reminded that to do otherwise, such as many previous researchers, is to attempt to con-elate the
critical heat flux condition simultaneously with the post-dryout condition--a patently unlikely possibility. It is no wonder that virtually all previous post-dryout prediction methods fail so mis erably.
4.GENERAL SUMMARY A general approach for the computation of nonequilibrium phase change in gas-liquid sys tems was described. This method, derived from first principles, shows that the generation of va por under thermal nonequilibrium conditions is a first-order, inhomogeneous, initial-value prob lem As such, initial conditions are of overriding importance in the detelmination of the actual vapor content of the flow. This method is termed the nonequiliblium relaxation description of phase change. Application of the relaxation phase change method to calculation of conditions beyond the critical heat flux in liquid-deficient, dispersed flow heat transfer accounts for the non-equili brium effects using a combination of first principles and semi-empirical application. Although the effects of history on post-dryout heat transfer appear to diminish with increasing mass velocity, it has been clearly shown that the proper expression of the non-equilibrium behav ior involves an initial value problem. History effects become more pronounced at lower mass velocities and may be quite important in natural circulation systems or in systems involving emergency fe-flood. In addition, the reporting of experimental post dryout data from experi ments should include inlet, dryout, and profile data, as well as local variables.
477 s. NOMENCLATURE
English a A Ai
Ar Bo Co
D e g G h
L m n Nu p Pr q" Re s S t T L\T u v V w We x z
Metric tensor Area Interfacial area density Archimedes number Boussinesque number Drag coefficient Hydraulic diameter Energy Acceleration of gravity Mass flux Heat transfer coefficient Enthalpy Length Mass flow rate Droplet number density Nusselt Number Pressure Prandtl number Heat flux Reynolds number Entropy or generalized source Slip ratio Time Temperature Temperature difference Specific internal energy Generalvelocity Volume Velocity in z-direction Weber number Quality Axial coordinate
Greek ex
cP r
Void fraction or thermal diffusivity Flux Volumetric vapor generation rate
478 5
� IJ. p
(J
u � 1:
Bubble diameter or boundary layer thickness Positive difference Dynamic viscosity Density Surlace tension Shear stress or dimensionless time specific volume perimeter
Subscripts c e f fg g hom k
1 m o p r s v w
1, 2,
Critical Equilibrium Saturated liquid Positive saturated liquid-vapor difference Saturated vapor Homogeneous Interlace Phase-k Liquid (not necessarily at saturation) Mixture Initial Constant pressure Relative or relaxation Swface or saturated Vapor (not necessarily at saturation) Wall Terminal Single-phase Two-phase
479
6. REFERENCES 1 . Aris, R.t 1 962. Vectors, Tensors, and the Basic Equations of Fluid Mechanics, Prentice Hall, New Jersey. 2. Bailey, N. A., 1. O. Collier, and J. e. Ralph, 1973a. Post Dryout Heat Transfer in Nuclear and Cryogenic Equipment. ASME preprint 73-HT- 16. 3 . B ailey, N. A., J. O. Collier, and 1. C. Ralph, 1 973b. Post Dryout Heat Transfer in Nuclear and Cryogenic Equipment," AERE-M-75 19, August.
4. Bennett, A. W., ll.al., 1968. Heat Transfer to Steam-Water Mixture Flowing in Uniformly Heated Tubes in which the Critical Heat Flux has been Exceed. Paper #27 presented at the Ther modynamics and Fluid Mechanics Convention, Bristol, March. 5. Bennett, A. W., O. F. Hewitt, H. A. Kea.rsey, and R. F. K. Keeys, 1967 . Heat Transfer to Steam Water Mixture Flowing in Uniformly Heated Tubes in Which the Critical Heat Flux has been Ex ceeded. AERE-R 5373, October. 6. Bromley, L. A., 1 950. Heat Transfer in Film Boiling," Chemical Engineering Progress, 46, 22 1 . 7 . Chen, lC., Ozkaynak, F.T., Sundaram, R.K., 1979. Vapor Heat Transfer i n Post-CHF Region Including the Effect of Thermodynamic Equilibrium. Nucl. Eng. Des 51, pg. 143. .
8. Collier, 1. 0., 1 962. Heat Transfer and Fluid Dynamic Research as Applied Fog-Cooled Power Reactors. AECL-Chalk River report, CRARE- 1 108, June. 9. Cumo, M., �., 1 973. On Two-Phase Highly Dispersed Flows. ASME preprint 73-HT-18.
1 0. Doughall, R . S., and W. M. Rohsenow, 1 963. Film B oiling on the Inside ofVertical Tubes with Upward Flow of the Fluid at Low Qualities. MIT Report 9079-26, September. 1 1 . Evans, D., Webb, S.W., and Chen, J.C., 1 983. Experimental Measurement of Axially Varying Vapor Superheats in Convective Film Boiling. In Interfacial Transport Phenomena, Pg. 85, HTD-23, le. Chen and S.O. B ankoft', Eds., ASME, New York. 1 2 . Forslund, R. P. and W. M . Rohsenow, 1 966. Thennal Non-Equilibrium in Dispersed Flow Film Boiling in a Vertical Tube," MIT Report 753 12-44, November. 13. Forslund, R. P. and W. M. Rohsenow, 1 968. Dispersed Flow Film Boiling. Trans., ASME
Ser. C. J. Heat Trans., 90, 399-407, ( 1 968). 14. Gill, L.. E., G. F. Hewitt, and P. M. C. Lacey, 1963. Sampling Probe Studies of the Gas Core in Annular Two-Phase Flow, Park II, Studies of the Efect ofFlow Rates on Phase and Velocity Dis nibutions. Harwell report AERE-R 3955. 1 5 . Oroeneveld, D. C., 1 968. An Investigation of Heat Transfer in the Liquid Deficient Regime. AECL-328 1 , December.
480
1 6. Groeneveld, D. C., 1 972. The Thermal Behavior of a Heated Surface at and Beyond Dryout. AECL-4309, PhD Thesis, University of Western Ontario, November. 1 7 . Groeneveld, D. C. and G. G. l DelOlme, 1975. Prediction of Thermal Non - equilibrium in Post-Dryout Regime. (private communication). 1 8 . Heineman, J. B . , 1 960. An Experimental Investigation of Heat transfer to S uperheat Steam in Round and Tectangular Ducts. Argonne report ANL-62 13. 1 9. Hynek, S. l , W. M . Rohsenow, and A. E. Bergles, 1969. Forced Convection Dispersed Flow Film Boiling. MIT Report DSR 70586-63, April. 20. 11oeje, O. c., W. M. Rohsenow. P. Griffith, 1975. TIu'ee Step Model of Dispersed Flow Heat Transfer (POST CHF Vertical Flow). AS ME preprint 75-WA/HT- 1 . 2 1 . Ishii, M 1 975. PIivate communication. . •
22.
Ishii. M., 1 97 1 . Thermally Induced Flow Instabilities in Two-Phase Mixture in Thermal Equilibrium. PhD Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology. 23. Ishii, M., 1 975 Thermo-Fluid Dynamic Theory of Two-Phase Flow, Eyrolle, Paris. 24. Janssen, E., and Kervinen, lA., 1975. Film Boiling and Rewetting. General Electric Report NEDO-20975 . 2 5 . Jones, O.C., 1982. Toward a Unified Approach for Thermal Nonequilibrium i n Gas-Liquid Systems. Nuel. Eng. Des., 69, Pg. 57. 26. Jones, O.C., Jr., 1984. Thermal Design Concepts for the Rotating Fluidized Bed Reactor. Nuel. Sci. Eng., 87, pp. 1 3-27. 27. Jones, O.C., 1 99 1 . A Nonequilibrium Relaxation Model forPost-Dryout HeatTransfer. To be published in the Int. J. Heat and Mass Trans. 28. Jones, O.C., and Saha, P., 1 977. Non-Equilibrium Aspects of Water Reactor Safety. In Ther mal and Hydraulic Aspects of Nuclear Reactor Safety. Vol. 1: Light Water REactors. O.C. Jones and S .G. B ankoff, Eels., ASME press, New York. 29. Jones, O.C., and Zuber, N., 1977. Post-Dryout Heat Transfer: A Nonequilibrium, Relaxation Model. ASME Preprint 77-HT-79. 30. Kocamustafaogullari, G., 1 97 1 . Thermo-Fluid Dynamics of Separated Two-Phase Flow. PhD Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology. 3 1 . Hsu, Y. Y. and J. W. Westwater, 1 959. Approximate Theory for Film Boiling on Vertical Sur faces. Chern. Eng. Prog Syrn. Ser #30, 56, .
15-24.
32. Kearsey, H. A." 1 965 . Steam Water Heat Transfer - Post B urnout Conditions. Chern. & Proc. Energy., 46, 455-459.
48 1
33. Laverty, W.F., and W. M. Rohsenow, 1 964. Film Boiling of Saturated Liquid Flowing Upward Through a Heated Tube and High Vapor quality Range. MIT Report 9857-32, September. 34. Le, K. and D. Ryley, 1 968. The Evaporation of Water Droplets in Superheated Steam. Trans. ASME Ser. C. J. Heat Trans., 90, 455-45 1 . 35. Miripolskii, Z. L., 1 963. Heat Transfer in Film Boiling of a Steam-Water Mixture in Steam Generating Tubes. Teploenergetika, 10, 49-53. 36. Nijhawan, W., Chen, J.c., Sundaram, R.K., and London, EJ. , 1 979. Measurement of Vapor Superheat in Post-Critical Heat Flux Boiling. In Nonequilibrium Interfacial Transport Pro cesses, pg. 45., J.C. Chen and S .G. Bankoff, Eds., ASME, New York. 37. Nijhawan, W., Chen, J.c., Sundaram, R.K., and London, EJ., 1 980. Measurement of Vapor Superheat in Post-Critical Heat Flux Boiling. Trans. ASME, J. Heat Trans, 102, pg. 465. 38. Parker, 1. D., and R. J. Grosh, 1961 . Heat Transfer to a Mist Flow. AND-629 1 , January. 39. Plummer, D. N., O. C. Iloeje, P. Griffith and W. N. Rohsenow, 1 973. A Study of Post Critical Heat Flux Heat Transfer in a Forced Convective System. MIT Report DSR -73645-80, March. 40. Plummer, D. N., O. C. Iloeje, W. M. Rohsenow, P. Griffith, and E. Ganic, 1974. Post Critical Heat Transfer to Flowing Liquid in a Vertical Tube. MIT RepOlt 727 1 8-9 1 , September. 4 1 . Polomik, E. E., Phase Velocities in Boiling Flow Systems by Total Energy and by Diffusion. Trans ASME, Ser. C. J. Heat Trans, 88, 1 -9, 1 966. 42. Quinn, E. P., 1 965 . Forced Flow Heat Transfer to Water Beyond the Critical Point. ASME Paper No. 65-WA/HT-36, December. 43. Stein, R., H. Firstenberg, S . Israel, R. Hankel, and M. Crane, 1 963. Investigations of Wet Steam as a Reactor Coolant (CAN-2). UNC-5008- 1 , August. 44. Truesdell, C. and R. Toupin, 1 960. The Classical Field Theories. from Handbuch der Phy sik, by S. Flugge, Bank Ill/ I . 45. Varone, A.F., and Rohsenow, W.M., 1 986. Post Dryout Heat Transfer Prediction. Nuel. Eng. Des., 95, pg. 3 1 5 . 46. Vernier, P., and 1 . M . Delhaye, 1968. General Two-Phase Flow Equations Applied to the Thennodynamics of Boiling Nuclear Reactors. Energie Premaire, IV, 1-2. 47. Wallis, G. B ., 1 974. The Tenninal Speed of Single Drops or B ubbles in an Infinite Medium. Int. J. Multiphase Flow, 1, 49 1 -5 1 1 . 48. Webb, S.W., Chen, J.c., and Sundaram, R.K., 1 982. Vapor Generation Rate i n Nonequili brium Convective Film Boiling. Proc. 7th lot. Heat Trans. Conf., Munich.
482 49. Yoder, J .L., and Rohsenow, W.M., 1 983. A solution for Dispersed Flow Heat Transfer Using Equilibrium Fluid Conditions . Trans. ASME, J. Heat Trans., 105, pg. 10. 50. Zuber, N. and J. Hench, 1 962. Steady S tate and Transient Void Fraction of Bubbling Systems on Their Operating Limits, Part I: Steady State Operation. General Electric Report 62GL lOO, July.
483
SHELLSIDE BOILING AND TWO-PHASE
FLOW
Michael K. Jensen Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY 12180-3590 Abstract The cw-rent state of knowledge on the prediction of two-phase flow patterns, pressure drop, heat transfer coefficients, and the critical heat flux condition in crossflow boiling on the shellside of multi-tube bundles is described in this chapter. The mechanisms' governing the processes are discussed. When available , correlations for the various phenomena are presented. Enhanced tube bundles and the modeling of the two-phase flow and heat transfer in large tube bundles are also discussed. 1. INTRODUCTION Shellside boiling with crossflow in horizontal multi-tube bundles is used extensively in a variety of applications such as in kettle and thermo syphon reboilers in the chemical process industry, submerged evaporators in the refrigeration industry, waste heat boilers, and horizontal natural circulation steam generators in nuclear power plants in the USSR (Collier [1]). Even though crossflow boiling is widely used and design techniques have been developed which can predict overall or average tube bundle performance, what is occurring at a particular point within the bundle (i.e., locally) is unknown because our knowledge of crossflow boiling heat transfer and two-phase pressure drop characteristics is insufficient. This lack of knowledge inhibits the development of a more systematic and detailed design approach via computer simulation which could lead to better designs and more efficient heat exchangers. An example of a heat exchanger with shellside boiling for which more information on local characteristics could lead to better designs and improved performance is a kettle reboiler, such as shown in Fig. 1A. An early view of the heat transfer processes in kettle reboilers was that nucleate pool boiling was the dominant mechanism; these results were based on inexact plant data • Some of this material has been previously presented by the author in H.e.a.t
Ed. R.K. Shah, ASME, New York, 1989.
484
FIGURE 1. Schematic of Cross-sectional View of (A) Kettle Reboiler and (B) Full Fundle Boiler (Payvar f4BD. (Palen and Taborek [2], Palen and Small [3]). Later research (Palen et a1. [4]) indicated that heat transfer mechanisms other than nucleate pool boiling were involved, the early design methods 'Were verry conservative, and that the use of a nucleate pool boiling curve from a single 'heated tube did not represent the bundle heat transfer processes very well. (See Fig. 2) Not only was the bundle average heat transfer coefficient in the nucleate boiling range much higher than that of the single tube, the bundle-iaverage critical heat flux (CHF) condition was significantly lower. The bundle CHF is defined as that condition when the integrated effect df all the tubes (not all the tubes dryout at the same time ) begin to have a significant adverse affect on the overall bundle performance. At this time for kettle reboNers, such as described above, and other multi-tube bundles with shellside boiling we do not have the necessary information to predict which tubes have dried out, what the heat transfer coefficient distribution is throughout the bWldle, what the effect of the bundle geometry is on the heat transfer processes, etc. If that information was available and simulation programs were developed, then we could tailor the bundle design to take advantage of favorable characteristics and to minimize unfavorable ones. However, it has been only in the past few years that research interest has been directed toward the determination of local conditions throughout the tube bundle. Once the flow behavior, the local heat transfer characteristics and the local pressure gradients for crossflow in tube bundles are quantified with respect to fluid conditions and geometry, then better designs and more efficient heat exchangers can be developed. It is the objective of this paper to briefly review the state of the art on forced and natural-convection induced crossflow
485
boiling in tube bundles and to suggest areas which need additional research. More detailed reviews can be found in Palen [5, 6] and Jensen [7]. CALCULATED S INGLE TUB E M A XIM U M H E A T FLU X -
2 .:
.. :=l I-
.c
1 05 8 6 4
C" :=l -I u-
x I« L.U :J:
2 10
4
8 6 4
2 2
4
6 810
2
4
6 8 1 02
2
OVER ALL AT, ( F )
6 8 1 03
2
4
FIGURE 2. Typical Tube Bundle Boiling Data Compared to Single Tube (Palen et a1. [4]). 2. FLOW PATI'ERNS Flow patterns in two-phase crossflow have received much less attention than has intube two-phase flow. (See, for example, Diehl and Unruh [8], Nakajima [9], Grant and Murray [10, 1 1], Grant and Chisholm [12], Kondo and Nakajima [13], Chisholm [14, 15].) Because it has been shown in several studies (e.g. Chisholm [14], Schrage et al. [16]) that the flow pattern can have an effect on the two-phase friction multiplier and, undoubtedly, the heat transfer, it is important that we can predict the flow pattern as a function of flow conditions, fluid properties and bundle geometry. Several distinct flow patterns have been observed, but it appears from examination of the studies on two-phase flow patterns in tube bundles that, unlike intube flows, there are only a limited number of flow patterns present in tube bundles; there are not enough data to determine what affect the tube layout has on the flow patterns. Shown in Fig. 3 are the most prevalent flow patterns observed in the above investigations; bubbly and spray flow are common to both vertical and horizontal flows while slug or intermittent flow generally occurs only in horizontal flows. These flow patterns are analogous to those occurring in in-tube flow.
486
in liquid
Bubbly llow
in liquid
0 0 0 00 0
"
0
0
0
0 0 0 0 0
o 0 0 0
.,
00 0°
0 0
and lubes Spray llow
" LiQuid drOpJeIS _ �
j e
0°
Gas
LiquidSlra�tied
Bubbly
m gas
on wans
Slug llow
Gas bubbles __ o0
Liquid lilm
in gas
LiQu:cl droplets
Gas bubbles
' , ,
&
Liquid -Siratilied· Spray
0
I
•
LiquiJ � 6 droplelS -l. I
I
,4
gg 0° , ,
• 6
Spray
FIGURE 3. Flow Patterns in Tube Bundles (Chisholm [14]). To generalize the data and to quantify at what fluid conditions the transition occurs between flow patterns, flow pattern maps have been presented by Grant and Murray [10, 11] and Kondo and Nakajima [13]. Those by Grant and Murray, as given in Grant and Chisholm [12], are shown in Fig; 4. Note, however, that these maps were developed using low pressure air water flows for a tube bundle with a p/D = 1.25 and an equilateral triangular layout, so they are not completely general. Chisholm [15] presents equations with which the quality can be determined at the three transitions in horizontal crossflows. Stratified: Bubbly: Spray:
I-xs B Xs s 1 xb xb B) l-xf Xf Bf =
-
=
=
(1)
In these equations, x s , Xb, and Xf are the transition qualities for the stratified, bubbly, and spray transition points, respectively; the quantities Bs , Bb , and Bf are
487
Bs = (22-m-2) I (r+1) ; Bb = { PH I Pg)1I2 ; Bf = (Ilfl llg)ml2 R = 1.3 + 0.59 Frfo N2 (Ilf I J.lg)-m r2 = (dP/dz)go I (dP/dz }fo = ( pf l Pg) ( J.lfl J.lg)-m
(2)
and m is the exponent in a Blasius-type single-phase friction factor equation. The quantity Frfo is a Froude number for the total flow as liquid with the velocity based on the minimum cross-sectional area in the tube bundle normal to the flow direction.
0.01 . 1 0
HORIZONTAL SIOE·TO·SIOE FLOW 10
FIGURE 4. Shellside Flow Pattern Maps (Grant and Chisholm [1 2]). To date no theoretical or semi-empirical analyses of the flow pattern transitions have been attempted for shellside flow; all the work has been experimental. Generally, the data bank for flow pattern information is very sparse. Only one flow pattern map has been developed for one tube bundle geometry. With renewed interest in shellside boiling, this could be a fruitful area for research. 3. PRESSURE DROP Evaluation of the pressure drop in crossflow boiling is important for a number of reasons. In kettle reboilers, for example, an estimate of the recirculating flow is determined by a balance between the driving hydrostatic
488
head in the liquid outside of the bundle and the total pressure drop (hydrostatic, acceleration and friction) across the bundle. In submerged evaporators in refrigeration service, the pressure drop through the bundle needs to be calculated so that the decrease in the saturation temperature of the refrigerant which will lower the system capacity can be estimated. In a variety of other applications the estimation of the pressure drop through a bundle is important so that circulation pumps can be sized more accurately. To calculate the hydrostatic and acceleration pressure drops, the primary quantity needed is the void fraction. For the friction pressure drop, using a separated flow model, a two-phase friction multiplier is required. 3.1. Void Fraction In vertical two-phase crossflow, there have been five studies that have addressed void fractions in tube bundles. Kondo and Nakajima [13] have taken indirect void fraction measurements in vertical upflow across horizontal staggered tube bundles using air-water mixtures using a quick-closing valve technique. The void fraction increased with superficial gas velocity; the superficial liquid velocity had no effect. The results also showed that the number of tube rows affected the void fraction. The void fraction data were correlated but the correlation cannot be generally applied because of the very low mass velocities used to generate the data. Schrage et al. [16] tested air-water mixtures in a square, inline tube bundle with p/D = 1.3 using quick-closing plate valves to isolate the bundle. At a fixed quality the void fraction increased with increasing mass velocity and was significantly lower than the homogeneous value. The data were correlated by applying a mass velocity correction factor in terms of a Froude number to the homogeneous void fraction: a I aH
=
1 + 0. I23Fr-O.19 1lnx
(3)
Dowlati et al. [17], using gamma densitometry, measured void fractions in a square, inline 10 row tube bundle with p/D = 1.26. They also found that the void fraction was a function of the mass flux and were able to correlate all their data using the Wallis parameter, jg*: a
=
0.88 jg* O.57
(4)
Note that the Schrage et al. correlation has poorer accuracy at low qualities than at high qualities (their experiment went to qualities as high as 68%) and that the Dowlati et aI. experiment was limited to qualities less than about 10%. The Schrage et al. [16] correlation tended to overpredict the low mass velocity data of Dowlati et al. [17]. In a later paper Dowlati et al. [18] measured void fractions in two 20 row inline tube bundles (p/D = 1.30 and 1.75) and found no pitch-to-diameter ratio effect on the void fraction. (See Fig. 5.) They correlated their data with: (5)
489
1 .0
0.8
H O M OG ENEOUS VOID FRACTIO N
0.6
CS
:
0.4
..
0.2
0
1 0-
4
I
6
..
•
1 0-
3
•
. ,.0"p �
0'; ,. .
crt. � .
•
0
..
", 0
..
0 o 6 6• 0 0 6 .t. 0
• 0 .. 6
•
t.
•
6 • 0 • 2 1 0-
Q UA L I TY
0
0
0 G
o 27 • 77 6 96
kg/m 2 s •
.. 1 5 1 262
o
348 5 03 ,. 599 � 696 • 818 v
1 0-
1
1.30, Inline [18]). Robinson et al. [19] studied void distributions in bubbly flows through yawed rod arrays. For an inline square array with the rods yawed up toward the left,
FIGURE 5. Shellside Void Fraction in Vertical Upflow in p/D = Bundle (Dowlati et al.
large bubbles drifted to the right wall and small bubbles migrated toward the left. For the rotated square array no bubble migration along the rod axis was observed. This behavior is attributed to vortices forming behind the rods. Reinke and Jensen compared the pressure drop across an inline and a staggered tube bundle with the same p/D ratio when operating at identical conditions. As shown on Fig. 6 for a low mass flux condition, the much lower pressure drop in the staggered tU:be bundle is directly attributable to a greater void fraction in the staggered tube bundle than in the inline tube bundle. Figure 7 is for another condition and shows the significantly different behavior between the staggered and inline bundles. The differences can be attributed to both the void fraction and friction factor characteristics of the two bundles. In horizontal crossflow, Grant and Chisholm have developed an expression for the void fraction in stratified flow. The correlation used to represent the data was
[20]
[1 2]
(1 -
a)
=
1+
1
(6)
where k2 was a velocity evaluated by (7)
490
.00
.05
.10
.15
Xo
.20
.25
.30
.35
.40
.45
.50
.045 o
STAGGERED ARRAY
+ IN-LINE ARRAY
� .n
110.
-
o
a. <J
o
o
0
0
0
-
-
.020
.0
2.5
5.0
7.5
( kW/m 2 )
1 0.0
q"
1 2.5
1 5.0
1 7.5
20.0
22.5
FIGURE 6. Comparison of Total Pressure Drops Between Staggered and Inline Tube Bundles with p/D = 1.30 at P = 500 kPa and G = 100 kg/m 2 s using R-113 (Reinke and Jensen [20]). Xo .00
.15
.10
.05
o
.050
+
.35
.30
.25
. 20
STAGGERED ARRAY IN-LINE A RRAY
.40
o
� .0
o
-
a. <J
o
o
o
O.
5.
1 0.
1 5.
20.
q" ( kW/m 2 ) 25.
30.
35.
FIGURE 7. Comparison of Total Pressure Drops Between Staggered and Inline Tube Bundles with pm 1.30 at P = 500 kPa and G = 300 kg/m2 s using R-113 (Reinke and Jensen [20]). =
49 1
The authors stated that this correlation represented the data well at low qualities and underestimated the data at higher qualities. Grant et al. [21] also have developed expressions for the volume fraction occupied by the separated liquid in stratified flow. Studies on void fractions in tube bundles are rare, and the correlations which have developed have not been widely tested. In particular, the effect of bundle geometry has not been quantified. Hence, care must be exercised when using the available correlations, particularly when the tube bundle geometry is different than that used in development of the correlations. Likewise, since it has been shown that the homogeneous model poorly represents the void fraction in crossflow, the use of the homogeneous void fraction cannot be justified. 3.2. Two-Phase Friction Multiplier In comparison to the work that has been done on shellside void fraction, there has been more attention given to the two-phase friction multiplier. However, the main emphasis of these experiments has been directed to horizontal crossflow over horizontal tube bundles; the lack of a suitable void fraction model for vertical crossflow, which would be required to properly reduce the experimental data to obtain the two-phase friction multiplier, is the reason for fewer vertical flow studies. Chisholm and co-workers (e.g. Grant and Chisholm [12] , Chisholm [14, 22] have developed a model for the two-phase friction multiplier. Data were obtained from two bundles with a equilateral triangular layout with p/D = 1.25 and were fit using '"
=
Bx(2-m)/2( 1 _x)(2-m)/2 + x(2-m)
where
'V
(8)
is a normalized two-phase friction multiplier defined as (9)
As shown on Fig. 8, '" is a function of mass flux and flow pattern; early expressions for B are given by Eq. 2 for horizontal crossflow. While these expressions gave reasonable results, there was a problem with them since the expressions indicate that the two-phase friction multiplier was a function of the number of tube rows. However, Chisholm [22] has corrected this in a more recent paper and has presented the expression for B: B
=
{..
+
(10)
where c = 1I(580000[kg!m�])( 2-m)/2 and Bf is as in Eq. 2 Other models have been developed for horizontal flows but this one presented by Chisholm and co workers is the best developed of the group.
492 eroao. .. v../CkI(.' i» . 1 7.5 e ns 0 532 D .. 1.lI 0 1;0 '" J 5. A S'," .. 265 • J130
I 0-3
1 0-4
10-�
10-1
Mus Drynes Fn�D, x
100
FIGURE 8. Normalized Two-Phase Multiplier (Chisholm [22]). Schrage et al. [16] obtained two-phase friction multiplier data for vertical crossflow. There were strong mass velocity trends in the two-phase friction multiplier data and, depending on the value of the Martinelli parameter, <1>1 could either increase or decrease with increasing mass velocity. (See Fig. 9) This behavior was attributed to changing flow patterns. Although it was inappropriate, the Grant and Chisholm [12] flow pattern map for two-phase flow in bundles was used to classify the flows as either bubbly, slug, or spray. It was shown that in bubbly flow <1>1 decreased with increasing mass velocity, but in both slug and spray flow � decreased with increasing mass velocity. The data were fit to Eq. 11:
where
(11)
493
200
1 00
1><1
50
N -'
-s.
*
1><1
1><1 *
o
Nk
��
20
X I><1 ��
MI( f!- >-N
10
1 0.01
�
•
Ox
*
N
lI(
x
*
�(;� ( N 1
0.1
I>(
G KG/ M * * 2 S 1 49 683 )( 1 1 7 459 78 390 � 59 254 274 54 1 95
+
� � � � >� �� ° �t><+ + � �t><
MART I N ELLI PARAM ETER
+0
1 00
FIGURE 9. Two-Phase Friction Multiplier for Inline Bundle with p/D = 1.30 (Schrage et a1. [16]). Table 1 Coefficients in Nondimensional Two-Phase Friction Multiplier Correlation (Eq. ll). Flow Patternt
C1
C2
C3
C4
0.036 2.18 0.253
1.51 -0.643 -1.50
7.79 11.6 12.4
-0.057 0.233 0.207
C5 0.774 1.09 0.205
*If Fr S; 0.15, use Ishihara et a1. [23] correlation tFlow pattern evaluated with Grant and Chisholm [12] flow pattern map The values of the coefficients are given in Table 1 as well as a restriction on the use of Eq. 11. (Note that the use of C5 * 1 is different than what other investigators have used and thus restricts the use of this correlation to qualities less than about 50%.) Dowlati et a1. [17] also measured the void fraction in their experiment so that they could accurately calculate the twophase friction multiplier. They concluded that '1 was not afected by the mass velocity and were able to satisfactorily correlate their data using Eq. 11 with C = 4.0 and C5 = 1.0.
494
Dowlati et a1. [18] successfully correlated their data for both test sections using Eq. 1 1 using m = 0.2 in X tt . For p/D = 1.30, C = 8 and C 5 = 1 . 0 for G > 260 kg/m2 s; for G < 260 kg/m2 s a strong mass flux effect was noted. (See Fig. 10.) For p/D = 1.75, C = 50 and C 5 = 1.0 for G > 200 kg/m2 s fit the data reasonably well; again, at lower mass fluxes, strong mass flux effects were observed. Generally, for a given value of Xtt , the larger p/D bundle had the larger two-phase friction multiplier. 1 00
N
--
8-
0
o
0
•
•
0
• A
10
G kg/m2 9
o
•
A
0. 1 0. 1
0
•
o
348 " 503 " 599 1 5 1 o 696 26 2 • 8 1 8 27 77 96
•
0
6. •
6
•
•
•
Eq.8 ( C =8)
X tt
10
1 00
FIGURE 10. Liquid-Only Two-Phase Friction Multiplier Data and Martinelli Parameter, p/D = 1.30 (Dowlati et a1. [18]). Other correlations have been developed for <1>1 in vertical crossflow but since the void fraction used to reduce the data were incorrect or were not given, the accuracy and validity of those expressions is questionable. Ishihara et a1. [23] reviewed several correlations and the data in the literature. In general, they concluded that all the correlations predicted the shear-controlled or high pressure drop data better than the low pressure drop data where the influence of the void fraction would be more evident. One of the major conclusions drawn by Ishihara et a1., which is still valid, was that since the various models were developed under specific flow orientations and geometries, application of a model outside its intended limits is not recommended due to the empirical nature of the correlations. Equation 1 1 was then used to correlate the data bank with C = 8.0 and C5 = 1 .0. This predicted the shear-controlled flow data for X tt < 0.2 with good results; however for
495
X tt > 0.2 deviations were quite large, exceeding 60 percent. To improve the correlation in this range, Ishihara et al. concluded that by categorizing the data according flow pattern and then obtaining the best curve fit for each pattern, an improvement in predictions could be made. However, this was not done by the authors. As noted at the beginning of this section, the two-phase friction multiplier for crossflow in tube bundles has been addressed in more detail then has the void fraction. However, for vertical flows, only the Schrage et al. [ 16] and Dowlati et al. [17, 18] correlations can be recommended for general use since they are the only ones for which the true void fraction was available to reduce the experimental data. These correlations have not been tested extensively so their limits of applicability are unknown. The Grant and Chisholm [12] equation is recommended for horizontal flows. As with the void fraction, more research is required.
to
4. HEAT TRANSFER COEFFICIENTS Two approaches have been used to obtain heat transfer coefficient data for shellside boiling: natural circulation and forced convection experimental set ups. Palen and co-workers [2-4] used natural circulation bundles and found that the heat transfer coefficients in the bundles were much greater than those for a single tube. (See Fig. 2). Circulation and turbulence caused by the rising vapor bubbles were credited with increasing the coefficients. Clearance between tubes was found to be a significant factor affecting the heat transfer coefficient; tube layout angle was not. However, the coupled processes of the recirculating flow and the heat transfer obscure the effect of one parameter versus another. Because of proprietary considerations, no quantitative information was presented. Tests on much smaller natural circulation tube bundles, e.g., Mednikova [24], Wallner [25], Wall and Park [26], Fujita et a1. [27, 28], Kawai et al. [29], Hahne and Mueller [30], have confirmed the increased heat transfer coefficients (compared to a single tube in pool boiling) for the tubes higher in the bundle. The effect was most pronounced at lower wall superheats and decreased with increasing heat flux. Differences between the heat transfer coefficients for pool boiling from a single tube and in a bundle can be large at lower heat fluxes but decrease and eventually disappear as the heat flux increases. (See, for example, Fig. 11.) More recently, the local heat transfer coefficients throughout a large (241tube) kettle reboiler have been measured (Leong and Cornwell [31], Cornwell and Schuller [32]). Fluid recirculation (Fig. 12) in the shell of the simulated slice of the reboiler was caused by rising vapor. Heat transfer coefficients (Fig. 13) increased with increasing height in the bundle. This work was extended by Cornwell et al. [33] by rotating the inline tube bundle by 45° thereby making a staggered tube bundle. Comparison of the inline and staggered tube bundle data indicated that the heat transfer coefficients were about the same but with the staggered tube data slightly larger; this was found at each heat flux. A later paper (Andrews and Cornwell [34]) indicated that the small width of the bundle in Leong and Cornwell [31] affected the heat transfer seriously and that
496 �
�
..
E
·0
.c
C
c
Q)
Qi
;;: e)
0 Q)
I.
c: CIS
5 1 03
4
1 03 8 6
4
en
2
!:
1 02
Ci
Q)
I
• • • •
2
s
f1 6 • • • • •
• 5 • 4
• 3 • 2 • 1
1 bar 2d. 37 8 mm haaled lube
R 1 1 p.
•
1 02
2
4
6 8 1 03
2
4
H e at flow d e n s i ty
6 8 1 04
2
4
6
8 1 05
qn
FIGURE 11. Heat Transfer Coefficients for Low Finned Tube Bundle (Hahne and Mueller [30]).
FIGURE 12. Streamlines in Tube Bundle (Cornwell et al. 1980).
497
q = 2 0 kW 1 m 2
·5
_
-- _
-
-e
2·
FIGURE 13. Heat Transfer Results of Leong and Cornwell [3 1]. Lines are Contours of Constant Heat Transfer Coefficient (kW/m2K). the heat transfer coefficients should be at least 25% smaller. Other tests, e.g. Grant et al. [35], Nakajima and co-workers [36, 37], showed the same trends. One of the main drawbacks in using natural circulation through a bundle (from which an evaluation of how the heat transfer coefficient varies with local conditions is to be made) is that the local mass velocity and quality throughout the bundle are unknown; hence, the effects of flow rate, quality and bundle geometry on the heat transfer are not separable. To avoid this problem several studies have used forced flow through a modeled section of a tube bundle. Polley et al. [38] tested a 36-tube, 6-row bundle in forced convection with known fluid conditions. The two-phase forced flow was found to significantly enhance the boiling heat transfer coefficient, particularly at low wall superheats. However, this enhancement decreased as the wall superheat increased. They also found a large increase in heat transfer coefficient with increasing quality. Hwang and Yao [39, 40], in a similar study, obtained comparable results. Jensen and co-workers [20,41-44] studied forced flow of R- 1 13 in three tube bundles. They found that except when both the heat flux and mass velocity were low, there was only a modest increase in the heat transfer coefficient from the bottom tube row to the top tube row. As shown in Fig. 14, mass velocity and heat flux had strong influences on the heat transfer coefficient while the effect of quality was less. Tests using two square, inline bundles (pil = 1.30 and 1.70) and one equilateral triangular bundle (pil = 1.30) showed that bundle layout can affect the heat transfer coefficient but only at lower heat fluxes and mass fluxes. At higher heat fluxes, there were little differences in the heat transfer coefficients among the three bundles. (See, for example, Fig. 15.)
498
5.0
4.0
Q" � �
Z
z
3.0
Z
Z
Z
Z
Z
Z
N
E
.. .c
2.0
1 .0
o +
0
""
""
""
""
""
¥
¥
¥
¥
¥
0
0
4.40
kW/m' kW/m'
X 5 S8
kW/m'
2
2.17
4
G s G, G - G. G = G.
8
6
+ 8.30 Z 1 8.9
Xo =.082 Xo ".206 Xo �.273
Y 25.2
12
10
16
14
0
0
0
0
0
*
�
""
¥
¥
¥
0
0
0
""
""
Z
Z
kW/m' kW/m' kW/m'
18
20
Z
z
*
•
0
0
G . G, G . G. G s G,
22
XO
XO Xo
".021 ".079 =.118
24
26
28
R O W N U M B ER
FIGURE 14. Effect of Heat Flux on the Heat Transfer Coefficient at P = 517 kPa and at G 1 = 50 kg/m2 s, G2 = 460 kg/m2s (Jensen and Hsu [41]).
o
o
d
o
o
�
0
+
0
0
+0
.
12
o
14
.16
FIGURE 15. Comparison of Heat Transfer Coefficients Between the !nline and Staggered Tube Bundles (p/D = 1.30) P = 500 kPa, G = 500 kg/m 2 s , q" = 31.5 kW/m2 (Jensen et al. [44]).
499
The mechanisms governing the heat transfer behavior of boiling in a tube bundle appear to be nucleation, convection and, perhaps, thin film evaporation, e.g., Fujita et a1. [27, 28], Hwang and Yao [39, 40], Jensen and Hau [41], Cornwell and Schuller [32]. Depending on the flow conditions and heat flux, there is a trade -off among these three mechanisms. There are combinations of conditions when it appears that one or another of the mechanisms dominates and for different conditions a different mechanism will dominate. For example, as shown on Fig. 14 at a low mass flux and heat flux the increase in the heat transfer coefficient from the first to the last row is in the range of 300% while at higher mass and heat fluxes the increase is minimal. Measurements of the circumferential variation in the heat transfer coefficient (Jensen and Hsu [41], Reinke and Jensen [20]) tend to support the trade-off among the mechanisms. In an inline tube, Jensen and Hsu [41] found that generally the coefficients were highest at the two sides exposed to the highest fluid velocities, next highest at the bottom of the tube where the bubbles rising from the lower tube swept the surface and lowest at the top of the tube (Fig. 16). As the heat flux increased, the circumferential variations tended to level out. Comparable behavior was also obtained with flow through a staggered bundle (Reinke and Jensen [20]).
1 .20 1 .15 CI �. < ..c .. ..c
1 .10 1 .05
0
1 .00
+
a + ¢
0 + ¢
0 -90 90 ±1 80
0
¢
¢
0.90 0.85
-1 80 -1 35 -90
-45
+
o
¢
+
0
0.95
o
+
a
0
0
45
Theta ( Deg rees)
6.30 kW/m2 1 8.9 kW/m2 31 . 5 kW/m2
0
0
90
+ 0 ¢
1 35
FIGURE 16. Effect of Heat Flux on the Variation of Circumferential Heat Transfer Coefficient at P = 206 kPa and G = 190 kglm2 s (Reinke and Jensen [20]). Because of the trade-offs among the mechanisms evident in the data, many researchers (e.g., Hwang and Yao [39, 40], Jensen and Hsu [41], Bennett et a1.
500
[45], Polley et [38]) have used a Chen-type correlation to try to predict the heat transfer coefficients in tube bundles. The form of this correlation is
aI.
(12) The convective coefficient, hconv ' and the nucleate boiling coefficient, hNB , have been calculated using correlations from the literature or have been experimentally measured on the bundle under study. The suppression factor, S, frequently has been evaluated with an expression developed by Bennett et al. [45] in which the influence of bundle geometry on S is incorporated. Various researchers have applied the momentum analogy (similar to that developed by Chen [46] for intube flow) to flow across a tube bundle and have developed the following expression for F: (13) where n is the Reynolds number exponent in the single-phase convection heat transfer correlation of the form Nu = C Re n pr O • 34 and m is the Reynolds number exponent in the single-phase friction factor in a Blasius-type correlation for the tube bundle of the form f = C Re-m . A variety of approximations have been used for
501
Sinel. Tub. 1n Sundle at qs
•
15 kW/m2
JO Bundle 20
10
FIGURE 17. Sliding Bubble Analysis of the Q-6T Curves at a Bundle Heat Flux of 15 kW/m2 (Cornwell [50]). under the rising bubbles caused the higher heat transfer coefficients compared to single tubes in pool boiling. Fujita et al. [53] have developed a two-mechanism-model for bundle boiling by adapting the Mikic-Rohsenow [54] pool boiling model to include the effects of convection caused by bubbles rising from lower tubes. As with the Cornwell model, this model is for lower heat fluxes, qualities and mass fluxes. In this model, the heated surface is divided into three parts (Fig. 18): for the bottom 20% of a tube, bubbles flowing directly from the tube immediately lower in the bubble set this heat transfer coefficient; for the sides (60% of the tube), the convective effects are set by all the vapor flowing from lower tubes; the top 20% is assumed only to have nucleation heat transfer present. The tube average heat transfer coefficient is the area-weighted average of the three parts. Their correlation is based on data from their national circulation bundle. Hence, the correlation is not generally applicable, but does show a possible approach to the development of a general correlation. 5. CRITICAL HEAT FLUX CONDITION Few studies have addressed the CHF condition in tube bundles. Palen and Taborek [2] and Palen and Small [3] studied full size tube bundles. They concluded that Kern's [55] recommendation for the bundle average CHF was very conservative and proposed their own correlation which was a
502
FIGURE 18. Variation in Boiling Behavior with Heat Flux and Pressure (Fujita et al. [28]). modification of Zuber's [56] single tube pool boiling CHF correlation. Later work by HTRI (Palen et al. [4]) indicated that this, too, was very conservative. Generally, it was concluded that for kettle reboilers the average maximum heat flux was considerably less than that for a single tube in pool boiling (see Fig. 2) and was a strong function of bundle geometry. Grant et al. [35] also tested a kettle reboiler and obtained a boiling curve similar to that shown in Fig. 2. The maximum heat flux was about one-third less than the CHF calculated using the Leinhard and Dhir [57] correlation for a single tube and was about 2.5 times the value calculated with the tube bundle correlation of Palen and Small. Chan and Shoukri [58] tested a very small bundle and showed that the system hydrodynamics played an important role in affecting the CHF condition. Schuller and Cornwell [59] tested a 241-tube electrically heated bundle. Each tube was instrumented with a thermocouple so that the heat transfer distribution throughout the bundle could be determined. Their results indicated a very complex and confusing behavior at higher heat fluxes (see Fig. 19); they suggested that some of the tubes in the bundle operated in the partial film boiling regime. They also found horizontal bands of tubes over which the heat transfer coefficients were alternately high and low. Generally, they concluded that the CHF decreases with increasing quality so that the most likely location for the CHF condition to initiate would be at the top of the bundle; however, they also concluded that the CHF condition may occur anywhere in the bundle. As these authors noted "These results do not simplify the task of the designer endeavoring to maximize the heat transfer in a boiler while avoiding dryout and vapor blanketing."
503 TIbe height In bundle
15
10
100 �wAol 10 . • 60 . , ,. .
.. •
. -0 a
]0 �w/ol %0 • 10 �
10
FIGURE 19. Variation of Heat Transfer Coefficient with Tube Row in Reboiler Rig (Schuller and Cornwell [59]). There have been only a few studies in which a known forced flow has been used for CHF studies in small arrays of tubes. Hasan et al. [60] investigated the CHF in saturated liquids on small diameter wires with adjacent unheated wires. An unheated cylinder any place except directly upstream of the heated upstream cylinder more than about four diameters away from the heated cylinder had only a minor influence; closer than four diameters resulted in a significant reduction (up to 90%) in the CHF. Above a certain velocity, there was a sharp drop in the CHF. Rahmani [61] found a decreasing CHF with increasing velocity at low qualities, but quality level was not given so that interpretation of these data is questionable. Cumo et al. [62] tested a 3x3 staggered bundle with a triangular pitch; inlet quality was varied. At zero quality, the mass velocity variation had only a minor effect on the CHF. Increasing the inlet quality caused an increase in the CHF such that at about 10-20% quality the CHF was 15 to 20% higher than the saturated liquid CHF at the same mass velocity. (See Fig. 20.) On the other hand, Schuller and Cornwell [59] for an inline bundle found a decreasing CHF with increasing quality; the effect of mass velocity was not given. Yao and Hwang [63] also tested an inline bundle and found that the CHF for a slightly subcooled liquid flow was much lower than that for a single tube in saturated pool boiling. Effect of quality was not given. They presented a CHF correlation based on a single tube in an equivalent channel. Dykas and Jensen [64] and Leroux and Jensen [65] have measured the CHF on a single tube in 5 x 27 unheated inline and staggered tube bundles. The shape of the CHF-quality curves display three distinct patterns which progress from one to another as mass flux increased (Fig. 21). At low mass fluxes, the CHF data monotonically decreased with increasing quality. At intermediate
504
G · 6S lkg/m'·sl
G - 4 1 Ik"m'·.1 J4
��
32
.� J6
G • 91
Ikg/m' .,
G - 1 1 6 Ikglm'·"
30
28
•
o
10
K 1'\'
20
JO
K 1'\1
10
10
JO
FIGURE 20. DNB Heat Fluxes Versus Quality in a Staggered Tube Bundle (Cumo et [62]).
aI.
349 3aB 289
00
269 N ( E , �
�
1.0. J: U
249
229
289
la9
169 149
129
° D
lea
a9 -. 1
.,
.1
° °
X
X
o .2
° Sbo
X XX
0 00 �o
00
3
.4
QUAL I T Y .
�O
. X a X
0
0
0
l eekg/mA2*s
2eekg/mA2*s
A 0 ° X
0
,, "
� >b ��
MASS FLUX
S ek g /m"2*s
0 0
D O O� A A A A. A.
O °� D
i�A A.
LEGEND
1 . 5 bar
1 . 3 INLINE
329
AD
O� 2SC0 .S
3eekg/mA2*s
4e0kg/mA2*s
S00kg/mA2*s
({)
a
0 <&' 0 0 .6
.7
FIGURE 21. C HF data with R-113 for an Inline Tube Bundle with p/D (Dykas and Jensen [64]).
.a
=
1.30
505
mass fluxes with increasing qualities, the CHF data initially decreased to a relative minimum, then increased to a relative maximum, and finally began to decrease again as higher qualities were reached. At high mass fluxes, as quality increased, the CHF rose gradually from the zero quality value to a maximum and then began to decrease. For all mass fluxes, the zero-quality CHF points clustered around an average value which varied slightly with test section geometry. The inline bundle with p/D = 1.30 had high CHF values (for the same conditions) than for the inline bundle with p/D 1.70 on the staggered bundle with p/D 1.30. These two studies show all the CHF trends that have been found individually in previous investigations. No correlation was presented. While possible mechanisms for the CHF condition in tube bundles have been discussed (e.g. , Hewitt [66]) and correlations used for tube bundle performance predictions suggested (e.g., Yilmaz [67] , Palen [6]), too few data have been obtained for the CHF condition in crossflow to be considered quantified in any sense. Leroux and Jensen [65] and others have suggested that the various CHF mechanisms are probably due to the flow patterns present in the two-phase flow. (Fig. 22) At low mass fluxes, a departure from nucleate boiling phenomenon similar to that which occurs in pool boiling may bring on the CHF condition. The accompanying flow pattern may be described as bubbly. High quality CHF behavior is believed to result from a dry out process. A spray-annular flow pattern usually occurs at high qualities. At intermediate qualities, where the slope of the CHF-quality curve is upward, the CHF trend may reflect a transition from the low quality to the high quality mechanism. The flow pattern in this region also maybe transitional. Because no general flow pattern map for cross-flow in multi-tube bundles is available, it is not possible to confirm this speculation. =
=
CHF
QU ll l l ty
FIGURE 22. Basic curve patterns observed in the data and postulated flow patterns and CHF Mechanisms (Leroux and Jensen [65]).
506
6. SIMULATION OF CROSSFLOW BOILING The design of heat exchangers with shellside boiling has progressed from approaches based on overall bundle performance predictions (ignoring local conditions) local conditions predictions being integrated over the whole bundle. Fair and Klip [47] point out that early design relied extensively on empirical approaches and bundle average quantities were used for design. Kettle reboiler type and full bundle boiler type heat exchangers (Fig. 1) were designed by this method. However, after the appearance of the work of Leong and Cornwell [31] which graphically showed the recirculation flow patterns in a kettle reboiler, the recirculation in the shell and the local convective heat transfer effects in the tube bundle began to be addressed. Brisbane et al. [68] were the first to develop a recirculation model; others (Palen and Yang [49] , Whalley and Butterworth [69] , Yilmaz [67]) presented similar analyses. All these approaches used a simplified one-dimensional model of the bundle which assumed the same number of rows in each column in the bundle and uniform flow through the bundle. From this model, the total recirculating flow, the outlet quality and the variation in heat transfer coefficient with tube row could be estimated. The results of these analyses were compared to the experimental results obtained by Leong and Cornwell [31] in their simulated slice of a kettle reboiler. Generally, there was reasonable agreement between the predicted and experimental circulation flow rates. For a given bundle diameter, the flow first increased with heat flux, reached a peak and then decreased with further increases in heat flux. The predicted heat transfer coefficients did show increases at tube rows higher in the bundle and tended to show the same trends as the experimental data. The transverse variations in flow and heat transfer coefficients across the bundle could not be shown because of the type of model chosen. Palen and Yang [49] and Fair and Klip [47] compared their results to proprietary data with reasonable agreement (+20 to -39%) between predicted and experimental overall heat flux for a given overall temperature difference; however, they adjusted numerous constants to obtain the best overall prediction. Jensen [70] also developed a one-dimensional geometric model but allowed for a different number of tubes and for a varying driving pressure head in each column. The effects of heat flux, weir height, geometric model , pressure drop model, bundle size and pressure level on the recirculating flow and exit quality were examined. It was concluded that the geometric model used does have a significant effect on the magnitude of the calculated flow as does the pressure drop model (up to a 100% variation in predicted recirculating flow) and that the simplified model used in previous investigations can obscure significant details of the recirculating flow. Full bundle boilers, such as are used in submerged evaporators in the refrigeration industry, have been analyzed in Payvar [48] and Webb et al. [7 1, 72]. These studies have also developed one-dimensional models of the process and are similar the kettle reboiler analyses. However, there are two main differences. As shown in Fig. 1B, the small shell to bundle clearance permits little liquid recirculation to occur; in addition, rather than the natural convection dominated situation as in kettle reboilers, the submerged evaporator is forced convection dominated.
to
to
507
Two-dimensional models for crossflow boiling on the shellside of horizontal multi-tube bundles have been presented by Carlucci et al. [73] and Edwards and Jensen [74]. Carlucci et al. developed a finite difference solution for the complete homgeneous flow field in a kettle reb oiler. The method used false porosity to account for the volume reduction in the shell due to the presence of the tube bundle. Unfortunately, the purpose of this investigation was only to show that the computational method can give a reasonable representation of the flow field; no discussion of the results was given and the model's accuracy was not verified. Edwards and Jensen [74] performed a more complete study using a two fluid model that accounted for slip between the phases (unlike Carlucci et a1.). Their results demonstrated that the two-dimensional simulations do provide more information and model reboilers better than one-dimensional simul ations. These results accurately predicted the location of the recirculation center from Cornwell's experimental reboiler rig and demonstrated that large transverse flows do exist in reboilers, but only over a limited extent of the bundle (Fig. 23). Also noted was the movement of the recirculation center down and away from the reboiler center as the bundle average heat flux increased. This contributed to a significant decrease in the recirculation rate through the bundle. Additional work on the interfacial friction model and pressure drop correlation are required to improve predictions with this simulation. There are no data for local flow parameters with sufficient detail throughout a bundle to fully validate the accuracy of the two-dimensional models.
FIGURE 23. Mass Flux VectorNoid Fraction Contour Plots for Constant Wall Superheat: A) 4C; B ) 15C (Edwards and Jensen [74].
508
7. TUBE BUNDLES WITH ENHANCED TUBES Research on the use of augmented surfaces in tube bundles has also been performed, although not to the same extent as with single tubes. Generally, three types of enhanced surfaces have been used in tube bundle studies: finned tubes, finned tubes which have been cold-worked, and surfaces with a porous, sintered metallic matrix bQnded to the base tube. The heat transfer behavior of these surfaces in a bundle depends on the type of enhancement and the operating conditions. Finned tubes have been studied in a variety of configurations, fluids and operating conditions (e.g., Myers and Katz [75], Wall and Park [26], Danilova and Dyundin [76], Hahne and Mueller [30], Yilmaz and Palen [77], Cornwell and Scoones [78], Hahne et a1. [79]). Generally, these investigations showed the finned tubes exhibit the same behavior as previously discussed for smooth tube bundles. The heat transfer coefficients varied with position and heat flux. At low heat fluxes, the heat transfer coefficient increased significantly at rows higher in the bundle; as the heat flux increased, the separate curves for each tube row converged to a single curve which was representative of a single finned tube. The induced convection of the vapor rising from the lower tubes and sweeping the upper tubes was credited with the enhanced heat transfer performance, just as it was in a plain tube bundle. Cornwell and Scoones [78] presented data that show the same behavior and suggest a correlation for the heat transfer coefficient. This correlation is based on the observation that nucleate boiling completely dominates for some conditions and for other conditions convection dominates. Their two-part correlation reflects the existence of the two regimes of heat transfer. Hahne et al. [79] measured void fractions around a finned tube in a bundle and found that vapor jets form in the inter-tube space; this channelling has been observed by others. However, they did not find any slug or annular flow occuring. Likewise, they noted that visual observations of vapor distribution around a tube are misleading; the void measurements showed that rather than a vapor cloud surrounding a tube, the mixture generally has a normal distribution of liquid and vapor. The second type of enhanced tubes in tube bundles (e.g., Arai et a1. [80], Yilmaz et al [81], Stephan and Mitrovic [82]) to be discussed are finned tubes which have been cold worked. These tubes (e.g., Gewa-T and Thermoexcel-E) have had their fins bent over to form reentrant type cavities which are interconnected below the surface. While there are some inconsistencies among the results from the different investigations, several conclusions can be drawn. A single enhanced tube of this type out performs both a single plain tube or a plain tube bundle (Fig. 24). However, the enhanced tube's performance relative to a single enhanced tube was much smaller than that for a plain tube bundle relative to a single plain tube. Hence, it appears that the "bundle effect" evident in plain tube bundles is not as significant for this type of enhanced surface (Fig. 25). We can speculate as to the heat transfer mechanisms that may be responsible for the smaller or negligible enhancement of the enhanced tubes in a bundle compared to single tubes. In the plain tube bundle at lower wall superheats, convective effects are large compared to the nucleation effects. However, the n u cl e a t i o n characteristics o f the a ugme n t e d t ub e s are
509
CD 0 (D c
4
.c
Evaporator lutle bundle (I ..
Evaporalor lube bundle
2S"- LIOt'
(Ll" 2'-·J...
Evaporat r lube bundle(LII'I
21-' L""
(non un form heal laid dialrl
ion)
20--) '7.S"''") 17 5
..)
10' "" -
-?
(�48 !���:) LOw lln�
5
1 0'
Heat flux q
(W/m2)
FIGURE 24. Bundle Boiling with a Finned and Thermoexcel-E Tube (Arai et. aI.
[80]).
FIGURE 25. Bundle Boiling with GEWA-T Tube (Yilmaz et aI. [81]).
510
significantly enhanced because of the reentrant cavities. Due to the internal geometry of the cavities and the heat transfer processes which occur inside the cavities, convective effects outside the cavity will have little effect on these internal processes since the convective flow cannot intrude into these small cavities. The overall heat transfer process generally is dominated by the internal heat transfer processes. Convective effects will influence the process only at low heat fluxes and will become negligible at much lower heat fluxes than plain tubes. Another enhancement technique which is directed toward improving the nucleation characteristics of tubes is the bonding of a porous, sintered metallic matrix to the base tube (e.g., Union Carbide ' s High Flux tubing). This augmentation technique has been investigated in a variety of tube bundles (e.g., Fujita et al. [27 , 28] , Fujita [83] , Czikk et al. [84], O'Neill et al. [85], Koyama and Hashizume [86]). In a comparison between a bundle with this enhanced surface and a plain tube bundle, about a factor of ten increase in the heat flux at a given overall temperature difference was obtained. The most significant aspect of this surface is that there was essentially no difference between its heat transfer characteristics in a bundle or on a single tube in a pool. The heat transfer coefficient of a single enhanced tube was much higher than that of a single smooth tube, but there was no additional heat transfer augmentation of the enhanced tube in a bundle due to convective effects. The explanation for this behavior would be similar to that offered above for the Gewa-T and Thermoexcel-E surfaces. 8. CONCLUSIONS
In the past several years research efforts on shellside crossflow boiling and heat transfer have been directed more toward the details of the processes rather than just the overall performance of the bundle. Apparently, it has been realized that to develop more efficient or innovative heat exchangers the local processes need to be understood so that the integrated effects of all the tubes can be used to determine the overall bundle performance. Information is being developed in a number of investigations but there still are few predictive s chemes or correlations which can be recommended with confidence. More experimental data on all facets of shellside crossflow boiling covering a wider range of fluids, flow conditions. and geometries are needed before accurate simulation/design programs can be developed. 9. NOMENCLATURE
parameter used in Eq. 7 ( ) parameters defined in Eq. 2 (-) parameters in Eq. 10 (-) tube diameter (m) two-phase Reynolds number factor (-) Froude number = G/pr'Jgfj (-) -
51 1
.*
gravity (9.806 mls2 ) mass velocity based on minimum flow area (kg/m2 s) heat transfer coefficient (W/m2 K) superficial vapor velocity based on minimum flow area
Jg k K2 m n N p �P dP/dz q R S x x s , Xb ,xf a f2
P
Il
Xtt 'If
Wallis parameter, Pg 112 j g I thermal conductivity (W/mK) parameter defined in Eq. 6 (-) exponent in Blasius equation Reynolds number exponent in Eq. 12 number of tube rows tube pitch (m) pressure drop (kPa) pressure gradient (kPalm) heat flux (W/m2 ) parameter given in Eq. 1 (-) suppression factor (-) mass quality (-) transition qualities given by Eq. 1 (-) void fraction (-) parameter defined in Eq. 2 (-) dynamic viscosity (kg/ms) density (kg/m3 ) two-phase friction multiplier for liquid flowing alone (-) « 1-x)/x)2-m ( Pg/P f) (Ilty'llg)m parameter defined in Eq. 8
Subscripts convective conv liquid f total flow assumed liquid fo vapor g total flow assumed vapor go homogeneous H nucleate boiling NB two phase TP 10. REFERENCES 1 2
J.G. Collier, in Two-Phase Flow Heat Exchangers Thermal-Hydraulic Fundamentals and Design, S. Kakac, A.E. Bergles and E.O. Fernandes (eds), Kluwer, Doedrecht (1988) 659. J.W. Palen and J.J. Taborek, Chern. Engng. Prog., 58, No. 7 (1962) 37.
512
3
J.W. Palen and W.M. Small, Hydrocarbon Processing, 43, No. 1 1 ( 1963) 199. 4 J.W. Palen, A. Yard en, and J. Taborek, AIChE Symp.Ser. 68, No. 1 18 (1972) 50. 5 J.W. Palen, Heat Exchanger Design Handbook, Hemisphere, Washington ( 1983). 6 J.W. Palen, Mechanical Engineering Handbook, Chap. 67, Wiley, New York (1986) 1893. 7 M.K. Jensen, in Two-Phase Flow Heat Exchangers Thermal-Hydraulic Fundamentals and Design, S. Kakac, A.E. Bergles and E.O. Fernandes (eds), Kluwer, Dordrecht ( 1988) 707. 8 J.E . Diehl and C.H. Unruh, ASME Paper No. 58-HT-20 ( 1958). 9 K.-I. Nakajima, Heat Trans.-Jap. Res. , 7, No. 2, ( 1978) l. 10 LD.R. Grant and I. Murray, NEL Report No. 500 ( 1972). 11 LD.R. Grant and 1. Murray, NEL Report No. 560 (1974). I.D.R. Grant and Chisholm, J. Heat Trans. , 101 ( 1979) 38. 12 M. Kondo and K.-L Nakajima, Bulletin of the JSME, 23, No. 177 (1980) 385. 13 14 D . Chisholm, Two-Phase Flow in Pipelines and Heat Exchangers, George Godwin, London (1983). D. Chisholm, Heat Trans. Engng., 6 (1985) 48. 15 16 D .S. Schrage, J.-T. Hsu, and M.K. Jensen, AIChE Journal, 34 ( 1988) 107. 17 R. Dowlati, M. Kawaji and A.M.C. Chen, AIChE Symposium Series No. 263, 84 (1988) 126. R. Dowlati, M. Kawaji and A.M.C. Chen, AIChE Journal, 36 ( 1990) 765. 18 19 J.T. Robinson, N.E. Todreas, and D. Ebeling-Koning, Int. J. Multiphase Flow, 14 (1988) 645. m M.J. Reinke and M.K. Jensen, Boiling and Condensation in Heat Transfer Equipment, E. G. Ragi et al. (eds), ASME, HTD-85 (1987) 41. 21 LD.R. Grant, C.D. Cotchin and D. Chisholm, Heat and Mass Transfer Conference, Dubrovnik ( 1981). 22 D. Chisholm, AIChE Symposium Series No. 269, 85 ( 1989) 60. K. Ishihara, J.W. Palen and J. Taborek, Heat Transfer Engng. , 1, No. 3 Z3 (1979) 1. 24 N.M. Mednikova, Heat Trans.--Sov. Res., 6, No. 2 ( 1973) 30. R. Wallner, Proc., 13th Int. Congress of Refrigeration, Paper 2.19 (1971) 25 185. K.W. Wall and E.L. Park, Jr., Int. J. Heat Mass Trans., 21 ( 1978) 73. aJ Y. Fujita, H. Ohta, S. Hidaka and K. Nishikawa, Memoirs of the Faculty 27 of Engineering, Kyushu University, 44, No. 4, 427. Y. Fujita, H. Ohta, S. Hidaka and K Nishikawa, 8th Int. Heat Transfer 28 Conf., San Francisco, 5 ( 1986) 2 131. S. Kawai, N. Kawamura, T. Furukawa, T. Kitamoto and T. Machiyama, 29 Heat Transfer-Japanese Research, 18, No. 4 (1989) 52. E. Hahne and J. Mueller, Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 26 ( 1983) 849. 3) 31 L.S. Leong, and K.Cornwell, The Chemical Engineer, No. 343 ( 1979) 2 19. K. Cornwell and R.B. Schuller, Int. J. Heat Mass Trans., 25 ( 1982) 683. 32 K. Cornwell, J.G. Einarsson and P.R. Andrews, 8th Int. Heat Transfer � Conf., San Francisco, 5 ( 1986) 2 137. P.R. Andrews and KJ. Cornwell, Chern. Eng. Res. Des., 65 ( 1987) 127. 34 LD.R. Grant, C.D. Cotchin and J.A.R. Henry, Heat Exchangers for Two 35 Phase Applications, HTD- 27, ASME, NY (1980) 41.
513 36 :rl 38 ffi 40 41 42 43 44
45 46
47
48 49 50
51
52 53 M
55 56
57
58 59 m 61 62 63 64 ffi 00 ffI (:i3
K.I. Nakajima and K Morimoto, Refrigeration (Japanese), 44, No. 495 (1969) 3. K.I. Nakajima and A. Shiozawa, Heat Trans. - Jap. Res. ,4, No. 4 ( 1975) 49. G.T. Polley, T. Ralston and I.D.R. Grant, ASME Paper 80-HT-46, (1980). T.H. Hwang and S.C. Yao, Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 29 ( 1986) 785. T.H. Hwang and S.C. Yao, Int. Comm. Heat Mass Transfer, 13 (1986) 493. M.K. Jensen and J.-T. Hsu, J. Heat Transfer, 1 10 (1988) 976. J.-T . Hsu and M.K. Jensen, Collected Papers in Heat Transfer, K.T. Yang (ed), ASME, NY HTD-104 (1988) 239. J.-T. Hsu, G. Kocamustafaogullari and M.K. Jensen, in "Experimental Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics, and Thermodynamics 1988, RK. Shah, E.N. Ganic, and K.T. Yang (eds), Elsevier, NY (1988) 1634. M.K. Jensen, M.J. Reinke and J.-T. Hsu, Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science, 2 (1989) 465. D .L. Bennett, M.W. Davis and B.L. Hertzler, AIChE Symp. Ser. No. 199, 76 (1980) 91. J. Chen, I&EC Proc. Des. Dev., 5, No. 3 ( 1966) 322. J.R Fair and A. Klip, Chern. Engng. Prog., 79, No. 8 ( 1983) 86. P. Payvar, Two-Phase Heat Exchanger Symposium, HTD-44, ASME, NY (1983) 11. J.W. P al e n and C . C. Yang, Heat Exchangers for Two-Phase Applications, HTD-27, ASME, NY (1983) 55. K. Cornwell, HTFS Res. Symp., City University, London, RS695 (1987). K. Cornwell, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer, 33 ( 1990) 2579. K. Cornwell," 9th Int. Heat Transfer Conf., Jerusalem, 3 (1990) 455. Y. Fujita, H.Ohta, K. Hoshida and S. Hidaka Heat Transfer-Japanese Research, 19, No. 2 (1990) 25. B.B. Mikic and W.M. Rohsenow, J. Heat Transfer, 91 ( 1969) 245. D .Q. Kern, Process Heat Transfer, McGraw-Hill ( 1950). N. Zuber, J. Heat Transfer, 80 ( 1958) 711. J.H. Lienhard and V.K. Dhir, J. Heat Transfer, 95 ( 1973) 152. A.M.C. Chan and M. Shoukri, Fundamentals of Phase Change: Boiling and Condensation ASME, HTD-38 (1984) 1. RB. Schuller and K. Cornwell, Inst. Chern. Engn. Ser. No. 86, 2 ( 1984) 795. M.M. Hasan, R. Eichhorn and J.H. Leinhard, 7th Int. Heat Trans. Conf. , Munich, 4 (1982) 285. R Rahmani, Ph.D Dissertation, University of California, Berkeley ( 1983). M. Cumo, G.E. Farello, J. Gasiorowski, G. Iovino and A. Naviglio, Nuclear Technology, 49 (1980) 337. S.C. Yao and T.H. Hwang, Int. J. of Heat and Mass Transfer, 32 (1989) 95. S. Dykas and M.K. Jensen, Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science, 4 (1991). K.M. Leroux and M.K Jensen, J. Heat Transfer, 114 ( 1992). G.F. Hewitt, in Two-Phase Flows and Heat Transfer, S. Kakac and T.N. Veziroglu (eds), Hemisphere, Washington, D.C. ( 1976). S.B. Yilmaz, Chemical Engineering Progress, 83, No. 11 ( 1987) 64. T.W.C. Brisbane, I.D.R. Grant and P.B. Whalley, ASME Paper No . .80HT-42 (1980). ,
5 14 m 70 71 72 73
74 75 76 71
78
79 8)
81 82 83
84 85 86
f5l
P .B. Whalley and D. Butterworth, Heat Exchanger for Two-Phase Applications, ASME, NY, HTD-27 ( 1983) 47. M.K Jensen, AIChE Symposium Series No. 263, 84 (1988) 1 14. R.L. Webb, T.R Apparao and K.-D. Choi, ASHRAE Winter Meeting, Chicago (1989). R.L. Webb, K.-D. Choi and T.R. Apparao, ASHRAE Winter Meeting, Chicago (1989). L.N. Carlucci, P.F. Galpin and J.D. Brown, in A Reappraisal of Shellside Flow in Heat Exchangers, W.J. Marner and J.M. Chenoweth (eds), ASME, NY, HTD-36 ( 1984) 19. D .P. Edwards and M.K. Jensen, in Phase Change Heat Transfer - 1991, E. Hensel, V.K. Dhir, R Grief and J. Fillo (eds), ASME, NY, HTD- 159 (199 1) 9. J.E. Myers and D.L. Katz, Chern. Engng. Prog. Symp. Ser. No 5., 49 ( 1953) 107. G.N. Danilova and V.A. Dyundin, Heat Transfer Sov. Res. , 4, No. 4 (1972) 48. S. Yilmaz and J.W. Palen, ASME Paper No. 84-HT-91 ( 1984). K. Cornwell and D .J. Scoones, 2nd United Kingdom Conference on Heat Transfer, Glasgow, 1 (1988) 21-32. E. Hahne, J. Spindler, Q. Chen and R Windisch, 9th Int. Heat Transfer Conference, Jerusalum, 6 (1990) 41. N . Arai, T. Fukushima, A. Arai, T . Nakajima, K. Fujie and Y. Nakayama, ASHRAE Trans., 83, Part 2 (1977) 58. S. Yilmaz, J.W. Palen and J. Taborek, in Advances in Enhanced Heat Transfer- 198 1, RL. Webb et al. (eds), ASME, NY, HTD-18 ( 1981) 123. K. Stephan and J. Mitrovic, in Advanced in Enhanced Heat Transfer198 1, RL. Webb et al. (eds), ASME, NY, HTD-18 (1981) 13l. Y. Fujita, Research on Efficient Use of Thermal Energy, Reports of Special Project Research on Energy under grant in aid of Scientific Research of the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan ( 1987) 27. A.M. Czikk, C.F. Gottzmann, E .G. Ragi, J.G. Withers and E.P.Habdas, ASHRAE Trans., 76 ( 1970) 96. P .S. O'Neill, R.C. King and E.G. Ragi, AIChE Symp. Ser. No. 199, 76 (1980) 289. Y. Koyama and K. Hashizume, 16th Int. Congo of Refrigeration, Proc., 2 (1983) 171. K. Cornwell, N.W. Duffin and RB. Schuller, ASME Paper No. 80-HT-45 (1980).
515
THE EFFECT OF FOULING ON BOILING HEAT TRANSFER
Euan F.e. Somers cales D epartment of Mechanical Engineering, Aeronautical Engineering & Mechanics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12 180-3590 USA Abstract
The published information on the fouling of heat transfer surfaces in the presence of boiling is revi�wed. The fundamental processes of fouling are discussed, and the terminology and nomenclature that is commonly used is described. The interaction between fouling and boiling is then considered for precipitation fouling, corrosion fouling, particulate fouling and chemical reaction fouling. The complexity of the topic and the difficulties of satisfactorily predicting the fouling performance of heat transfer surfaces under boiling conditions are pointed out. Quantitative data and theoretical predictions, where they are available, are presented. 1.
INTRODUCTION
1.1
�tion ofFouling
Fouling can be defined as the formation of deposits on heat transfer surfaces which impede heat transfer and increase the resistance to fluid flow. The growth of these deposits causes the thermal and hydraulic performance of heat transfer equipment to decline with time. Fouling affects the energy consumption of industrial processes and it can also decide the amount of material employed in the construction of heat transfer equipment, because it may be necessary to provide extra heat transfer area to compensate for the effects of fouling. In addition, where the heat flux is high, as in steam generators, fouling can lead to local hot spots and ultimately it may result in mechanical failure of the heat transfer surface, and hence an unscheduled shut down of the equipment. The designers and operators of heat transfer equipment must be able to predict the variation of its performance as fouling proceeds. The designer needs this information to ensure that the users' requirements with regard to cleaning schedules can be met and maintained for a heat transfer device designed for a predetermined first cost. The users of heat transfer equipment subject to fouling must be able to formulate rational operating schedules, both for equipment management purposes and in order to obtain from the manufacturer equipment that will meet the desired operating schedule.
516 1.2
Objectives offbe Lecture
The objective of the lecture is to introduce the reader to fouling, particularly fouling in the presence of boiling. It has been assumed that the reader is interested in the topic for one or more of the following reasons: a. To obtain an overview of the state of the art of designing and operating heat transfer equipment subject to fouling in the presence of boiling. b.
To apply available data to predicting the performance of heat transfer equipment subject to fouling for the purpose of designing and/or operating specific items of such equipment.
It is not intended to present a comprehensive review of fouling; however, the lectures will contain references to sources of further information on various aspects of fouling. 1.3
Cost of Foulingt
The fouling of heat transfer equipment introduces an additional cost to the industrial sector of the national economy. This added cost is in the form of increased capital expenditure, and increased energy consumption and increased payments for labor. a. Oversizing or redundant equipment In order to compensate for the effects of fouling the heat transfer area of a heat exchanger is increased. Duplicate heat exchangers may be installed so as to ensure uninterrupted production while a fouled heat exchanger is cleaned. b. Specialty materials and geometric configurations Fouling, particularly that associated with corrosion, can be reduced by the careful selection of the materials used in the construction of the heat exchanger. Typically these are high cost materials, such as, titanium, stainless steel, glass, and graphite. Also, various special design features, reducing the size and number of crevices, and eliminating eddies and dead zones, help to decrease the effects of fouling. These special features add to the cost of an item of heat transfer equipment. c. Additional downtime Fouling increases the normally scheduled time incurred in maintaining and repairing equipment. • This is based on Garrett Price et a1.
[1].
517
d. Lost production Downtime for cleaning fouled heat transfer equipment, when a plant is operating at or near capacity, represents a loss of valuable production. In addition, plant shut-down and start-up may result in production that does not meet normal product specifications. Such products must be discarded or sold at a discount. e. Cleaning equipment and sources The incorporation of fixed items of equipment for cleaning heat exchangers, such as soot blowers and vibrators, increases costs. In addition, chemical treatment of the process stream handled by the exchanger increases costs. f. Additional energy requirements and loss of waste heat Fouling reduces the transfer of energy between flowing streams, and it can result in higher pumping costs because of the reduction in the stream cross section. In certain cases waste heat is not captured and re-used because of fouling. Estimates of the cost of fouling have been made by Thackery [2] for the British industrial economy. Thackery based his estimate on the following cost components: (a) increased capital costs; (b) energy losses; (c) maintenance costs; (d) lost production. Using "considered guesses" and knowledge of fouling problems in Britain, Thackery estimated that the anual costs of fouling in Britain were $320 to $800 million in 1978. L4
Observed Efects ofFouling
The effect of fouling is to add a thermal resistance (Rr), commonly called the � �, to the convective thermal resistance (Rc) at the heat transfer surface, so that the � thermal resistance (R) is given by (la) ••
or (lb) In equation (lb) it has been assumed, for simplicity that the surface is plane. The overall thermal resistance is related to the heat flux (q) by
•• It is probably advisable to restrict the terminology fouling factor to the maximum or design value of the fouling thermal resistance that is used to determine the size of a heat exchanger. The fouling thermal resistance is then a more general term, which includes the fouling factor, that recognizes the time dependent nature of fouling.
518
q-
ITs - 1\,) R
(2)
can
Fouling also affect the fluid friction characteristics of the heat transfer surface. This means that for flow in a closed duct the pressure drop (&p) in a length L of the duct can increase because the Fanning friction factor (0 has increased, where (3a) where 2'ti
f :: -
p v2
(3b)
The pressure drop may also be affected by the reduction in the flow cross section caused by fouling deposits on the duct wall. In the past the pressure drop effects of fouling have not been given much attention, because in most circumstances the heat transfer resistance is considered to have a much more important influence on the performance of heat transfer surfaces. The emphasis in this lecture will be on the heat transfer effects. Numerous measurements covering all categories of fouling, have been made of the fouling thermal resistance, and one of the first things that is noticed is its variation with time. Broadly, graphs of the fouling thermal resistance as a function of time fall in one of three categories, as illustrated in Figure 1. Curve 1 can be called lin.e.n �, curve 2 can be called � and curve 3 is However, it is sometimes IJl.k suggested that the falling rate fouling (curve 2) is really asymptotic fouling that is taking a long time to reach the asymptotic case. In practice the curves obtained are not usually as smooth as curves 1, 2, and 3 shown in Figure 1 , and the final curve (curve 4 ) shows a more realistic form for the asymptotic case. Various explanations have been advanced to explain the form of these curves and these will be addressed later. Curves 1, 2, 3 and 4 are shown as originating at time zero but quite often there is no measurable fouling thermal resistance for some extended period after the measurements begin and this initial period is usually called the Fouling processes that exhibit an induction time are shown by curves lA, 2A and 3A in Figure 1. 1.5
Importance of Fouling
Because fouling deposits introduce an added thermal resistance at a heat transfer surface there is a reduction in the performance of a given item of heat transfer equipment. To demonstrate the technical importance of fouling the effect be estimated of a given fouling resistance in a given heat exchanger on the required surface area and the resulting overal temperature difference in the two fluid streams. The starting point is the basic equation for a heat exchanger, which can be written can
519
3A
I N D U CT I O N T I M E
Figure 1.
Models of fouling: 1 ,lA linear fouling; 2 ,2A falling rate fouling; 3,3A asymptotic fouling
(4) If we represent the performance of a clean heat exchanger by the following modified form of equation (4) (5a) and for the same heat exchanger when it is fouled
(5b)
then we can write (6) where He is the fouling thermal resistance.
520
If equations (5a) and (5b) apply to the same heat exchanger, then Ac = AF = A. F C = FF = F, and
Qc = A Uc F 6TmC
(7a)
QF = A UF F 6TmF
(7b)
Suppose the heat exchanger is to operate at al times with a constant rate of heat transfer Q (= QC = QF ), then from equations (7) we have the following relation between the temperatures (represented by the log mean temperature differences ATmC and 6TmF) in the clean and fouled heat transfer equipment (8)
That is, as fouling proceeds and Rf increases then the log mean temperature temperature (6 T m ) must be increased relative to the clean value. Furthermore, this effect increases in importance as the value of the clean overall heat transfer coefficient (UC ) increases (see Fig. 2).
0 0
.P ,.
1 00
! a: 0 0 0
I r-,O
10
� � S
Rt
Figure 2. Percent increase in the temperature driving force (or area) as a function of the clean overall coefficient (Uc) and the fouling resistance (He) (from Knudsen [3])
521
(=
If the heat exchanger is to operate at a constant rate of heat transfer Q Q C = QF ) and with a constant change in temperature (�TmC and �TmF ) ' then it can be shown from equations (5) that
(9) In this case the effect of fouling is to increase that required heat transfer in the heat exchanger. From a comparison of equations (8) and (9), it is clear that the percentage change in the temperature difference and the percentage change in the heat transfer area is the same in both cases. If the heat exchanger is to operate with a constant overall temperature difference, then from equations (7) 1 - (QlA)F
(Q/A)C
(10)
This shows that as the fouling thermal resistance increases, then the heat transfer rate decreases. Again, this effect is more important with larger values of the clean overall hat transfer coefficient (UC ) (see Fig. 2). The aggravating effect of increasing the overall coefficient on the performance of a heat exchanger subject to fouling is of considerable importance. Knudsen [3] has pointed out that with increasing energy and material costs, there will be a strong incentive to design heat exchangers with high overall coefficients of heat transfer. This means that the prevention or control of fouling is a matter of increasing importance. 1.6 Categories ofFouJing
Fouling can be classified in several ways [4]: a. Type of heat transfer service being provided, e.g., change of phase (boiling, condensation), or sensible (heating, cooling), or chemical reaction (endothermic, exothermic) heat transfer. b. Type of fluid causing the fouling, e.g., aqueous solutions, petroleum fractions, flue gases, etc. c . Type of equipment experiencing the fouling, e.g., plain surface, extended surface, enhanced surface, tubular heat exchanger, plate heat exchanger, etc. d. Type of industry in which it occurs, e.g., power generation, desalination, chemical processing (with numerous sub-categories), etc.
However, rather than these categorizations, the very fundamental classification that was proposed by Epstein [4] at the 1979 International C onference on the Fouling of Heat Transfer Equipment has been widely
522
adopted by engineers and scientists concerned with the fouling of heat transfer surfaces. This scheme classifies fouling according to the principle process that gives rise to the phenomenon. In this way the following six categories have been identified: a.
heat transfer surface.
the precipitation of dissolved substances on the
b.
the deposition of finely divided solids, suspended in the fluid, on the heat transfer surface.
c.
deposits formed on the heat transfer surface by chemical reactions in which the surface material itself is not a reactant.
d.
the heat transfer surface itself reacts to produce corrosion products that foul the surface.
e.
the attachment of macro-organisms (macro biofouling) and/or micro-organisms (micro-biofouling or microbial fouling) to the heat transfer surface, together with the adherent slimes generated by the microbial fouling.
f.
solidification of a liquid, or some of its higher melting constituents onto a sub-cooled heat transfer surface.
Epstein [4] points out that each of the above six categories identifies a process that is essential to the particular observed fouling phenomenon. However, the process appearing in the title is not necessarily that which governs the rate of deposition of the fouling material. For example, in almost all of the categories of fouling, mass transfer from the bulk of the fluid to the heat transfer surface is important, and, furthermore, is often the process that governs the rate of fouling. This classification of fouling by the fundamental processes involved wil be considered further below. An important limitation of the above classification is that it does not recognize the importance of combined modes of fouling e.g., both precipitation fouling and corrosion fouling are frequently observed together on a heat transfer surface. Until the fundamental fouling processes are better understood, it seems more fruitful to concentrate our attention on single categories of fouling, rather than fouling situations that involve several categories. The term fouling has been used in this lecture to describe deposits that form on heat transfer surfaces and inhibit the transfer of heat. This is, perhaps, not a generally accepted or universal terminology, because heat transfer inhibiting deposits are also known as scaling, crud, sludge, and so on. These different descriptive terms, which all refer to essentially the same situation, are probably associated with the different industries in which the problem of fouling is important. A lack of communication between the practitioners in
523
various areas of technology has, no doubt, been the cause of this wide variety of descriptive terms. 2. FUNDAMENAL PROCES OF FOULING 2.1 Introduction
In view of the current state of our knowledge of heat transfer, mass transfer, chemical kinetics, and fluid mechanics, and considering the success that has been experienced in applying these fundamental sciences to a wide variety of technical problems, it is natural to anticipate that they wil provide a means for the development of methods for predicting the fouling performance of heat transfer equipment, and, perhaps more importantly, suggest ways in which fouling can be minimized. As will be seen this expectation is overly optimistic because fouling is an extremely complex phenomenon, even if consideration is restricted to a single category of fouling without the complications arising from interaction between two or more categories of fouling. However, in spite of the limitations of approaching fouling from a fundamental viewpoint, it is a useful way to organize thinking about the topic and can lead to profound insights that will assist the designer and user of heat transfer equipment subject to fouling, not to say the research worker who is concerned with obtaining a complete understanding of this phenomenon. In this lecture it is proposed to explore the possibility of constructing a theoretical model of fouling. This will be based on the idea that the net effect of fouling is the consequence of competition between growth and removal processes. The growth processes can be classified according to the transport processes involved. The formation of the fouling deposit from the transported material depends on 'reactions' occurring in the deposit. These reactions can vary during the life of the deposit and can affect the processes that act to remove the deposit. Knowledge of the removal processes is limited, but the information that is available will be reviewed. 2.2
Kern-Seaton Model
The basic equation of fouling is due to Kern and Seaton [5,6] who hypothesized that the observed rate of fouling on a heat transfer surface is the result of competition between the rate of growth processes and the rate at which the deposit is removed. That is, if dmlde is the observed rate of fouling, where mf is the mass of deposit on unit area of the surface at any instant of time (e), then dmf d e = mg - m r •
•
(11)
where mg = rate of growth of the deposit and mr = rate of removal of the deposit (the units of both quantities are mass per unit area per time).
524
Equation (11) gives the fouling effect in terms of the mass (mf) of the deposit formed on unit area of the heat transfer surface, to relate this to the fouling thermal resistance (Rr) of the deposit per unit area we have (12)
where Pf is the density and kf is the thermal conductivity of the deposit. These quantities can change during the course of the fouling process, as discussed below. Fundamental studies of fouling are concerned with formulating suitable expressions for the growth (mg) and removal (mr) tenDS in equation (1 1). This involves introducing concepts connected with the transport of fouling materials both to and from the heat transfer surface and the rates of processes (e.g., crystallization, polymerization, etc.) affecting the fouling deposit on the surface. These processes can vary over the time of exposure of the surface to the fouling stream. This is indicated by the observed character of the fouling thermal resistance at different times. Thus, when the surface is first exposed to the fouling stream it is frequently observed that there is no measurable magnitude for the fouling thermal resistance (Rr). The period during which these conditions persist is usually known as the .Q.[ dW tim& (en). The irregular variation of the fouling thermal resistance is another characteristic that suggests that different fundamental processes are active at different times during the course of the fouling process. Typically a fairly steady increase in the fouling thermal resistance is followed by a decrease, and so OD. These "excursions" in the thermal resistance are irregular in magnitude and irregular in their time of occurrence, however, a general trend can be identified. Clearly there are "phases" assOciated with the fouling process, such that different fundamental processes are active at different times during the "life" of the fouling deposit. This aspect of fouling will be considered in the next section. 2.3
The Phases of Fouling
The discussion of the preceding section has suggested that there are different phases in the fouling process. It is proposed to classify these as the ll and the � �. These are discussed in the following two subsections. The mechanisms that operate during the induction time at the initiation of fouling are not completely understood; however, the following represents a summary, based on the discussion of Epstein [7,8], of current knowledge as it applies to different categories of fouling. Precipitation fouling: The induction period is closely associated with the crystal nucleation processes, such that the induction time (en ) tends to decrease as the concentration in the fluid of the precipitating material increases relative to the concentration that would saturate the fluid. Crystal
525
nucleation processes and their relation to the induction time have been comprehensively reviewed by Troup and Richardson [9]. Chemical reaction fouling: The induction time appears to decrease the surface temperature is increased which is presumably a consequence of the rates of the chemical reactions involved in the induction process increasing with temperature. Biological fouling: According to Baier [10], the initiation of biological fouling is dependent on the adsorption of polymeric glycoproteins and proteoglycans on the heat transfer surface. Such materials are present in natural waters and act to condition the surface by laying down a film to which the micro organisms subsequently attach. The adhesive characteristics of the film depend on the material of the heat transfer surface which can be characterized by the critical wetting tension (oc)' According to Baier if Oc is between 20 and 30 dyne s/cm , then bio-adhesion is minimized. The original reference should be consulted for more details. All categories of fouling: It has been widely reported that for all categories of fouling the induction time (On ) decreases as the surface roughness increases. Surface roughness probably acts at the initiation of fouling in three ways: roughness projections provide additional sites for crystal i. nucleation; ii. grooves provide regions for deposition that are sheltered from the mainstream velocity; iii. decreases the thickness of the viscous sublayer and hence increases eddy transport to the wall. AJdu. Aging of the fouling deposit occurs as soon as it starts to form on the heat transfer surface. It can manifest itself as i. change in crystal structure; ii. polymerization of the deposit material; iii. developing thermal stresses; iv. dissolution processes occurring at the deposit-surface interface; v. poisoning of micro-organisms by corrosion products released from the surface; vi. death of micro-organisms due to starvation. The aging process causes the deposit to change its character so that removal processes change. Thus, where the removal of a microbial deposit initially occurs by erosion (deposit leaves as microscopic particles) , it may at some later time occur by spalling (deposit leaves as a gross mass) because the micro organisms have died and are no longer attached to the heat transfer surface. as
2.4 Growth Proces
The growth of the fouling deposit on a heat transfer surface can be seen as a combination of processes that transport the fouling material to
526
the surface and some "reaction" that results in the attachment of the material to the surface. It is usual to represent such processes mathematicaly by IDg = kt (Cb - Ci )
(13)
where kt is a transport coefficient, and for the "reaction" IDg = � (Ci - C s)D
(14)
where � is the reaction rate constant for the n-th order reaction. In these equations Cb is the bulk concentration of the transported species, Ci is its concentration at the deposit-fluid interface, and Cs is its concentration at the deposit-surface interface. Under steady state conditions··· the growth processes represented by equations ( 13) and ( 14) occur at the same rate. In that case the interface concentration Ci can be eliminated between equations ( 13) and (14) in favor of the observable quantities Cb and C s. On doing this we obtain the result
.
n mg kr (Cb - C s - � kt ) =
(15)
This is a somewhat awkward expression in that the desired rate of growth (fig) appears on both sides of the equation. However, for the special case of n 1 we obtain the explicit relation =
(16)
The use of equations (15) and (16) to determine the rate of growth of the deposit, for given values of the concentrations Cb and C s of the fouling material, depends on knowledge of the transport coefficient (kt) and the reaction rate constant (k r ). This depends, in its turn, on the type of material being transported to and attached, by means of the 'reaction', to the heat transfer surface. The materials can be either the fouling material itself, as is actually implied in equations ( 13) through ( 16), or it can be a 'nutrient', that is, a material that is essential to the formation of the fouling deposit. t The division In actual fact, steady state cannot exist in fouling, the fouling rate is continually varying with time. However, an instantaneous steady state can be imagined, and it is that situation that is implied here. t Where nutrient transport is under consideration it is necessary to relate rates for the nutrient and the fouling material. Typically, this could be through some chemical reaction involving both kinds of materials. •••
527
of transported materials into these two classes suggests that categories of fouling growth processes can be identified and related to the categories of fouling discussed earlier, as follows: i.
ii.
Growth due to material transport Particulate fouling Precipitation fouling Chemical reaction fouling Growth due to nutrient transport Corrosion fouling (oxygen being the nutrient)
iii. Growth due to both material and nutrient transport Biological fouling Combined categories of fouling In the following three subsections these growth processes will be considered in greater detail. If the transported material is in the form of ions, molecules or very small particles ( smaller than 1J.Lm or O. lJ.Lm , typically) then the transport is diffusional in nature and the transport coefficient (kt) can be identified with the mass transfer coefficient (km ). The latter can be obtained from the published mass transfer correlations of experimental data or from theoretical equations, provided the mass diffusivity (D) of the transported material can be determined. tt Fouling which grows due to the transport of ions, molecules or fine particles can be classified in the categories of � � or Experimental data on mass transfer in binary systems (i.e., involving two chemical species) in forced convection is usually presented in the form of an equation involving dimensionless quantities, thus, ,
Sh = C Scl1l Ren
.
(17)
where Sh = Sherwood number, which is a dimensionless mass transfer coefficient, and is defined in the NOMENCLATURE, Sc = Schmidt number, which is a dimensionless ratio of the momentum (u ) and mass transport difusivities (D), and Re = Reynolds number, which is a dimensionless fluid velocity, and is defined in the NOMENCLATURE . The constant C and exponents m and n are determined by measurement, and depend on the geometry of the system and the fluid, chemical and thermal conditions in the system. It is worth noting that, provided the mass flux of the depositing component and its concentration, are not too large, equations of the form. of equation (17) can be deduced from the usually more widely available equations for heat transfer by substituting the Sherwood number (Sh) for the Nusselt number (Nu), and the Schmidt number (Sc) for the Prandtl number (Pr). tt The determination of the mass diffilsivity is very complicated and is hindered by the limited infonnation that is available. A comprehensive discussion will be found in Skelland [11].
528
The deposit growth rate (mg ) has been computed using the mass transfer model by Precipitation fouling: Hasson [12] Chemical reaction fouling: Watkinson and Epstein [13] and Crittenden and Kolachowski [14] Particulate fouling: Newson, Bott and Hussain [15] The application of the simple mass transfer concepts to particulate fouling must be made with caution, because (a) for larger size particles (diameters in excess of O. I�m to l�m) the diffusion mechanism for transport is replaced by mechanisms based on particle fluid mechanics:
(b) (c)
for even larger particles (diameter in excess of 10Jl.ID) gravity effects can control particle motion; in the presence of a temperature gradient, particles can move under the influence of that gradient, this is called and acts so as to increase the rate of transport of particles to the heat transfer surface.
Beal [16] has devised a comprehensive model of particulate fouling that recognizes the relative contributions of diffusion and particle momentum. He assumed that the conventional mass transfer techniques could be applied to all points in the fluid, except for a certain region immediately adjacent to the heat transfer surface. In this region fluid motions are dominated by viscous effects, and, accordingly, mass transport is dominated by diffusion effects. Such a transport mechanism is not appropriate for the larger sizes of particles, so Friedlander and Johnstone [ 17] assumed that a particle, rather than being transported directly to the surface by diffusion and turbulent eddies, is only transported by these mechanisms to within a certain distance of the surface, (S). From that point particles are imagined to called the coast to the wall by virtue of their momentum. Since the stopping distance is the distance a particle, with some initial velocity Vpo will coast in a stagnant or slowly moving fluid under the influence of viscous drag forces. This means that S=
d2 pp p Vpo 18�
--
(18)
529
Beal [16] modified this result by noting that the particle center would be at a distance dy'2 when it contacted the surface. That being so S=
d
�V
--
18J.1
d � po + 2
(19)
The initial particle velocity Vpo would be Vpo = O.9 < U >
�
(20)
which is equal to the magnitude of the average velocity at its point of origin in the fluid where y = 80u/« u> fl2). To determine the rate of transfer of particles to the fouled surface Beal [16] and Friedlander and Johnstone [17] used the expression km
=
Uc+ UC+ J du+ + (Sc - 1) J 1 Us+ Us+ fl2
(21) +
d +
where u/ and uc+ are, respectively determined at y = S and at the duct center line. For S > 30u/ with a Schmidt number (Sc) of unity, equation (21) takes on the simple form fl2 km = 1 - 13.73 ..JV2
(22)
where us+ = 13.73. To relate the mass transfer coefficient (�) defined by equations (21) and (22) to the concentration (C s ) of particles at the heat transfer surface, Beal assumed that the particle concentration at points between the surface (y=O) and the stopping distance (y=S) is uniform and equal to the concentration at the surface. The rate of growth of fouling due to the formation of corrosion products on the heat transfer surface depends, at least in part, on the rate of transport of oxygen to the surface. This can be viewed as a 'nutrient' for fouling, in the same way that microbial fouling depends in part on the rate of transport of true nutrients to the deposit. Because microbial fouling involves a combination of transport processes involving the fouling material (microbes can be viewed as very small particles) and the nutrient, consideration of that case is postponed until the next subsection. The corrosion fouling of a metallic (metal M) heat transfer surface exposed to flowing oxygenated water involves the following overall chemical reaction
530
02 + 2H� +
4 4 Z M --+ z M(OH)z
(23)
where z is the valence of metal M. On removal from the water, and drying, the metal hydroxide loses its constituent water and the deposit consists of metal oxides. These oxides and hydroxides constitute the fouling deposit. It is clear that the rate of growth of the fouling deposit depends on the rate of transport of the oxygen dissolved in the water to the heat transfer surface (assuming the cathodic reaction controls corrosion), and its rate of consumption by the corrosion reaction. So we can write for the rate of growth (mg) of the fouling deposit on the surface dml mg = KI de •
(24)
where from equation (23) (25)
and dml/de is the rate of oxygen transport and consumption. Oxygen transport to the heat transfer surface can be viewed as involving two steps: (a) convective transport from the bulk of the water to the interface between the corrosion products (fouling deposit) and the flowing water (b) diffusion through the corrosion products. Hence, we can write
dO" dml
_
Cbl - C sI 1
--
km1
+
(26)
D1
Assuming for the moment that C sI is known, we will proceed to investigate the character of the mass transfer terms in the denominator of equation (26). The most realistic discussion of oxygen transport is due to Mahato et al [18-20]. From their calculations and measurements it can be shown that equation (26) can be written (27a) where kmo is an overall mass transfer coefficient
531
(27b) use
To equations (27) it is necessary to know Sno, kl, k2 , and k3 . These must be obtained by experiment. In addition a value must be assigned to the mass transfer eddy diffusivity (Ec). An experimental investigation of corrosion on the inside of pipe under isothermal conditions was cared out by Mahato et.al. [20] and they reported the following values: k 1 = 3.517 x 10"" d Re-0.371 [dm7 mg-2] (28a) k2 2 .834 x 10"" Re-0.785 [m31kg] (28b) =
=
k3 1.189 x 10-3 Re-O·256 [mg-l]
(28c)
Fouling due to microbial growths on a heat transfer surface involves transport of the fouling material, in this case the microbes which may be treated as small particles in the size range 0.51lm to 20llm [21], and the transport of nutrients to keep the microbial growth alive. So two parallel mass transfer processes are involved. Pres bly, a similar situation exists where two or more categories of fouling are present on the heat transfer surface. From a theoretical point of view, fouling in these circumstances involves multicomponent mass transfer. This is a topic of current research, and only a few theoretical results are available for very simple flow situations. Certainly no attempts have been made, as yet, to introduce these concepts into the study of fouling. In these circumstances it does not seem appropriate to consider a strictly fundamental approach. Instead the overall empirical model proposed by Bryers and Characklis [22] for microbial fouling will be briefly described. Bryers and Characklis [22] have proposed that the rate of formation (dmtld9) of the fouling deposit be given by dmf (29) d9 = kmf uma
where k is the rate constant for the rate of formation of the deposit. This quantity is assumed, on the basis of empirical evidence, to be given by (30)
where kl is an empirical constant (called the specific biofilm accumulation rate constant), Cb is the bulk concentration of the biomass, Re is the Reynolds number, and Il is the dispersed biomass growth rate. Analysis of
532
experimental data showed that a written
=
1, b
=
-1, c
CbJl dmf k de = l Re mC
=
1, hence equation (29) can be
(31)
where kl 125.0 ±25.0 l/mg. Note the biomass growth rate (Jl.) is obtained in a 'static' ('beaker' or batch) test, but applied to fouling under flow conditions. The convenience of this technique is obvious, but its validity is uncertain. This approach appears to have had reasonable success with microbial fouling, so it might form an excellent starting point for studying the growth of combined categories of fouling that involve two or more parallel mass transport processes in the growth process. =
2.5
in the deposit
When the fouling material arrives at the heat transfer surface it must be attached to that surface. There is considerable uncertainty about this process, but the available information will be summarized. It is convenient to divide the discussion according to the categories of fouling. The mass transfer coefficients (km ) deduced by Beal [16], and described above, can be used to compute the flux of particles (Ns ) transported to the heat transfer surface using
(32) Observation suggests that only a fraction of the particles transported to the heat transfer surface remain there and form a fouling deposit. Beal [16] assumed that the flux of particles that stick on the surface is proportional to the concentration (C s ) of particles at the surface and is also proportional to the average velocity (v) of the particles normal to the heat transfer surface. Hence
(33) where p is the fraction of particles in the region next to the heat transfer surface that stick on the heat transfer, sometimes called the Eliminating C s between equations (32) and (33)
(34)
In estimating the normal component of velocity (v), Beal [16] assumed this was the sum of the normal component of the turbulent fluid velocity and the average diffusion velocity (the original reference should be consulted for details).
533 A major limitation of the theory of Beal is that he assumed. because of lack. of information. that the sticking probability (p) was unity. That is. all the particles transported to the wall stick on the wall. Subsequently two alternative expressions for the sticking probability have been developed. one due Bea1 [23] and the other by Watkinson and Epstein [24]. Beal [23]:
to
(
Cu
(35a)
where C and n are constants depending on the fluid and on the value of S (see the original reference for details). Watkinson and Epstein [24]: p
=
a
2
f
( E ) exp - RT
(35b)
where a is an empirical constant, E is an activation energy (also determined empirically). R is the universal gas constant, and T is the absolute temperature. Clearly this expression difers from that proposed by Beal [23] in that it includes a temperature effect in the form of an Arrhenius type expression. In addition the velocity dependence is different. Thus, in Beal's expression p - 1I5 . whereas in the Watkinson and Epstein formula p 1I< u > 2 . In view of the empirical nature of these expressions it is not surprising these differences exist. In precipitation fouling the material attaches the surface by a process known as surface integration, which can be represented by the expression
to
(36)
The attachment rate constant is assumed
to
depend on the temperature (Ts) of
the heat transfer surface through an equation of the Arrhenius type
(37)
to
In chemical reaction fouling it is usual assume that the fouling material forms on and attaches to the heat transfer surface according to
534
(38)
where it is assumed that the fouling material is completely consumed at the heat transfer surface. so that Cs O. It will be assumed. following Somerscales [25]. that the oxygen consumption reaction is first order. then . (39) mg = 1 � + km l D l =
--
where K l is given by equation (25), and km l and �ID I are given by equation (27b).
[26]. the rate
According to empirical evidence gathered by Fletcher of attachment of micro-organisms to a surface is given by (40)
where A. is the fraction of the surface covered by micro-organisms. This particular expression does not appear to have been used in work on the microbial fouling of heat transfer surfaces, presumably because no suitable model for the transport of the organisms has been deduced. 2.6 Removal Proces
Removal of deposit from the surface involves a release "reaction" together with transport into the flowing fluid at the deposit-liquid interface. Very little is known about the removal of fouling deposits, but three plausible mechanisms have been proposed, they are (b)
(a)
(c)
dissolution - material leaves in ionic fonn; erosion - material leaves in particulate fonn; spalling - material leaves as a large mass.
It is proposed in this section to review each of these three mechanisms separately. Assuming, for the purposes of illustration, that the fouling deposit consists of the metal hydroxide M(OH)z ' that is. corrosion fouling is under consideration, then removal of the fouling deposit involves the dissolution of this substance according to (41)
535
Assuming that the rate of the dissolution reaction is much greater than the rate of transport, it can be shown for [M+Z] « [ORe] that (42)
The mass transfer coefficient k would be provided by the usual techniques discussed above. Models for deposit removal by erosion have been proposed by Bartlett [27], Charlesworth [28], and Beal [ 16]. Bartlett proposed that
(43) where � = constant, F" = effective applied force per unit area exerted by the flowing fluid on a particle, q, effectiveness factor for the projected area (Rp) of the particle, ap = projected area of individual particles forming the deposit, Pp = particle density, and Vp = volume of the particles. The quantities �, F", • and ap have to be determined either theoretically or experimentally. Bartlett's equation is based on a model of erosion release that assumes that the shearing force exerted by the flowing fluid causes weak bonds, where it is assumed that the particles are bonded to their neighbors, to break. The weak bonds are seen as developing as a result of an accumulation of small particles which combine to form a large particle. Eventually sufcient small particles have accumulated so that the resulting force exerted on the particle agglomeration by the fluid flow causes the weak bond joining the particles to its neighbors to break. Charlesworth [28] supposes that the rate of removal of the deposit increases as the amount of deposit increases. The simplest model of this type would assume that the rate of removal is directly proportional to the amount of deposit on the surface and inversely proportional to the residence time (9R) of the deposit on the surface. Thus =
dm r
mf
d9 = 9 R
(44)
In the case cited by Charlesworth, 9R = 100 hours. The only model that is clearly related to actual fouling conditions is due to Beal [ 16], who was able to provide numerical values for the constants in his removal rate expression. However, so far as can be ascertained, this model has never been tested. Beal assumes that
536
(45)
where F is an empirically determined force [29] which acts on individual particles given by
(46)
where vpc = the fluid velocity at the center of the particle. In equation (45) ke is the transport coefficient for eroded particles. Consideration of the preceding discussion suggests that erosion and spal1ing differ by virtue of the factors that are important in the two processes. For erosion these are: fluid velocity, particle size, surface roughness, and bonding of the deposit. Spalling, however, depends on thermal stresses set up in the deposit by the heat transfer process, stresses induced by the addition of material within the deposit structure, changes in the deposit structure induced by thermal effects, and poor bonding of the deposit to the wall. The latter may b� caused, as pointed out by Ross [30], by changes in the solubility of the deposit resulting from changes in the temperature at the deposit-heat transfer surface interface that occur as the deposit grows on the transfer surface. Models that attempt to quantitatively characterize spalling have been proposed by Kern and Seaton [5,6] , Taborek et.aI. [31] and by Loo and Bridgwater [32]. The first of these, due to Kern and Seaton, assumed that the spalling was caused by the shear stress ('ti) at the deposit-fluid interface. They further assumed that the rate of removal increased in proportion to the mass (mf) of the fouling deposit. Hence, they said (47)
where C is an empirical constant. Taborek et.al. [31] proposed that the rate of removal be given by dm r 'ti a CI8 = C 'V" mf
(48)
where 'I' is a function of the deposit structure and must be determined experimentally together with C and a. Information on 'I' can be obtained from the data reported by Morse and Knudsen [33]. Loa and Bridgwater [32] investigated the spalling of fouling deposits by considering the stresses set up in a deposit as a result of the accumulation of the deposit, and as a result of temperature gradients due to the heat transfer through the deposit. They show that the maximum stress in the deposit formed on the outer surface of the cylinder is given by
537
(49)
by
This stress will induce fracture in the deposit if it reaches a magnitude given
(50)
where KIc material constant depending on the physical processes occurring at the crack tip during crack propagation, al geometric factor, a initial flaw size. KIc can be determined experimentally by the introduction of a large artificial flaw and then loading the specimen until fracture. =
2.7
=
=
Limitations of Fouling Models
Attempting to understand fouling by considering the fundamental processes that contribute to the overall fouling effect has the following limitations: a. There is a lack of information on many of the transport and chemical kinetic processes. This is particularly true as far as the removal processes are concerned. b. Even if a satisfactory model can be deduced, its application is limited by the availability of suitable information on the properties of the fouling deposits, such as, the density ( P f), the thermal conductivity (kf)' nutrient diffusivity, and so on. For these reasons the engineer concerned with the practical aspects of fouling is likely to find empirical data much more useful. Nevertheless, the utility of this data can be enhanced if simplified models, suggested by the theoretical considerations discussed in this lecture, can be used to put the data in a suitable mathematical form. The discussion of such simplified, quasi empirical models is considered below. 3.
EMPmICAL FOULING MODElS
3.1 Introduction
Basing the design of heat transfer equipment subject to fouling on the assumption that fouling effects are independent of time, as is implied in the conventional fouling factor, can lead to substantial errors in design. There is a need for simple, practical methods for estimating the effect of fouling on the performance of heat transfer equipment. Such methods are based on mathematical expressions that represent a combination of theoretical ideas
538
and experimental measurements. This lecture will review a representative selection of models for fouling. The models will be classified by the observed temporal character of the fouling thermal resistance, i.e., (a) falling rate, (b) linear fouling, (c) asymptotic fouling. These modes of fouling are sketched in Figure 1. The various models are based on the fundamental model of Kern and Seaton [5] that views fouling as a competitive process between the growth of the fouling deposit and its removal. Mathematical expressions are then derived for the three modes of fouling. Applications of these models in practical situations are described. It should be noted that for mathematical representations of the removal processes, the information given in the section entitled FUNDAMENTAL PROCESS OF FOULING wil be drawn upon. An important feature of fouling is the so-called induction time, which is the time, when the surface is first exposed to the fouling stream, during which no detectable fouling is observed. The limited amount of information available on this phenomenon is reviewed. 8.2
Fal Rate Fouling
The earliest mathematical model of fouling was proposed by McCabe and Robinson [34] to describe the fouling of evaporators. Although this predated the Kern-Seaton model, it actually represents a special case in which the rate of growth (mg) of the deposit was proportional to the temperature difference between the deposit-liquid interface (Ti) and the bulk of the liquid (Tb). Hence (51)
where lCr is a combined mass transfer coefficient and reaction rate constant (which, presumably, could be evaluated by the methods described above), and B is a temperature coefficient of solubility. Combining equation (5 1) and the Kern and Seaton model with the assumption of no deposit removal we have dRf lCrB (T. - Tb (52) ) dO Pfk f 1 =
To eliminate the interface temperature (Ti ) in favor of the observable temperature (Ts) of the heat transfer surface, we have T.
1
- 'E Rr (Ts - 'Ib) - s Rc + Rf
where Rc is the convective thermal resistance at the deposit-fluid interface. Combining equations (52) and (53) we have
(53)
539
(54) where K2 = x:rB/p ptr. If it is assumed that the temperature difference Ts - Tb is constant (a reasonable assumption in the steam heated evaporators under consideration by McCabe and Robinson), we have on integrating equation (54) R r =Rr
9= 9
Rr=O
9=0
I (Rc + Rf )dRf = K2 (Ts - 'Ib )Rc I d9
(55)
On integrating, assuming the convective resistance R c at the deposit-fluid interface remains constant,
(56)
where K3 = 2K2 (T s - Tb )R c ' and R = Rc + Rr = total measured thermal resistance at the heat transfer surface. This model predicts "falling rate" fouling. If the model is valid, then plotting the square of the total thermal resistance (R) measured in some item of heat transfer equipment against the elapsed time since it was exposed to the fouling stream will give a straight line. In 1964 Reitzer [35] published a more general model than that used by McCabe and Robinson. It was assumed that the growth of the deposit from saturated solutions depends on an undefined power (n) of the temperature difference Ti - Tb' Then equation (51) becomes m = � Bn (T - T )D (57) g i b Again, assuming the temperature difference Ts - Tb is constant, we have on following the procedure used to determine equation (56) Rn+1 = R�
+1
+ Ka 9
(58)
n where Ka = (n+ 1)K2 (Ts - Tb )D Rc ' Clearly, equations (57) and (58) contain the McCabe and Robinson model as a special case where n=1 . Epstein [4] suggests that equation (58) ca n b e used to represent data from the fouling of heat transfer surfaces on which boiling is occurring. In particular, he proposes n
'!:"
1: relatively low velocity non-stirred systems, in which the fouling process is mass transfer controlled
540
n ':' 2: high velocity and/or well agitated systems where the fouling process is controlled by the crystallization process on the heat transfer surface. Hasson [12] showed that equation (58) can be used to represent experimental data on the fouling of the inner surface of steam heated double pipe heat exchangers carrying a calcium carbonate (CaC03 ) solution in the inner pipe. The exponent n was found to be dependent on the fluid velocity as follows: v < 50 cmJs: n = 2.5 (duration: 400 hours) v
> 50 crnls: n = 2.5 (duration less than 100 hours)
n+1 n+1 . R - Rc --+ constant (duratIon greater than 100 hours).
Watkinson and Martinez [36], who used higher fluid velocities (v) than Hasson, also used the Reitzer model with n = 2 to describe the growth process for calcium carbonate fouling in a double pipe heat exchanger. They also took into account removal processes which had been ignored by previous investigators. In deriving the falling rate fouling model it was assumed that the temperature difference Ts - Tb between the heat transfer surface and the bulk of the fluid remained constant, if, instead of that assumption, it is assumed that the heat flux at the surface remains constant then a linear relation between the deposit thermal resistance (Rr) and time (0) is obtained. Thus, in equation (54) put Ts - Tb = q (Rc + Rr); then dRf
d9 = K.t
(59)
Integrating (60) If the Reitzer [35] model for growth from a saturated solution [equation (57)] is used, then we obtain for the fouling thermal resistance
(61)
541
where K4, = ��n qn/pftf. The linear fouling model has been found to represent the fouling of a Kraft liquor heater [24], data from a seawater desalination plant [37], precipitation fouling with pure crystalline substances [38]. In spite of this apparent occurence of linear rate fouling in engineering practice, care must be taken in applying this model, especially on the basis of data taken from observation periods of limited duration. There is a distinct possibility that if an item of heat transfer equipment is observed for a sufciently long time, the linear behavior might turn to falling rate fouling or even asymptotic fouling (see below).
R:
A very widely observed form of fouling is the so-called asymptotic fouling. In order to model this type of fouling, Kern and Seaton [5] assumed that
mg
was a constant and that ID r was propo.rtional to the mass (mf) of the fouling deposit. With this assumption the desired asymptotic form for the dependence of the fouling on time was obtained, as will be seen below. Accordingly, dmf dO = mg - b mf •
(62)
where b is a constant. On integrating
mf = mr [ 1 - exp (-O/O c)]
(63)
where m'f = mgfb (remember ID g is assumed constant), and 0 c = lib. The quantity mf is the asymptotic value of the mass of the fouling deposit and ac is a time constant. The latter quantity represents the average residence time of an "element" of the fouling deposit on the fouled surface. Alternatively 0 c can be viewed as the time it would take to accumulate the asymptotic fouling deposit if the fouling proceeded linearly at the constant growth rate m g . Making use of the relation between the fouling thermal resistance (Rr) and the mass (mf) of the fouling deposit we can write equation (63) as Rr = Rf [ 1 - exp(-O/Oc)]
R'f
(64)
where is the asymptotic magnitude of the deposit fouling resistance (Rr). Equation (64) has been used to represent the fouling behavior of many items of heat transfer equipment. For example: Watkinson and Martinez [36], Morse and Knudsen [33], and Watkinson [39], where the latter two cases referred to hard water of various mixed salt compositions, and the first case referred to a pure calcium carbonate solution. The designer and user of heat transfer equipment subject to fouling would require values for and 0 c . if equation (61) were to be used to predict the
R'f
542
fouling performance of heat transfer equipment. Very little theoretical information is available that could allow the Jl m:i.m:i determination of R and
to
to
f
a c ' but empirical data is beginning be accumulated relating the values of the parameters. The work reported by Knudsen and his associates [40-42] represents a valuable body of empirical data relating precipitation fouling from water flowing through heated tubes.
to
It is frequently observed that no reasonable fouling effect can be detected on a heat transfer surface for some time after it is exposed a fluid. This time is known as the induction or delay time (see Figure 1). The models discussed in the preceding sections do not include any effects for the induction time, so some empirical procedure must be used. Knudsen and Story [43] modified the asymptotic fouling expression, equation (61), as follows
to
(65)
where aD is the induction time. No information was provided on methods for determining aD a :wi2ri in a given fouling situation. Ritter [38] studied the fouling in an electrically heated annular heat exchanger carrying saturated solutions of either calcium. sulfate (CaS0 4 ) or lithium sulfate (Li 2S04 ). He reported the fouling empirical expressions for the induction time (aD).
(66a)
(66b)
where
le,
Cb and Cs are measured in SI units and an is given in hours.
4. DESIGN OF HEAT TRANSFER EQUIPMENT SUBJECT TO FOULING 4.1 Introduction A heat exchanger subject to fouling may be designed on the assumption that fouling introduces a time independent additional heat transfer resistance (Rf), or, recognizing that fouling is really a time dependent phenomenon, a schedule for cleaning may be devised based on operating and/or economic
543
considerations. The latter approach may, or may not, involve the provision of additional heat transfer area over and above that required on the assumption that the heat exchanger is clean. This section will consider ways of specifying the allowance for fouling effects. In addition a brief review wil be given of forms of heat exchanger for fouling service, and of practical design considerations for shell-and-tube heat exchangers. 4.2
Fouling Thermal Resistances and FouJing Factors
The design equation for a heat exchanger
can
be written (67)
If we represent the performance of a clean heat exchanger by the following modified form of equation (67)
Qc =
Ac Uc FC L\TmC
(68a)
, and for a fouled heat exchanger (68b) where (69)
U
U
and F and C are the overall heat transfer coefficients of the fouled and clean heat exchangers, respectively. It should be noted that equation (69) implies that the fouling thermal resistance associated with all the fluid streams can be consolidated into a single fouling thermal resistance He. On the assumption that fluid stream temperatures at inlet and outlet, and the flow geometry are the same for both fouled and unfouled heat exchangers, i.e., FF = FC and L\TmF = L\TmC ' then equations (68) clearly indicate that if QF = Q C then the heat transfer area of the fouled surface (AF ) must be greater than that of the clean surface. This is the basis of the design of a heat exchanger for fouling service assuming that fouling is a time independent process. To design heat transfer equipment assuming that fouling does not change with time requires the specification of a fouling resistance (He) either by the designer or by the user (mostly by the latter). The commonest procedure is to make use of the well known fouling factors originally proposed by the Tubular Exchanger Manufacturers Association (TEMA). The origin of these fouling factors (actually fouling thermal resistances) is uncertain, but they can be viewed as values based on the experience of a representative group of engineers with an extensive background in the design of heat transfer equipment.
544
The fouling resistances published by TEMA should not be viewed as asymptotic fouling resistances, because that would suggest that heat transfer equipment designed on the basis of these values need never be shut down for cleaning. This does not seem to be implied in the information published by TEMA. Accordingly it is better to assume that a heat exchanger with dimensions given by the TEMA values will meet performance requirements with a "reasonable" time between shutdowns for cleaning. The interval between cleaning would, presumably, be based on the analysis of the performance of the heat exchanger while in service. In using the TEMA resistance values it must be recognized that they are subject to a number of limitations: (a) they do not take into account the time dependent nature of fouling; (b) they are not related to the specific design features and operational characteristics of particular heat exchangers; (c) information is available only for a limited number of fluids. 4.8 The
Factor and Percent Oversurf
In addition to the fouling factor, or time independent fouling thermal resistance. fouling requirements can be given in terms of the so-called cleanliness factor (widely used in the electric power industry for steam condenser design) and in terms of the percent oversurface. These are related to the fouling deposit thermal resistance (Rr) and it is proposed to demonstrate that relationship. The cleanliness factor (CF) is defined as C F = UF"Uc
(70)
where UF and Uc are determined under identical conditions of flow and temperature. Because the cleanliness factor involves convective heat transfer conditions, as well as the thermal characte.ristics of the fouling deposit. it confuses rather than clarifies the understanding of fouling. From equation (70) it is possible to obtain an explicit relation between the fouling factor and the cleanliness factor 1 - (C F) Rr = U (CF) C
(71)
The requirements that must be met in order to accommodate the effects of fouling can be expressed in terms of the heat transfer area that must be supplied. Thus Percent oversurface =
)
- 1 100
(72)
Equations (68) can be used to relate the fouling factor and the excess heat transfer area. H qF = qC . FF = FC ' and 6TmC = 6TmF. then Percent oversurface = 100 UcRr
(73)
545
Equation (73) is given in graphical form in Figure 2. In order to make the preceding discussion concrete, a simple example due to Knudsen [44] wil be considered. A typical distillation column water-cooled shell-and-tube overhead condenser is to be designed for fouling service with the fouling restricted to the surfaces exposed to the cooling water. Determine the overall heat transfer coefficient (UF )' based on the tube outside surface area, when operating with a specified fouling thermal resistance (Rr) of 0.00035 m2K1W. It is to be assumed that there is no fouling on the condensing side. It is probably simplest to clean the interior of fouled tubes, so the cooling water wil be in the tubes with the condensing vapor in the shell. The required overall coefficient of heat transfer is given by
( ( (
x 1 =1 +R l+ f UF hI kW
J J
J
Al Aw + 1 + Rf2 A2 h2 A2
(74)
where x is the thickness of the tube wall, and subscript 1 refers to conditions inside the tube, subscript 2 to conditions outside the tube, AW is the average of the inside and outside areas for thin wall tube. It will be assumed: h I = 2840 W/m2 K = h2 ; tube O.D. = 0.091m; tube wall thickness = 0.00165m; kW = 45 W/mK (mild steel). Equation (74) becomes UF
=
2840
45
1 21 2840
So UF = 804 W/m2K. This is divided among the various resistances as follows: outside tube convective: 28.3%; wall: 3.3%; fouling deposit: 34.2%; inside tube convective: 34.2%. 4.4 The Efect of Fouling on Pres Drop
The fouling deposit effectively roughens a heat transfer surface thereby affecting fluid friction. In the case of flow through ducts, a sufciently heavy deposit of fouling will decrease the hydraulic diameter of the duct, thereby increasing the pressure drop over a length of the duct if the fluid flow rate is maintained constant. The effects of fouling on the fluid flow in the shell side of the shell-and-tube heat exchanger must be important, but they do not appear to have been investigated. Marner and Suitor [45] show that if the fouling deposit is treated as a layer of uniform thickness on the inside surface of a duct of circular cross section then
546
(75) where df and dc are the diameters of the available flow cross sections in the fouled and cleaned ducts, respectively The application of equation (75) requires knowledge of the deposit thermal conductivity (kf) and the fouling deposit thermal resistance. Experience suggests that the former lies between 0.03 and 10 W/mK. .
4.5 Design Features that Fouling Selection of an appropriate type of heat exchanger and its careful design can mitigate the effects of fouling [46]. Firstly consider the form of heat exchanger:
Direct contact heat exchangers: geothermal brines.
heavily fouling liquids, such as
Fluidized bed heat exchangers: scouring motion of fluidized particles scours away the fouling deposit. Plate and frame heat exchangers: easily disassembled for cleaning (widely used in food processing for this reason). Scraped heat exchangers: fouling deposit removed by the scrapers. Compact heat exchangers: not advised for fouling service, because they are difficult to clean. If the heat exchanger form has been selected consideration should be given to design features that will reduce the effects of fouling. C henoweth has reviewed this aspect of design as it applies to shell-and-tube heat exchangers. Thus [46]: Tube-side fluid: should be the more rapidly fouling fluid, because the tube interior is easier to clean than the external surfaces. Orientation: horizontal heat exchangers are easier to clean than vertical ones. Elimination of stagnant and low-velocity regions on the shell-side: baming arrangements are important and close axial spacing between the bafiles usually decreases the size of stagnant fluid regions. Enhanced heat transfer surfaces: may be subject to fouling because they provide regions in which the fouling deposit accumulates, however evidence is accumulating that certain surfaces have fouling minimization properties. Tube bundle layout: it is easier to mechanically clean bundles with square or rotated square tubefield layouts.
547
Tube spacing: increasing the tube pitch will provide wider lanes for hydraulic cleaning. 5. FOULING AND BOll.JNG 5.1 Introduction
Fouling under boiling conditions involves the following categories of fouling: (a) precipitation; (b) corrosion; (c) particulate; (d) chemical reaction. Each of these categories is reviewed in the following subsections. Because of its technical importance, a substantial body of literature is available on this topic, but space will only permit the highlights to be considered. In spite of the work that has been done on fouling on surfaces with boiling heat transfer, the complexity of the topic means that the available knowledge is still very incomplete and our understanding of the subject is in a confused state. 5.2 Precipitation Fouling
The fouling of steam generator heat transfer surfaces by insoluble salts present in the feedwater was the earliest manifestation of fouling reported in the technical Iiterature [47]. However, this particular occurrence of fouling is no longer a serious problem l;>ecause chemical means of controlling the phenomenon have now been developed. Nevertheless, continual vigilance is maintained because of the adoption of new materials for the heat transfer surfaces and because of steady advances in steam pressures and temperatures. This is particularly important in nuclear reactors where corrosion products, released from other parts of the steam circuit, have been found to deposit on the heat transfer surfaces. These corrosion products are sometimes in particulate form (magnetite, FeaO4 ) or sometimes in dissolved form (hematite, a-Fe 2 0a). The latter when it deposits on the heat transfer surface is a manifestation of precipitation fouling. Precipitation fouling under boiling conditions also occurs in evaporators used for sea water purification, sugar refining and crystallization. No comprehensive review of precipitation fouling in the presence of boiling appears to have been published since that prepared by Partridge [48]. This deals with the relevant literature up to 1929, with a particUlar emphasis on fouling in steam generators. According to Partridge, the earliest investigation on the mechanism of precipitation fouling with boiling is due to Couste [49], who observed that calcium sulfate (a frequent contributor to fouling in boilers using untreated water) is an inverse solubility salt. He further proposed that local Bupersaturation of the solution in the vicinity of the heat transfer surface could be the cause of fouling. No further fundamental work on fouling under boiling conditions was reported until Hall [50] presented the results of an investigation that appeared to support the hypothesis of Couste. No measurements of the fouling thermal resistance (He) due to precipitation fouling in the presence of boiling heat transfer have been made. This is a consequence of the difficulty in separating the fouling thermal resistance (Rr) from the convective thermal resistance (Re) and the directly measurable overall thermal resistance (R), as shown in
548
equation (1). However, measurements of the total thermal resistance (R) have been reported by Schmidt and Snodgrass [51], Reutlinger [52], Croft [53] and Partridge [48] (see also Partridge and White [54,55]). Of these, the most accurate are probably those of Reutlinger and of Partridge. If it can be assumed that the convective thermal resistance (Rc) is the same on the clean and fouled surfaces (a dubious assumption), then the fouling thermal resistance can be obtained from Rc = R - Rc. Another approach is to determine the mass (mf) of fouling deposit formed on unit area of the heat transfer surface then Rc can be determined from equation (12), provided the thermal conductivity (kf) and density (Pf) of the deposit are known. Appropriate measurements, in pool boiling in a saturated calcium sulfate solution, of the mass of fouling deposit were first reported by Partridge [48], who proposed that the net rate of formation (m f) of the fouling deposit be given by ·
mf = - K5 dT
qn
(76)
Partridge made no attempt to evaluate the empirical constants Ks, m and n. The data on which equation (76) was based were obtained on the assumption that the net rate of formation (� f) of the deposit was constant. Similar pool boiling measurements with saturated calcium sulfate solutions using this assumption have been reported by Palen and Westwater [56] and by Curcio [57]. The latter measurements involved plain and enhanced heat transfer surfaces. Palen and Westwater represented their results as (assuming mg = 0) m = Ksq2 f
(77)
It can be shown (see Palen and Westwater [56]) that this implies that the exponent n=2 in Reitzger's model for faling rate fouling [equation (57)]. Experiments reported by Asakura et.al. [58,59] and by Mizuno et.al. [60] using hematite (a-Fe20 3) solutions have considered in addition to the heat flux (q), the latent heat of vaporization (hfg)' the bulk concentration of the solution ( C b )' and the time of exposure (9) of the surface to fouling conditions. They represented their results by
( )m Cben
m =K � 7 hfg f with n = 0
(78)
549
Unfortunately, so far as the author is aware, no data is available on the properties (kf, PC> of the hematite deposit, so at this time equation (78) cannot be used to determine the fouling thermal resistance Re. Partridge [48] (see also Partridge and White [55]) gf * studied the formation of the calcium sulfate deposit on the heat transfer surface and noted that at an early stage in the growth of the deposit it was seen to be in the form of rings. On the basis of this observation they hypothesized that the deposit was formed at the triple interface between the liquid, the vapor in the bubble and the heat transfer surface (see Fig. 3). Similar observations for calcium sulfate have been reported by Schmid-Schonbein [38] and for hematite deposits by Asakura et.al. [58,5 9]. Further work on the deposition of calcium sulfate, subsequent to that of Partridge [48], by Hospeti and Mesler [61] showed that the formation of deposits of calcium sulfate during nucleate boiling in saturated solutions was due to the evaporation of a microlayer (about 0.5 j.LDl to 2.6 J.1m thickness) of liquid beneath the bubble. Asakura et.al. [58] made use of this information to determine the constant K7 in equation (78), which was found to decrease with increasing flow rate of the solution over the heat transfer surface. Independent calculations by Schmid-Schonbein [37], using essentially the same model, have been carried out for saturated calcium sulfate solution.
3EN ERAL SOLUTION
/
H IGH TEMPERATURE AREA CAUSING CRYSTALLIZATION OF SALTS WITH NEGATIVE SOLUBILITY SLOPE
HEATING SURFACE AT ELEVATED TEMPERATURE
Figure 3. Dynamic mechanism of precipitation fouling deposit formation under boiling conditions proposed by Freeborn and Lewis [62].
5 50
llI The time dependence of the net rate of formation (�f) of the fouling deposit was observed by Mizuno et.al. [60], who found that it was constant up to some critical time, which depended on the concentration of hematite in the solution. Measurements of the heat transfer surface temperature by Palen and Westwater [56] indicated the temperature initially increased at a constant rate, then decreased, followed by an increasing trend. It seems reasonable to assume that these observations are related, but the exact nature of this relationsip requires further investigation. Similar tests to those reported by Palen and Westwater have been carried out by Curcio [57] using enhanced heat transfer surfaces. He found that the surface temperature initially increased, but after about two to five hours (longer than Palen and Westwater, but shorter than Mizuno et.al.) the temperature did not increase significantly. This appeared to confirm results obtained by Gottzman, O'Neill and Minton [63] with UOP High Flux Q) enhanced heat transfer surface exposed to an aqueous solution. As mentioned in the introduction to this section, the most important current application of the preceding is to evaporators handling seawater and certain other fluids, such as sugar solutions. However, these practical situations are complicated by the fact that the solutions handled involve a number of different salts that can precipitate on the heat transfer surface. Seawater, which is the most widely investigated evaporator fouling fluid typically contains several saltsttt that can precipitate on a heat transfer surface. Typically, but the composition is variable (surface temperature has an important effect), the deposits consist of calcium carbonate (CaC0 3 )' magnesium hydroxide [Mg(OH)2]' and calcium sulfate ( CaS04 )' Work on scaling in seawater evaporators up to 1958 has been comprehensively reviewed by Badger and Associates [64]. Probably the most important studies on this occurrence of fouling are due to Langelier et.al. [65], Hillier [66], Dooly and Glater [67], and Rankin and Adamson [68]. The investigation of Langelier et.al. [65] was concerned with the chemical mechanisms of fouling, and showed that the effect of carbon dioxide, as it influences the carbonate ion concentration is important. Hillier's study involved the use of a small evaporator in which heat was supplied by the condensation of steam in tubes submerged in the brine. He concluded from his tests that a minimum fouling occurred at 180°F, and that this temperature was a transition temperature such that calcium carhonate predominated in the deposit at lower temperatures and magnesium hydroxide was the major constituent at higher temperatures. The amount of deposit formed was proportional to the amount of seawater processed and the rate of
formation (� � of the fouling deposit increased with decreasing heat transfer surface temperature. These findings were questioned at the time of their publication and subsequently by Badger and Associates [64], and by Dooly and ttt Typical analysis (parts per million by mass):
calcium bicarbonate, Ca(HCOa)2: 180; calcium sulfate, CaS04: 1220; magnesium sulfate, MgS04 : 1960; magnesium chloride, MgC12: 3300; sodium chloride, NaCI: 25,620.
55 1
Glater [67]. However Rankin and Adamson [68] did find good agreement
between the rate of formation (mf) of the deposit as measured by Hilier and by themselves. It is probably true to say that our understanding of fouling in seawater evaporators is very incomplete at this time, but this is not surprising considering the complexity of the fouling solutions. Precipitation fouling in the presence of boiling is stil not fully understood, but the success in controlling fouling in steam generators suggests that where the economic incentive exists even a fouling situation as complicated as this is capable of resolution. 5.3 Corrosion Fouling
Corrosion under boiling conditions has not been extensively studied, and its effects on heat transfer have received even less attention. This type of fouling could be important in steam generators and engine cooling systems, for example, however corrosion inhibitors are universally used in these applications. Probably corrosion fouling in the presence of boiling heat transfer is only of importance when the use of inhibitors is impossible, such as, in chemical processing. The author is not aware of specific examples in the latter situation, so this discussion is restricted to some observations of corrosion fouling in laboratory boiling experiments where the metallic test surface has been exposed, on purpose or inadvertently, to oxygenated water. ml lmW l: I:wat transfer. Bui and Dhir [69] EfmdiI m have reported the effects of an oxide deposit on pool boiling heat transfer in water. Typical results are shown in Fig. 4(a). The nature of the oxide is not given, but it was probably a tarnish on the copper test surface, since the surface is described as clean with a mirror finish. It will be seen that this oxide has no effect on nucleate boiling (the left hand portion of the figure where &T is increasing with increasing heat flux, q). However there is a definite effect in the transition regime between nucleate and film boiling. No data was provided in the original reference on the change in heat transfer with time as the oxide film develops (presumably the oxide film was developed by exposing a clean surface with a mirror finish to the laboratory atmosphere for several hours). It is unlikely that oxide in the form of a tarnish will have much effect on the heat transfer and fluid flow in the vicinity of the surface, other than affecting the number of bubble nucleation sites. The observed shift of the transition boiling curve to higher values of & T is therefore probably an indication of the magnitude of the conductive thermal resistance (&lkf) of the oxide film. Some other data provided by Bui and Dhir demonstrate the effects of a so called deposit of dirt on the heat transfer surface. Since this was formed, according to the authors, when it operated "in nucleate boiling for several hours in the liquid pool exposed to the laboratory environment," and since the water was normally kept under nitrogen pressure in the test chamber it is likely that in the usual course of events little or no corrosion occurred while the apparatus was being operated. This suggests that what Bui and Dhir cal dirt may in fact be, to a greater or lesser extent, a heavy oxide deposit. As will be seen from Fig. 4(b), curves are shown for "Some Deposit of Dirt" and "Heavy
552
\
\
SUR F A C E S A R E CLEAN AND MIRROR FINISH
.
.
o
/
\
\
\�
\
WITH O X I D E 15 == 4 5
NO O X I D E == 90 STEADY STATE
o G>
T R A N S IE N T C O O LING
V �
TRANS IENT COOLING
STEADY
STATE
I RU N 4 9
IRUN 48
10
1 00 AT
200
( K )
Figure 4(a). Effect of oxide film (tarnish) on pool boiling, according to Bui and Dhir [69] Deposit of Dirt". presumably this is some indication of the progressive effect of fouling with time of exposure. As in the case of the oxide film [Fig. 4(a)], the effect of the deposit is to shift the transition boiling curve to higher values of AT for a given heat flux (q). It is possible, depending on the nature of the deposit ( see the section below on particulate fouling), that this is a manifestation of both the conductive resistance of the deposit (Slk f) and its effect on the convective thermal resistance (Rc )' There is a clear need for more investigations of the interaction between corrosion and heat transfer under boiling conditions.
5.4 Particulate Fouling Important examples of particulate fouling under boiling conditions occur in fossil fuel fired and nuclear steam generators. the former case, this is usually combined with corrosion products formed at the
In
553
�
STEADY STATE
•
TRANSIENT HEATING
..
;
i
..
\
A
10
CT NO
OOL I N G
STUDY STATE
0 0 •
T R A NSIE NT H E A T I N G
•
TRANSIENT HEATING
0 [3
.. '0
TRANSIENT COOLING
\\
TRANSIENT C
STE ADY STATE
1
I I j
'I
RUN 50
RUN 5 1
T R A N S I E N T C O O L I N G RUN
"6
DEPOSIT
D E P O SIT OF D I R T
0/ \ .�/ "8 $.A-J.,A
6
'-A
ALL S U R F A C E S OF S A M E
R OU G H N E S S E.800
1 00
10
�T
200
( K )
Figure 4(b). Effect of surface deposit (corrosion product?) on pool boiling according to Bui and Dhir [69] steel heat transfer surface (the extent depending on the effectiveness of the corrosion inhibition of the boiler feedwater). Nuclear power steam generator heat transfer sufaces, on the other hand, are usually made from zirconium alloys which corrode very little under heat transfer conditions. However, such surfaces are subject to fouling by corrosion products, produced elsewhere in the flow system, and transported to the heat transfer surface in dissolved and particulate form. The case of precipitation fouling, typicaly by dissolved hematite (a-Fe 2 0 3 )' has been discussed above in the section devoted to precipitation fouling and boiling. The fouling of fossil fuel fired boiler heat transfer surfaces can lead to excessive surface temperatures followed by damage and failure. This is a consequence of the normally high temperatures and heat fluxes at which these
554
operate. In nuclear reactors. which operate at comparatively low temperatures and heat fluxes. fouling can result in the transport of radioactivity outside of the reactor and possible damage to the heat transfer surface is a secondary consideration. * Such transport of radioactivity is undesirable from both the safety and the convenience points of view. Particulate fouling in such industrial devices as evaporators and kettle reboilers does not appear to have been considered. This may be an indication of the relatively greater importance of precipitation fouling in these cases. A good review of particulate and precipitation fouling under boiling conditions. with special reference to nuclear steam generators is due to Lister [70.71]. gf The only attempt to formulate a complete theory of particulate fouling under boiling conditions is due to Charlesworth [28]. although there have been a number of theoretical studies of certain aspects of the fouling process (see. for example. Gasparini et.al. [72]. Iwahori et.aI. [73]. and Styricovich et.al. [74]). Charlesworth [28] made use of the Kern and Seaton [5] model for asymptotic fouling discussed above. In terms of the net amount (mf) of deposit formed on the surface we have from equation (63)
r
mf = m [1 exp (-O/Oc)] -
(79)
On the basis of a number of tests on heat transfer surfaces located both in the nuclear reactor and outside the reactor. Charlesworth obtained the following empirical values for the constants in equation (79) m
r
=
25 kg/cm2
and 0c
: =
100 hours
On the basis of earlier work by Mankina [75]. it is frequently stated that the net
�
rate of formation ( f) of the fouling deposit on a surface with boiling heat transfer is proportional to the square of the heat flux at the surface.** so the above values of m and 0 c can only be assumed to apply at one heat flux. which. according to Charlesworth. was between 80 and 100 W/cm2 . Charlesworth's model has been used to calculate particle transport rates in nuclear reactor heat transfer systems (see. for example. Burrill [76-78]). Simpler models for particulate fouling under boiling conditions. which owe their origin to the work of Mankina [75]. cited above. assume a dependence on
r
* However the so-called denting of fuel elements as a consequence of the accumulation of transported corrosion products in flow stagnation regions and their possible consequent effect on local temperatures should be noted. it Se further discussion below.
555
time that is different from the asymptotic form of Charlesworth. Examples are due to Asakura et.al. [58,59], Mizuno et.al. [60], and to Picone and Fletcher [79]. The first three references have already been discussed under precipitation fouling*** where the following expression was given
(SO)
Picone and Fletcher proposed (81)
Equation (81) was not able to explain the measurements of fouling deposits in the Saxton reactor. Kabanov [80] sugested that a form like equation (80) would be better in which m= l and n =O. An important investigation by Thomas and Grigull [81] considered the deposition of magnetite on heat transfer surfaces under both boiling and non boiling conditions. In the absence of boiling, heat flux had little effect on the net rate of formation of the fouling deposit, but the turbulence level was very important. In nucleate boiling the extra turbulence induced by bubble motion led to an increase in the rate of deposition. Under film boiling conditions, the film of vapor at the surface impeded the transport of particles to the surface, so a decrease in the net rate of formation of the deposit was observed. The net rate of formation of the deposit was given in the form of a mass transfer Stanton number relation, namely (82) Stro = Stro exp (-mth) where I
0
(83)
and Stro , o is the initial (clean surface) mass transfer Stanton number. The initial net rate of formation of the deposit was given by
(84) :ri:tf,o = K8 Re 1.073 Detailed discussions of the physical and chemical mechanisms of particulate fouling in the presence of boiling have been made by Gasparini et.al. [72], Iwahori et.al. [73], and by Styricovich et.al. [74]. The speculative nature of The work of these authors involved hematite (a-Fe203) which was injected into flowing water in a finely divided form (partide diameters - 3.5 J,1m 0. 1 J,1m) part of which probably dissolved in the water and was deposited on the heat transfer surface by precipitation. *H
-
-
556
these theories, which is a consequence of the difficulty of making the associated measurements, does no warrant space being devoted to their consideration at this time. .lAd IwU transfer. Fouling deposits, particularly those formed in the presence of boiling, are frequently porous in nature and this bas an important effect on the heat transfer at the surface. Macbeth [82] has proposed that 'chimneys' in the deposit play a role in the bubble formation and heat transfer. A conceptual diagram of such a chimney is shown in Fig. 5. Macbeth used this model to compute the effect of the chimneys on boiling heat transfer and showed (Fig. 6) that increasing size of the liquid capillaries alL) and of the vapor capillaries (Dy) increased the rate of heat transfer. Cohen [83] has used the chimney system to compute the rate of transport of foulant to the deposit. Particularly imporant in this respect are non-ferrous materials which substantially decrease the thermal conductivity (kf) of the deposit thereby increasing the fouling thermal resistance (Rr). After precipitation fouling in the presence of boiling, particulate fouling has been studied the most extensively. In spite of this our understanding of this topic is very limited. There is assuredly insufficient information to allow the design of boiling heat transfer equipment subject to particulate fouling. STEAM
ESCAPING
FROM
MOUTH OF
STEM� CHIMNEY BY SUCCESSIVE FORMATION A ND RE LEASE OF STEAM BUB&LES.
FLOW OF __
=
_
CRUD DEPOSIT THICK N E S S
CAPILLARY CHA N N E L S DRAWI N G UOUID TO THE BASE OF THE STEAM CH I M NEY
HEAT
FLOW
Figure 5 . Proposed model of 'wick' boiling in a magnetite fouling deposit, according to Macbeth [82].
557
EFFECTIVE CRUD VOIDAGE
CRUD THICKNESS
L
X < L
� J
5O)MI
=
0']
I
!
40 )0 20 10 DIAMETER OF VAPOUR HOLES - ).1m
Figure 6. Maximum heat flux rates attainable in a porous fouling deposit with water at 1.0 bar, according to Macbeth [82].
5.5 Chemical Reaction Fouling Chemical reaction fouling is defined by Watkinson [84] "as a deposition process in which a chemical reaction either forms the deposit directly, or is involved in forming deposit precursors (or foulants) which subsequently cause the deposition". The reaction does not involve the material of the wall, this would only occur in corrosion fouling. Precursors can be produced on the wall, in the wall region, or in the bulk of the fluid. The precursor, if formed in the fluid, may be soluble in the fluid and only precipitate on the wal. Alternatively, the precipitate may be in finely divided solid form in the bulk. of the fluid and deposit on the heat transfer surface by particulate fouling mechanisms. Clearly chemical reaction fouling involves features of precipitation fouling and/or particulate fouling. However it has not been possible to separate the processes of precursor formation from the
558
deposition process. In the presence oC boiling, Watkinson [84] suggests that the higher boiling point Coulant precursors will be concentrated in the liquid. Chemical reaction Couling is most usualy observed in the heating of organic liquids, particularly petroleum refinery and petrochemical processing feedstocks. This type oC fouling also occurs in the fuel lines and combustor nozzles of gas turbines. UseCul reviews oC chemical reaction Couing have recently been prepared by Crittenden [85] and Watkinson [84]. Thermal The most complete investigation oC chemical reaction fouling with boiling has been reported by Crittenden and Khater [86,87] who carried out experiments with kerosene. They demonstrated the importance oC liquid phase processes. This conclusion was based on two observations from their experiments, viz., (a) Fouling was greatest just before bulk vaporization commenced in the fluid, i.e., nucleate boiling was occurring when the rate of fouling was a maximum.
(b)
Fouling was most significant in portions of the heat transfer surface that were known to be covered with liquid.
Crittenden and Khater also investigated the effect of pressure on the rate of fouling. This is a parameter of interest because raising the pressure could suppress boiling, however it was Cound that Couling was in fact enhanced. This finding also suggests that reducing the amount of vaporization by increasing the fluid velocity, which could also increase the rate oC deposit
removal (Iil r ), may not be the best approach to reducing Couling in practical situations. Likewise the observation that fouling is less in the vapor phase, which corresponds to higher surface temperature, is contrary to conventional fouling wisdom. This serves to demonstrate that fouling is such a complex phenomena that the identification of operating strategies that will reduce fouling requires much more than a superficial acquaintance with the subject. Some interesting experiments on fouling under boiling conditions with styrene dissolved in heptane have been reported by Fetissoff et.al. [88]. This results in the formation of a deposit of polymerized styrene on the heat transfer surface. The data (Fig. 7) showed that the time variation of the fouling thermal resistance had an asymptotic Corm [equation (64)]. Tests were carried out with two different concentrations of styrene (3.08% and 1 1.8%) and from a comparison of the results the authors concluded that the induction period generally decreased with increasing styrene concentration and that the fouling rate generally increased with the amount of styrene. There have been fairly extensive studies of Couling in kerosene and jet fuels because of the tendency for deposits to form in fuel lines and combuster nozzles of turbojet engines. Particularly important contributions have been made by Taylor (see, for example. Taylor [89]). This body of work has identified the important role of oxygen in promoting fouling. The formation of the fouling deposit is believed to be related to a so-called auto oxidation reaction. as follows:
559
S Y MBOL S
0 ·2 4
P f Ru-a
�
RU N
HWP 6 ' F R U .. A 0
12
�
0-1 6
,. ..: .. � "
e
-
0 ·08
0:
o
10
5
20 T i me
25
( h ou r s )
30
35
40
Figure 7. Fouling thermal resistance a s a function o f time for 3.1% styrene in n-heptane. A and B represent two separate runs using an HTRI Portable Fouling Research Unit (PFRU), according to Fetissoff, Watkinson and Epstein
[88].
(a)
Hydrogen absorption from the parent hydrocarbon R-H with a free .
radical X
(b)
.
.
R-H + X � R + XH
(85a)
.
Reaction of R with molecular oxygen .
.
R + 02 � ROO
(85b)
560
(c)
Further hydrogen abstraction ROO + RH -+ ROOH + R .
(d)
.
(85c)
Homolysis of the weak 0-0 bond in ROOH to form more radicals ROOH -+ RO + OH .
.
(85d)
The reaction chain breeds since equations (b). (c) and (d) result in one free radical giving rise to three. Our current understanding of chemical reaction fouling is so limited that the addition of boiling to an already very complex problem makes it likely that progress on this type of fouling will be slow. Nevertheless. it deserves much more attention than it has received in the past because of its great technical importance. 6. SUMY AND CONCLUSIONS
This lecture has reviewed the physical nature of fouling and its effect on heat transfer and fluid flow. Fouling models based on fundamental processes have been discussed. but our present incomplete understanding of fouling limits the usefulness of these in the design and operation of heat transfer equipment. Empirical data. combined with simplified models, is currently a more suitable approach to the problems faced by a heat transfer engineer concerned with equipment exposed to fouling conditions. However design methods employing such data have not so far been developed and consequently fixed values of the fouling thermal resistance. known as fouling factors. based on a body of practical knowldge are widely used to design heat transfer equipment. The combination of such crude methods with the refined techniques now available for the design of heat transfer equipment is illogical. Clearly there is a need to develop methods for estimating fouling that are of comparable quality to the methods used to evaluate the performance of clean heat exchangers. The interaction of fouling and boiling was also reviewed, but this is a topic that has not been very extensively studied. Because of this and because of the complexity of the process, involving the interaction between two complex processes - fouling and boiling, it is unlikely that significant progress toward understanding this topic will be made in the near future. Nevertheless the technical importance of this type of fouling suggests that it would be worthy of more study. NOMENCLATURE
A AC AF a ap B
heat transfer area. m2 heat transfer area in clean heat exchanger, m2 heat transfer area in fouled heat exchanger, m2 initial flaw size, m projected area of particles. m2 temperature coefficient of solubility, kg/(m3o C )
56 1
constant in equation (61). m2°C/(W s) constant in equation (76). kg 1 m m3m+2n-2 }{2m w-n s-l constant in equation (77). kg m2 W 2 s- l constant in equation (80). m2m+ 1 sm-n-1 kg-m constant in equation (84). kg/m2 s
ke kf km kmo km1 kr kro
m
.
mf
material constant in Lo and Bridgwater theory. equation (50) solubility product. kg2/m6 rate constant for rate of formation of microbial fouling deposit. equation (29). s- l transport coefficient for eroded particles. mls thermal conductivity of material of the fouling deposit. W/m K mass transfer coefficient in equations (32). (34). (36). (38). mls overall mass transfer coefficient. defined in equation (27b). mls value of km for oxygen. m/s reaction rate constant. kgn-1 m3n 2 s l Arrhenius constant for the temperature dependence of kr• same units as kr transport coefficient. mls thermal conductivity of material of the heat transfer surface. W/m K constant in corrosion model of Mahato et.al. [18-20]. dm7mg-2 constant in corrosion model of Mahato et.al. [18-20]. m3/kg constant in corrosion model of Mahato et.al. [18-20]. mg- 1 length of duct. m molar mass of oxygen. kglkg mole molar mass of fouling deposit. kg/kg mole exponent in equations (17). (76). (78). (80). dimensionless mass of oxygen per unit area of the heat transfer surface. kg/m2 mass of the fouling deposit per unit area of the heat transfer surface. kg/m2 net rate of formation of the fouling deposit. kglm2s rate of growth of the fouling deposit. kglm2s
p Q Qc
rate of removal of the fouling deposit. kg/m2s number flux of particles to the heat transfer surface. m-2 s- 1 exponent in equations (14). (15). (17). (35a). (38). (57). (58). (76). (78). (80). dimensionless sticking probability. dimensionless rate of heat transfer in the heat exchanger. W rate of heat transfer in the clean heat exchanger. W
562
b C Cb Cbl Ci Cp Cs C si C sat Dl D
i
d dc df dh dp E F F"
FC FF f fI h h fg [I] Kl
�
K3
l<.i
removal rate constant in equation (62), s- l ; constant in equation (82), kg- I constant in equations (47) and (48) (units defined by respective equations) bulk concentration of fouling deposit material, kg/m3 bulk concentration of oxygen, kg/m3 concentration of fouling deposit material at the interface between the deposit and the flowing fluid, kglm3 specific heat of liquid, kJ/kgK concentration of fouling deposit material at the interface between the deposit and the heat transfer surface, kg/m3 value of Cs for oxygen, kg/m3 concentration of fouling deposit material at the saturation conditions, kg/m3 mass diffusivity of oxygen in the deposit, m2/s mass diffusivity of oxygen in water, m2/s duct diameter, m diameter of available flow cross section in clean heat exchanger, m diameter of available flow cross section in fouled heat exchanger, m duct hydraulic diameter, m particle diameter, m activation energy, kJ/kg mole; elastic modulus in equation (49), N/m2 correction factor for adjusting the actual heat exchanger to a double pipe counter-flow heat exchanger, dimensionless; force, N effective applied force per unit area exerted by the fluid on the particle, N/m2 correction factor F for clean heat exchanger, dimensionless correction factor F for fouled heat exchanger, dimensionless Fanning friction factor, dimensionless activity coefficient of species I, dimensionless coefficient of heat transfer, W/m2K latent heat of vaporization, kJ/kg concentration of chemical species I, kg/m3 (subscripts i and s indicate values at the liquid-deposit and deposit surface interfaces, respectively) stoichiometric constant relating the rate of growth of the corrosion fouling deposit to the rate of consumption of oxygen [defined in equation (25)], dimensionless constant in equation (54), m2/W s constant in equation (56), m2oC/(W2 s); constant in falling rate fouling model, equations (56), (58), m2oC/(W hr) constant in equation (59), m2°C/(W s)
563
�
q R
rate of heat transfer in the fouled heat exchanger, W heat flux, W/m2 total thermal resistance, m2K1W; universal gas constant, equations (35b), (37), kJlkmole K convective thermal resistance at the heat transfer surface, m2KJW fouling deposit thermal resistance, m2KIW asymptotic fouling resistance, see equation (64), mZKIW Reynolds number = dlu, dimensionless outside radius of the deposit formed on a cylindrical surface, m inside radius of the deposit formed on a cylindrical surface, m stopping distance, m Schmidt number = ulD, dimensionless Sherwood number = km dHID, dimensionless
mass transfer Stanton number = xitf/P (Cb - C s )' dimensionless value of S1m at 9 = 0, dimensionless temperature, K bulk fluid temperature, K temperature at the interface between the fouling deposit and the flowing fluid, K; temperatures on the inside radius of the deposit formed on a cylindrical surface, K temperature on the outside radius of the deposit formed on a cylindrical surface, K temperature of the heat transfer surface, K overall heat transfer coefficient, W/rnZK. value of U on a clean surface, W/m2K · value of U on a fouled surface, W/m2K _
fluid velocity averaged over the duct cross section, mls particle volume, m3 initial velocity of a particle coasting toward the heat transfer surface, m/s average component of velocity of particles normal to the heat transfer surface, mls fluid velocity at the location of the center of the particle, mls -
v
average fluid velocity, mls thickness of heat transfer surface normal to the direction of heat flow, m distance measured normal to the heat transfer surface, m . valence of the metal molecule, dimensionless geometric factor, dimensionless
564
pressure drop over the length L of the duct, m temperature diference between the heat transfer surface and the fluid, K log mean temperature difference, K value of L\Tm in a clean heat excbanger, K value of L\Tm in a fouled heat exchanger, K thickness of the deposit, m thickness of the damped turbulence layer on the clean heat transfer surface, m mass transfer eddy diffiJ.sivity, m2/s effectiveness factor in equation (43), dimensionless mass transfer coefficient in equation (66a), kg/m2s combined mass transfer coefficient and reaction rate constant, m1s fraction of surface covered by micro-organisms, dimensionless dynamic viscosity, kglm s kinematic viscosity, m 2 /s; Poisson's ratio in equation (49), dimensionless fluid density, kg/m3 density of the fouling deposit material, kg/m3 density of the particle material, kg/m3 deposit strength factor, N/m2 shear stress at the deposit-fluid interface, N/m2 time, hr or s time constant in asymptotic fouling model = 1Jb, s or hr or days induction time, s or hours or days residence time, s or brs critical wetting tension, Baier [10], dynes/cm; fracture stress, Loo and Bridgwater [31], N/m constant in equation (43), dimensionless
1
2
3
B.A. Garrett-Price, et al., Industrial Fouling: Problem Characterization, Economic Assessment, and Review of Prevention, Mitigation, and Accommodation Techniques, Battelle Pacific Northwest, Report PNL483, UC-95f (1984). P. Thackery, Fouling - Science or Art, ed. A.M. Pritchard (Proceedings of a conference at the University of Surrey, Guildford, England, March 1979) pp. 9. J.G. Knudsen, Fouling in Heat Exchange Equipment, eds. J.M. Chenoweth and M. Impagliazzo (American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, 1981) pp. 29-38.
565
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13
14 15
16 17 18 19 a>
21 22 23 24 25
N. Epstein, Fouling of Heat Transfer Equipment, eds. E.F.C. Somerscales and J.G. Knudsen (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1981) pp. 31-55. D.C. Kern and R.E. Seaton, Brit. Chem. Eng. 4 ( 1959) 258-262. D.C. Kern and R.E. Seaton, Brit. Chem. Eng. 55(6) (1959) 7 1-73. N. Epstein, Heat Exchangers: Theory and Practice, eds. J. Taborek, G.F. Hewitt and N. Afgan (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1983) pp. 795-815. N. Epstein, Low Reynolds Number Flow Heat Exchangers, eds. N. Kaka�, R.K. Shah and A.E. Bergles (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1983) pp. 951-965. D.H. Troup and G.A. Richardson, Chem. Eng. Comm 2 ( 1978) 167-180. R.E. Baier, Fouling of Heat Transfer Equipment, eds. E .F.C. Somerscales and J.G. Knudsen (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1981) pp. 293-304. A.H.P. Skelland, Diffusional Mass Transfer (John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1974). D. Hasson, Dechema Monographien 47 (1962) 233-252. A.P. Watkinson and N. Epstein, Heat Transfer -Philadelphia, Chem. Eng. Prog. Symp. Series 65(92) (1979) 84-90. B. Crittenden and S. Kolachowski, Fouling - Art or Science, ed. A.M. Pritchard, (Proceedings of a Conference at the University of Surrey, Guildford, England, 1979) pp. 19. lH. Newson, T.R. Bott and C.I. Hussain, Fouling in Heat Exchange Equipment, eds. J.M. Chenoweth and M. Impagliazzo (American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, 1981) pp. 73-8 I. S.K. Beal, Nucl. Sci. Eng. 40 (1970) I-II. S.K. Friedlander and H.F. Johnstone, Ind. Eng. Chem. 49 (1957) 11511156. B.K. Mahato, S.K. Voora and L.W. Shemilt, Corrosion Science 8 ( 1968) 173-193. B.K. Mahato, S.K. Voora and L.W. Shemilt, Corrosion Science 8 ( 1968) 737-749. B.K. Mahato, S.K. Voora and L.W. Shemilt, Corrosion Science 20 (1980) 421-441. W.G. Characklis, Fouling of Heat Transfer Equipment, eds. E.F.C. Somerscales and J.G. Knudsen (Hemi sphere Publishing Corp . , Washington, D.C., 198 1) pp. 255-291, J.D. Bryers and W.G. Characklis, Fouling of Heat Transfer Equipment, eds. E .F.C. Somers cales and J.G. Knudsen, (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1981) pp. 313-333. S.K. Beal, American Inst. Chem. Engrs., 65th Annual Meeting, Paper No. 76-C (1972). A.P. Watkinson and N. Epstein, Heat Transfer 1970, Proc. 4th International Heat Transfer Conference, Vol. I (Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1971) Paper HE 1.6, pp. 1-12. E.F.C. Somerscales, Fouling in Heat Exchange Equipment, eds. J.M. Chenoweth and M. Impagliazzo (American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, 1981) pp. 17-27.
566 2S rn 28
� :J)
31
32
33
34 35 :J) m 38 39 40
41 42 43
44
45
46
47 48 49 50
51 52
M. Fletcher, Can. J. Microbiology 23 (1977) 1-6. J.M. Bartlett, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission Report, BNWL 676, May 1968.
D.H. Charlesworth, Research and Development Studies in Environmental Pollution in Reactor Cooling Systems, Nuclear Engineering - Part XXI, ed. R.H. Moen, Chem. Eng. Progress Symposium Series 66(104) (Amer. Inst. Chem.Engrs., New York, 1970) 21-30. H. Visser, J. ColI. Interface Sci. 34 (1970) 26-31. T.K Ross British Corrosion J. 2 ( 1967) 131-142. J. Taborek, T. Aoki, R.B. Ritter, J.W. Palen and J.G. Knudsen, Chem. Eng. Prog. 68(7) (1972) 69-78. C .E. Loo and J. Bridgwater, Progress in the Prevention of Fouling in Industrial Plant, ed. A.M. Pritchard (Proceedings of a Conference held at the University of Nottingham, Nottingham, England, April 1-3, 1981). RW. Morse and J.G. Knudsen, Can. J. Chern. Eng. 55 (1977) 272-278. W.L. McCabe and C.S. Robinson, Ind. Eng. Chern. 16 (1924) 478-479. B.J. Reitzer, Ind. Eng. Chem. (Proc. Design) 3 ( 1964) 345-348. A.P. Watkinson and O. Martinez, J. Heat Transfer 97 ( 1975) 504-508. J-J. Schmid-Schonbein, Desalination 21 (1977) 99-118. R.B. Ritter, J. Heat Transfer 105 (1983) 374-378. A.P. Watkinson, Heat Exchangers: Theory and Practice, eds. J. Taborek, G.F. Hewitt and N. Mgan (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, DC, 1983) pp. 853-861. J.G. Knudsen and H.K. McCluer, Chem. Eng. Prog. Symp. Series 55(29) (1959) 1-4.
RW. Morse and J.G. Knudsen, Can. J. Chem. Eng. 55 (1977) 272-278. S.H. Lee and J.G. Knudsen, ASHRAE Trans. 85(1) (1979) 281-302. J.G. Knudsen and M. Story, AIChE Symp. Series 74( 124) (Amer. Inst. Chern. Engrs., New York, 1978) 25-30. J.G. Knudsen, Seminaire sur L'Entartrage des Equipments de Transfert de C haleur, eds. J.G. Knudsen and E.F. C . Somerscales (L'lnstitut Algerien du Petrole, C entre d'Arzew, April 27-28, 1985) pp. 9. 1-9.8. W.J. Marner and J.W. Suitor, Handbook of Single Phase Heat Transfer, eds. S. Kaka�, RK. Shah, and Win Aung (John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1987).
J.M. Chenoweth,Fouling Science and Technology, NATO AS! Series E: Applied Sciences - vol. 145, eds. L.F� Melo, T.R. Bott, and C .A. Bernardo (Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 1988) pp. 477494.
E.F. C . Sornerscales, Heat Transfer Engineering 11(1) (1990) 19-36. E.P. Partridge, Formation and Properties of Boiler Scale, University of Michigan Engineeering Research Bulletin, No. 15 (June 1930). E. Couste, An Mines 5(5) (1854) 69-164. RE. Hall, Ind. Eng. Chem. 17 (1925) 283-290. E. C . Schmidt and J.M. Snodgrass, Effect of Scale on the Transmission of Heat Through Locomotive Boiler Tubes, University of Dlinois Engineering Experiment Station Buletin No. 1 1 (1907). E. Reutlinger, Z. Ver. Deutscher Ing. 54 (1910) pp. 545-553, 596-601, 638642, 676-681.
567
53 54
55
56 57 58
59 ro 61 62 m 64 ffi 66 fj'{
68 m
70
71 72
H.O. Croft, Power Plant Eng. 31 (1927) 1001-1002. E.P. Partridge and A.H. White, Ind. Eng. Chem. 21 (1929) 834-838. E.P. Partridge and A.H. White, Ind. Eng. Chem. 21 ( 1929) 839-84. T.W. Palen and J.W. Westwater, ,Heat Transfer - Los Angeles, Chem. Eng. Prog. Symposium Series 62(4), ed. J.G. Knudsen (American Institute of Chemical Engineers, New York, 1966) pp. 77-86. L.A. Curcio, Jr., Pool Boiling of Enhanced Heat Transfer Surfaces in Refrigerant - Oil Mixtures and Aqueous Calcium Sulfate Solutions, M. Eng. Thesis (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, 1989). Y. Asakura, M. Kikuchi, S. Uchida and H. Yusa, Nucl. Sci. Eng. 67 ( 1978) 1-7. Y. Asakura, M. Kikuchi, S. Uchida and H. Yusa, Nucl. Sci. Eng. 72 ( 1979) 117-120. T. Mizuno, K. Wada and T. Iwahori, Corrosion 38 (1982) 15-19. N.B. Hospetti and RB. Mesler, AIChE J. 11 (1965) 662-665. G. Freeborn and D. Lewis, J. Mech. Eng. Sci. 4 (1962) 46-52. C.F. Gottzmann, P.S. O'Neill and P.E. Minton, Chern. Eng. Prog. 69(7) (1973) 69-75. W.L. Badger and Associates, Inc., U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Saline Water, R&D Progress Report No. 25, July (1959). W.F. Langelier, D.H. Caldwell, W.B. Lawrence and C.H. Spaulding, Ind. Eng. Chern. 42 (1950) 126-130. H. Hillier, Proc. Instn. Mech. Engrs. I(B) (1952) 295-322. R. Dooley and J. Glater, Desalination 11 (1972) 1-16. B.H. Rankin and W.L. Adamson, Desalination 13 (1973) 63-87. T.D. Bui and V.K Dhir, J. Heat Transfer 107 (1985) 756-763. D.H. Lister, Corrosion Products in Power Generating Stations, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, Report No. AECL-6877 0,980). D.H. Lister, Fouling in Heat Exchange Equipment, eds. E.F.C. Somerscales and J.G. Knudsen (Hemisphere Publishing Corp . , Washington, DC, 1981) pp. 135-200. R. Gasparini, C. Della Rocca and E. Ioanilli, Combustion 51(5) (1969) 1218.
73
T. Iwahori, T. Mizuno and H. KOyama, Corrosion 35 (1979) 345-350. M.A. Styricovich, 0.1. Martynova, V.S. Protopopov and M.G. Lyskov, Heat Exchangers: Theory and Practice, eds. J. Taborek, G.F. Hewitt and N. Afgan (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington, D.C., 1983) pp. 833-
75 76
N.N. Mankina, Teploenergetika 7(3) (1960) 8-12. KA. Burrill, Can. J. Chern. Eng. 55 ( 1977) 54-61. K.A. Burrill, Can. J. Chern. Eng. 56 (1978) 79-86. K.A. Burll, Can. J. Chern. Eng. 57 (1979) 211-224. L.F. Picone and W.D. Fletcher, Post-irradiation Examination of Saxton Fuel Cladding, US Atomic Energy Commission Report no. WCAP-3269-57 (1980). L. Kabanov, Energia Nucleaire 18(5) (1971) 285-289. D. Thomas and U. Grigull, Brennstoff - Warme Kraft 26(3) (1978) 167-180.
74
Tl
78 79 8)
81
840.
-
568 82 83 84 85
86 87 88
R.V. Macbeth, Boiling on Surfaces Overlayed with a Porous Deposit: Heat Transfer Rates Obtainable by Capillary Action, U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, Report No. AEEW-R71 1 ( 1971). P. Cohen. Chemical Thermohydraulics of Steam Generating Surfaces. 17th AIChE-ASME National Heat Transfer Conference. Salt Lake City, Utah (1977). A.P. Watkinson, Critical Review of Organic Fluid Fouling: Final Report, US Department of Energy, Argonne National Laboratory, Report No. ANUCNSF-ATM-208 (December 1988). B. Crittenden. Fouling Science and Technology. NATO ASI Series E: Applied Sciences - vol. 145. eds. L.F. Melo, T.R. Bott, and C.A. Bernardo (Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 1988) pp. 293313. B. Crittenden and E.M.H. Khater, First U.K. National Conference on Heat Transfer, Vol. I (University of Leeds. July 3-5, 1984, Symposium Series No. 86, Institution of Chemical Engineers, London, 1984) pp. 401-414. B.D. Crittenden and E.M.H. Khater, J. Heat Transfer 109 (1987) 583-509. P.E. Fetissoff. A.P. Watkinson and N. Epstein, Heat Transfer 1982, Vol. 6. eds. U. Grigull, E . Hahne, K. Stephan and J. Straub (Hemisphere Publishing Corp., Washington D.C 1982) pp. 391-396. W.F. Taylor, Ind. Eng. Chem. (Product R&D) 13 (1974) 133-138. .•
89
569
INTERMOLECULAR AND SURFACE FORCES WITH APPLICATIONS IN CHANGE-OF-PHASE HEAT TRANSFER
Peter C. Wayner, Jr. The Isermann Department of Chemical Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York 12180-3590
1.
INTRODUCTION
The successful application of many technologies depend on the characteristics of thin liquid films. This is discussed in BankofI's review of the importance of change-of-phase heat transfer in ultra-thin liquid films [ 1 J . Unfortunately, from the perspective of interfacial forces, w e find that a thin liquid film is not a simple system. For example, ultra-thin liquid films are not macroscopic in nature because their intensive properties are a function of their thickness. Large density gradients are present near the liquid-solid and liquid-vapor interfaces where the transition from the intermolecular force field associated with a less dense substance to that associated with a denser substance occurs over a short distance. As a result of this density gradient, the stress tensor is anisotropic near interfaces. In ultra-thin films, these interfaces can overlap. The internal pressure in a bulk liquid due to cohesion can be of the order of thousands of atmospheres, whereas it is small in the vapor. In addition, adhesion changes the internal pressure near the solid liquid interface. Therefore, we expect large interfacial effects on transport processes near interfaces. Because of the nature of the transition from one phase to another, there is no simple way to model the interface. However, to overcome some of the theoretical difficulties, useful models have been developed. For example, Gibbs [2] developed the highly successful formalism of a two-dimensional dividing surface. At times, we find this convention and the resulting surface tension of a flat interface between two phases useful. In other situations, we find it necessary to use other concepts which are not easily described within the framework of the two dimensional dividing surface model. The thickness of the interface is also important. This requires the use of the surface excess convention. Both the Gibbs convention and the surface excess convention are used herein. A good discussion of the details and the comparison of these two conventions are given by deFeijter [3]. The concept of thick interfaces is not new. For example, van der Waals (see Rowlinson, [4]) analyzed the extremely large density gradient located at the liquid-vapor interface. Thick interfaces are also associated with resistances to
570
transport processes. Using kinetic theory, Schrage [5], Nabavian and Bromley [6], Umur and Griffith [7], and Sukhatme and Rohsenow [8] demonstrated that extremely large interfacial heat and mass transfer coefficients are possible at the liquid-vapor interface. Large density gradients are also present near the liquid-solid interface. Derjaguin et a1. [9] discussed the effect of these interfacial intermolecular force gradients on fluid flow and the effective pressure in the liquid film using the concept of a disjoining pressure. Potash and Wayner [10] and Wayner et a1. [11] demonstrated that the disjoining pressure has a profound effect on the resistance to change-of phase heat transfer in ultra-thin liquid films. Wayner [12] generalized these concepts by showing that the non-equilibrium processes of change-of-phase heat transfer and fluid flow are intrinsically connected because of their common dependence on the intermolecular force field and gravity. Moosman and Homsy [13], Stephan and Busse [14], Wayner, et a1. [15], and Schonberg and Wayner [16] demonstrated that the conductive resistance across the thin liquid film also has a significant influence on the evaporative process. As the thickness of a completely wetting system decreases, the stabilizing effect of interfacial forces increases. However, shear stresses become very large in small systems. In general, transport processes depend on the intermolecular force field which is a complicated function of temperature and pressure near interfaces. This will be discussed after a short introduction concerning classical interfacial phenomena. When a liquid comes into ccmtact with a solid substrate, one of three conditions must exist at equilibrium: complete wetting, partial wetting, or non-wetting. Complete wetting occurs when the liquid spreads on the solid substrate to form an equilibrium film with a uniform thickness and a contact angle equal to zero (9 = 0). For 0° < 9 < 90° the liquid partially wets the solid. At equilibrium , the total interfacial free energy is a minimum, i. e. (1)
where asv ' asp and a] v are the interfacial free energies of the solid-vapor, solid-liquid and liquid-vapor interfaces respectively and where AIJ. . are the areas. The solid-vapor interfacial free energy is used because the solid is in equilibrium with a vapor phase . The solid surface free energy is a function of the vapor pressure because the vapor can adsorb on the solid surface. As described herein, this leads to extremely important effects. Equation (1) can be used to describe the contact angle formed by a liquid in contact with a solid substrate which is shown in Figure ( 1). However, using a simple force balance, Young (see Rowlinson and Widom, [17]) derived the following equation for the apparent contact angle: (2)
The modifier apparent is used to remind us that we cannot see the real contact angle, which is of molecular dimensions, and that the surface tensions were assumed constant in the derivation of Equation (2). Additional
571
FIGURE 1. Drop of liquid with a finite apparent contact angle on a solid substrate.
details concerning the microscopic details of this contact region are given in [ 18 and 19]. Since the interfaces are boundaries between phases, large stress gradients are present in the contact line region. Therefore, the resulting interfacial free energies are a function of the local liquid film thickness profile. At the molecular level, the interfaces are dynamic with large anisotropic density gradients. These differences vanish at the critical point. Obviously, the above equations are simple but successful macroscopic models of the intermolecular force field. However, we will find herein that additional detail is needed to optimize the use of interfacial forces in the modeling of transport processes. We can also relate the wetting characteristics in terms of the final spreading coefficient, S, introduced by Cooper and Nuttal [20] . (3)
Thus the condition for complete wetting is S 0; while the condition for partial wetting and nonwetting is S < Although the apparent contact angle and the surface tensions give considerable information concerning the general wetting characteristics of a system, the disjoining pressure concept, n, discussed next is more useful. It
O.
=
allows /Zuid /Zow and vapor pressure concepts to be easily introduced and evaluated because it can be viewed as an effective pressure resulting from
a body force acting between the substrate and the mobile liquid film ( e.g. Derjaguin et al. [9,21], Wayner et. al. [ 1 1], Wayner [ 12]). Briefly, the disjoining pressure is (minus) the potential energy per unit volume due to intermolecular forces, F , and is a function of the film thickness, 0: [1
(B) = F (B) -
(4)
572 Disjoining describes the physical process whereby a completely spreading liquid naturally tends to "disjoin" a solid from the vapor by spreading. The concept is shown in Figure (2) for a completely wetting fluid which is evaporating in a gravitational field. To avoid inconsistencies, it is necessary to include gravity in some of the equations even though the other forces are usually substantially larger. In addition, it allows the use of the fundamental concept of hydrostatics to describe the phenomena. The relationship between surface tension and disjoining pressure is discussed in Section (2). At equilibrium, the gravitational force is equal and opposite to the surface forces. We note that the thickness of the thin film at its junction with the classical capillary meniscus can be substantial ( of the order
10-7
m).
VAPOR
LIQUID
Y
FIGURE 2.
Completely wetting fluid in contact with a vertical plate. Evaporation and fluid flow is maintained by an external heat source which is not shown. Adding the "pressure jumps" due to capillarity and disjoining pressure at the liquid-vapor interface, the following extended Young-Laplace equation for the hydrostatic pressure change in a non-evaporating equilibrium liquid film can be written:
(5)
in which PI is the density of the liquid in the gravitational field g, Pvx and PIx
are the pressures in the vapor and liquid at x respectively, and K is the
573 curvature of the liquid-vapor interface. The hydrostatic pressure change is approximate because the effect of the density of the vapor on buoyancy has been neglected. Neglecting n, Equation (5) is the classical equation of capillarity. An equivalent change in energy per unit surface area, E ' with s liquid film thickness could be given as
(6) Therefore , for a completely wetting system, the "surface energy" decreases with an increase in the film thickness. This leads to a positive disjoining pressure, n, and a negative potential energy per unit volume, F, and demonstrates that fluid naturally flows from the thicker to the thinner region as a result of intermolecular forces. For a simple fluid, the film thickness due to van der Waals forces at the height reached by the classical capillary meniscus is of the order of 100 nm. Therefore, the weak van der Waals force has a profound effect on an equilibrium system. As demonstrated below, extremely small temperature differences also have a large effect on the film profile. Therefore, isothermal equilibrium is difficult to maintain ( see e.g. Sujanani and Wayner, [22], and Truong, [23]). Although the disjoining pressure concept can be applied to more complicated systems and the finite contact angle case, we will restrict its use for convenience herein to completely wetting films interacting by only dispersion forces. We caution that intermolecular force fields are complicated and that the results for a simple system, which can be modeled using only van der Waals dispersion forces, can be misleading if applied to more complex systems . Nevertheless, the general objective of obtaining the heat transfer characteristics of a small system from the intermolecular force field is attainable. Some recent books that review and cover these concepts in detail are those by Israelachvili [24], Ivanov [25], Rowlinson and Widom [ 17], and Slattery [26]. Additional details concerning the contact line are given in articles by Wayner [18] and Brochard Wyart et a1. [19]. Chandra and Avedisian [27] addressed the contact line region in their study of the collision dynamics of a liquid droplet on a solid substrate, which is important to processes like mist cooling.
2.
THEORETICAL BACKGROUND
2. 1
Equilibrium Vapor Pressure of a Liquid Film
In this section, interfacial thermodynamics are used to relate the vapor pressure of a curved film of liquid on a solid substrate in a gravitational field to the temperature and the effective pressure in the liquid film. The resulting vapor pressure will be subsequently used to model change of phase heat transfer. The surface excess convention is used in which the single component liquid film can be thought to consist of a volume part, bounded by dividing surfaces at the liquid-vapor and liquid-solid interfaces (e.g. , see deFeijter [3]. and Wayner [12]). The properties of the volume phase are those of a bulk liquid phase in a gravitational field in equilibrium with the film. In the limit of a
574
thick film, the surface tensions of the two dividing surfaces are those of a bulk fluid in contact with the solid and with the vapor. When the film thickness is of the order of 10-9 m and less, bulk properties in the film have to be modified. When the film is very thin, the surface tensions of the dividing surfaces and other properties are a function of the film thickness. The Gibbs-Duhem equations for the two bulk phases a, liquid and v, vapor) in Fig. (2) are dPl
=
sldT - P lgdx + nldlllg
(7) (8)
where s is the entropy/volume and n is the molar density. The chemical potential in a gravitational field is Ilig
=
Ili + M gx
(9)
where Ili is the chemical potential/mole, and M is the molecular weight. The disjoining pressure for a flat film (curvature effects are included below) is (10)
Therefore, a pressure jump model is used for the interfacial body force. The film tension, which is the excess tangential force relative to the surrounding bulk vapor, is (11)
-{
==
J [PT( Y ) Pv]dy 0-
0+
-
(12)
The first term on the right-hand side of Eq. ( 1 1) is the sum of both surface tensions at the dividing surfaces, CJ} v and crls . Near the interfaces the pressure tensor is nonisotropic and PT(y) is the component of the pressure in the direction tangent to the interface. Equation ( 1 1) is important because it relates the disjoining pressure to the more classical surface tensions. Another useful equation is (13)
in which sl is the surface excess entropy. Using the above equations, dS = Sv Sl - SO- I, dp = Pv - Pl , L\n = nv - nl with local equilibrium between the vapor and liquid, J.1vg = J.1lg' gives
575
yf
d
dllg
=
-
aL\n
L\s
(14)
+ Mgdx - - d'I' L\n
This can be rewritten in terms of the fugacity, f,
dlnf
yf
� dT
d =
(15)
RT6n
RTa6n
DeIjaguin and Zorin [21] essentially used Eq. (15) to study adsorption of a vapor in the form of a thin liquid film on a superheated solid surface placed
( 13) for dyf gives
close to but slightly above a pool of liquid. Using Eq.
dIT
= (Sy - Sl)dT + pgdx
Integration of Eq.
(16)
(14) with dJ,lg = 0
(16) over a small temperature change (from Ty, IT
Tly, IT) during which (sv - Sl) is approximately constant and x IT
=
(Sy - Sl)
(Tly
-
=
(
- ATi
67t(Tly -
=
0
=
0
T y )L\h
to
leads to
(17)
Ty)
Using IT = -Al6 7ta3 for film thicknesses less than where Ti = (Tly + Ty)/2, gives a
and Eq.
20
nm and
(Sy
-
Sl)
=
L\h!Tj,
) 113
(18)
The constant A is the Hamaker constant and represents the relative importance of adhesion to cohesion which depend on the intermolecular force field. Eq. (18) can be used to calculate the thickness of an adsorbed layer of liquid on a superheated. (Tly - Ty), solid surface from the value of the volumetric heat of vaporization of the liquid film , £\h, and the Hamaker constant, A. Conversely, the Hamaker constant can be obtained by measuring, S(Tly, Ty). A conceptual drawing of an experimental cell to study adsorption on a superheated flat surface in a gravitational field is presented in Figure 3 . For small changes i n the fugacity i n a range where the fugacity can be replaced by the vapor pressure, Eqs. (13 and 15) give on integration with (L\n)- 1
==
-Vl
(19) where Ply is the vapor pressure at the liquid-vapor interface. In this equation, Py is a reference vapor pressure of a thick, flat, liquid film, where IT
�
0,
with
576
VAPOR, T v
LIQUID, T /
FIGURE 3. Experimental closed cell showing adsorption of a thin liquid film on a superheated solid substrate located at a height x above the reference bulk liquid. At equilibrium for mass transfer, the vapor pressure of the thin film is equal to the surrounding vapor pressure. However, Ts = Tlv > Tv = TI . As indicated, the film thickness can be measured optically using an ellipsometer. The sensitivity of the film thickness to height and temperature difference is shown in Table 1. These results are based on Eq. (22) which is derived below. TABLE 1. Sensitivity of the adsorbed film thickness to temperature difference and hydrostatic head using Plgx �h (Ts-Tv)/T + no for octane on Si02 at T 298 K. n o NO� is an important characteristic pressure difference based on the characteristic thickness, 00, =
-
=
== -
�T, K a
small �T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . equivalent to large �p
0.001 0.01 0. 1 0 1
x, mm 1.7 1.7 1.7 1.7 12.4 m 1.7
00, nm 30.0 7.2 3.3 1.6 1.6 0.7
a surface temperature Tlv = Tv and �h is the ideal heat of vaporization per unit volume of the film. Equation (13) can be modified to include curvature at
577
the liquid vapor interface by replacing n by n + O'lvK in which K is the curvature and O'lv is the surface tension of the liquid-vapor interface: (20) Equation (20) also represents the change in equilibrium vapor pressure relative to the pool surface of the extended meniscus presented in Figure (2) for a change in temperature of (Tlv - Tv) and hydrostatic pressure equal to Plgx :: (n + O'lvK). The right hand side can be viewed as representing both the Kelvin and Clapeyron equations. This is approximate since buoyancy has been neglected. An integration in the vapor space at constant Tv gives for small changes in the vapor pressure Pyx - Pv
�
MgPvx - RTv
(21)
Combining Eqs. (20 and 2 1) with Pyx case
equilibrium
=
Pl y gives for the non-isothennal
MgPv VlPv PvVl6h Ply - Pyx = - RTlv ( n + O'lvK) + RTv x + RTlvTv (Tlv - Tv) = 0 For the isothermal case, Tlv Vlc n + O'lvK)
=
VZ P Z gx
=
=
(22)
Tv, this reduces to the identity
(Mgx)l
(Mgx)v
(23)
If Pyx 1t Ply, Eq. (22) can be used along with kinetic theory to calculate the rate of evaporation from (or condensation on) a curved thin film. This is demonstrated in the next section. Equation ( 19) can be rewritten for constant temperature while retaining the natural logarithm to obtain Equation (24). n
n
-
=
� Vl
-
.R
Bn
RT - - V l Zn
Pv
(24) (25)
Therefore, the adsorbed film thickness is easily related to the static head in the liquid and vapor. Experimentally, it is observed that the film thickness decreases as the height above the pool increases (Sabisky and Anderson [28]; Dzyaloshinskii, et a1. [29]). As an approximation in the thickness range 1 nm < 5 < 10 nm, B in Equation (25) (negative for a spreading system) can be viewed as a constant, A, with n = 3 (Restrictions on the use of this approximation are
578 discussed by Truong and Wayner
[30]). A is
related
to the classical
Hamaker
constant, A, and intermolecular forces by A = 61tA. From Equation (25) it can be seen that B is negative for a spreading system
and that the effective pressure ( chemical potential per unit volume ), F(o)
=
- n, in the thin film decreases as the film thickness decreases. These results can be easily connected to statics and experimentally measured. If a drop of a spreading liquid is placed on a horizontal surface, fluid flows from the thicker portion of the ultra-thin film near the contact line to the thinner portion because of this gradient in the disjoining pressure which is represented by the slope of the thin film and which is due to the gradient in the surface force field. Gravitational effects are relatively small near the contact line of a horizontal film and the effective pressure gradient (F') for flow in a horizontal film is represented by dF dx
_ -
F'
A
3 - - 4 0 _
(26)
An example of the variation of chemical
(6
potential with film thickness for a
thin film is given in Figure (4a) for a simple spreading case
=
0)
and for a
simple finite contact angle case. In the limit 0 � 0, � � - 00 for both cases but i s not shown. The variation for a complicated system which includes a fluid like water is given in Figure (4b). A discussion of various isotherms is given by D zyaloskinskii et aI. [29] and Derjaguin et a1. [31].
9>0
5
jJ. (5)
jJ. (5)
9=0 (a)
FIGURE 4. Variation of Chemical Potential with Film Thickness: (a) simple spreading and non-spreading systems; (b) complicated system (e.g. , water) 2.2 Interfacial mass flux. In 1953, Schrage [5] reviewed the literature, presented and discussed the following equation based on kinetic theory relating the net mass flux of matter
579
crossing a liquid-vapor interface to a jump change in interfacial conditions at the interface: m •
_ -
C1
P
Lv Py x IJ ( 2 ) (.. TIJLv2 - TIJv2 ) 21tR
(27)
Herein, we presume that the net mass flux crossing the interface (e.g. , evaporation) results from a small vapor pressure drop across an imaginary plane at the interface in which Pl y , is the quasi-equilibrium vapor pressure of the liquid film at (TZv , K, n, x) and Pyx is the equilibrium vapor pressure of a reference bulk liquid (K = 0, n = 0, x) at a temperature Tv. As discussed by Maa [32], the coefficient C 1 accounts for a molecular exchange resistance at the liquid-vapor interface and has a maximum value of 2 if the exchange is ideal. Neglecting resistances in the bulk vapor space, Pyx and Tv can exist at a short distance from the interface, and a resistance to evaporation at the interface can be defined using Eq. (27). This resistance is associated with the effect of pressure (due to changes in the intermolec1ar forces near interfaces) and temperature on the vapor pressure. Conceivably, other resistances are associated with Cl. Using T }� T�2, this can be rewritten as ""
(28) Wayner, et a1. [11] used an extended Clapeyron equation for the variation of equilibrium vapor pressure with temperature and disjoining pressure in a horizontal thin film to obtain Eq. (29) for the vapor pressure difference in Eq. (28). (29) We note that, when interfacial effects are important, the effective pressure in the liquid, Pl, is not necessarily equal to the pressure in the vapor or to its normal vapor pressure. For example, the equilibrium vapor pressure of a small droplet is not the same as that of a flat pool of bulk liquid at the same temperature, and the pressure inside the droplet is greater than the surrounding pressure because of surface tension. The concept of pressure is further clouded by the concept of internal pressure due to cohesion which is extended in thin films to include adhesion. Therefore, Ply is used to designate the equilibrium vapor pressure of an interface at Tlv changed by interfacial forces and (PZ - Pv) designates the pressure change in the liquid due to interfacial forces. For example, the above equation can be used to calculate the required subcooling needed to achieve equilibrium between a curved interface (droplet) and a flat interface when the vapor pressure is changed by the surface pressure jump due to surface tension. Combining Eqs. (28 & 22) for the non-equilibrium case gives
580
•
m
=
Cl (
MgPv PvMflhm VZPv M (TZv - Tv) - RT (n + crlvK) + RT x)} )112 vTLv Zv v 21tRTi -
--
(30)
which can be used to calculate the interfacial mass flux. Herein, there are two interfacial effects that can cause an effective pressure jump at the liquid-vapor interface: capillarity, crLvK , and disjoining pressure, n. The significance of the disjoining pressure herein is that the vapor pressure of an adsorbed completely wetting liquid film is reduced by interfacial forces and therefore a superheated adsorbed liquid film can exist in ( vapor pressure) equilibrium with a bulk liquid at a lower temperature. For convenience, we will emphasize spreading (zero contact angle) fluids and will use the following sign convention (3 1)
B A n == - - = - on 03
(32)
The approximation, n 3, in Eq. (32) restricts its use to thicknesses 0 � 20 nm. However, in the numerical examples presented below this is acceptable for either 0 � 20 nm or n :: O. The equations can be easily modified for general use andlor for other cases. It is useful to make the mass flux dimensionless using an ideal mass flux based on the temperature change only: =
(33)
M
==
Iit
mId
= 1
-
VZ T i (crZvK + n PZgx) M � h m �T -
(34)
with �T = (TZy - Ty). Taking M = 0, n = 3, B = A = Al61t, K = 0 in Eq. (34), Eq. ( 18) for the thickness of a flat adsorbed liquid film, 00, on a superheated surface with �To = (TZv - Ty) can be recovered. Restricting the following material to a constant interfacial temperature difference, �To = (TZy Tv ), and defining a reference disjoining pressure, -
no =
-
Alo� , Eqs. (18 and 34) become
M = 1 - (crl� + n - PZgx) no;
(35)
A constant temperature difference simplifies the analysis and should not alter the significance of the results. This is relaxed in one of the applications
581
given below. It is useful to keep in mind that no could be replaced by the equivalent temperature difference using Eq. (18). Therefore. the temperature difference increases the value of the disjoining pressure which causes the evaporating fluid to flow towards the contact line. Using 1'\ = 6100 and � = x/xo the curvature, K, for small interfacial slopes, can be written as •
0" [1 + (0')2]312
(36)
Defining the parameter 3 Nc == crlv0olTIox� with n o = 1'\3 n and P lgx = TI oX gives
M = 1 - 3NCT\" - 1'\-3 + X
(37)
With dimensionless terms the prime refers to differentiation with respect to � , otherwise x. Eq. (37) gives the change in the dimensionless evaporation rate resulting from the effects of gravity and interfacial forces on the vapor pressure. Using oAT0 = �hm, this can also be written as a dimensionless liquid-vapor interfacial heat transfer coefficient: (l
. = 1 3NCT\" - 1'\ -3 + X id (l
-
(38)
Therefore, an interfacial heat transfer coefficient can be obtained from first principles. The dependence of the Hamaker constant on the "optical" properties of the liquid and solid is discussed in Section (4.4). Considerable insight can be obtained from Eq. (37). We find that at the leading edge of an evaporating horizontal (X = 0, due to g = 0) flat (1'\" = 0) thin film, 1'\ = 1, the evaporation rate can be zero even through the superheat can be substantial. This condition is required to define a stationary interline for an evaporating thin liquid film with varying thickness which has an equilibrium contact angle equal to zero. However, when the dimensionless film thickness is 1'\ = 4.6 (X = 0, 1'\" = 0), the evaporation rate will be 99% ofits substantial ideal value. When 1'\ < 1, condensation occurs. These equations allow the interfacial forces and thermal effects to be compared and combined, and have many uses in evaporating, condensing and/or equilibrium systems. For curvature to have the same effect, use of Eqs. ( 18 and 35) with n = 0 and g = 0 gives (39)
582
Using Eqs. (18 & 39) and I10 = Plgx, the equivalents presented in Table 2 are obtained for octane on Si02 at 298.16K with AJ61t = -3. 18 x 10-22 J. For the hydrostatic "x" equivalent, Ko and 6T are taken to be equal to zero. For the Ko equivalent, x and ITo are equated to zero. TABLE 2. Equivalents calculated using Equations (18 & 39). x, m
3.94 x 106
0. 1
8.49 x 1()4
1.55
12.4
This demonstrates that the decrease in film thickness associated with a 6T = 0 . 1 K is equivalent to the pressure difference associated with a static liquid head of 12.4 m. This is a pressure drop available for fluid flow from the thicker region of a film. Extremely large pressure drops are available for monolayers. 2.3
Fluid Mechanics. Fluid flow in a curved thin film is also controlled by the "pressure" gradient. Using the definitions for Tt, � , xo , n o and the small slope assumption given above leads to Equation (40) for the pressure gradient.
3no eN d ) dx (CJZvK + IT Plgx = Xo CTl -
III -
Tt' Tt4
X' ) -3
(40)
Using the lubrication approximation for flow in a slightly tapered thin film while neglecting surface shear stress, the mass flow rate per unit width in a liquid film can be approximated by
r=
-
B3 d P dx [ l
3v
+ Plgx]
(41)
Using Eqs. (3 1, 40 and4 1) while assuming Pv « PI gives (42) and the following equation for the dimensionless mass flow rates in the film
583
-
==
r
rxoV
aollo
=
Tl
N
·
- -
Tl
-
Tl
3X'
(43)
Using Eq. (44) for a steady state, stationary thin film with phase change dr
dx
(44)
•
=
-m
and Eq. (45), in which x� == -Nv �id, with Eq. (37) gives Eq. (46) d;
dr -
(!L + ,
T\
:nx� A
Y 3X'
_
_ _
-M
(45)
•
NCT\ 3Tl "')'
=
1 3Ncn" - Tl 3 + X
(46)
-
Using four boundary conditions, Eq. (46) can be numerically solved to determine the he·at transfer characteristics of a stationary, steady state. thin film. When the right-hand side and the left-hand side of Eq. (46) are not equal, the above material can be used with the equation of continuity to analyze the transient case. An evaluation of Eq. (30) demonstrates that, in an isothermal horizontal ultra-thin film, evaporation or condensation occurs unless ( n + CJlvK) O. Using simple models, this case without phase change has been previously discussed for the leading edge of a film (n > 0, K < 0) by Joanny and deGennes [33] and for the partial wetting case (n < 0, K > 0) by Wayner [ 18]. The results demonstrate that the interface becomes planar very rapidly. However, the phenomena controls the motion and phase change processes near the contact line. For motion to occur in an isothermal, ultra- thin, horizontal film, Eq. (4 1) demonstrates that (n + CJlvK) "¢ O . This indicates that fluid flow due to interfacial forces in an "isothermal" thin film must be associated with change-of-phase heat transfer (Eq. (30» . Therefore, at the leading edge of a spreading ultra-thin film a small temperature gradient due to change-of phase heat transfer is present. The size of the temperature gradient would be a function of the volatility of the fluid. =
3.
APPLICATIONS
3. 1 An Evaporating Ultra·Thin Film Next we present a simple application of the above for a quasi-equilibrium spreading system (an evaporating zero contact angle system with a fixed contact line). The thin film portion of a steady state evaporating film in the
584
contact line region consists of evaporating and non-evaporating regions as shown in Figure (5).
"
,
"
" ,-------
dB dx
NON-EVAPORATING ADSORBED FILM
SOLID
FIGURE 5. Generic Contact Line Region for Spreading System, ac = 0 (not drawn to scale) We note that the contact line is not moving and that the adjective spreading describes the equilibrium contact angle (a = 0). The apparent contact angle at the location represented by the thickness B. as. is larger in this case. The film and substrate are at a temperature above the reference saturation temperature set by condensation in a thick film in a region not shown in the figure. If the film is sufficiently thin. S = So. it is kept from evaporating by the additional van der Waals force acting between the solid and the liquid. n(S). as given in Eqs. ( 18 & 32) above. For the spreading case. the liquid-solid interaction is stronger than the liquid-liquid interaction. In the limit. the film thickness can be of the order of a monolayer. If a section of the film is slightly tapered. portions of the film may be sufficiently thick to evaporate since the force of attraction between the solid and the surface molecules decrease with an increase in the film thickness. Fluid flows towards the thinner region as a result of the thickness gradient. Gradients in the temperature. composition. and/or the curvature can either enhance or impede the flow. As a convenient example. it is possible to focus on a plane in the film where the thickness is approximately 10-8 m so that a continuum approach is acceptable. For developed laminar flow in a slightly tapered thin liquid film. the mass flow rate per unit width of the film can be represented by (Wayner. et a1.. [1 1])
@ dP r = - ( dxl) 3v
-
(47)
As a result of the van der Waals forces between the molecules, an "effective pressure" in the liquid can be represented by Equation (48 ). We note that the effective pressure can have a negative value because it is related to the internal pressure and A < 0 for spreading systems.
Pz =
A
(48)
Since there is almost a random inconsistency in the sign convention used in the literature for this equation, we re-emphasize that we are analyzing spreading systems with A < O. This is opposite the sign convention used in some articles but consistent with the Hamaker constant convention. In addition, the force concept is viewed two ways in the literature: Derjaguin pioneered the disjoining pressure concept (see, e.g. , Derjaguin, et at , [9 and 31]); an insight into the body force approach can be obtained in Huh and Scriven, [34], Miller and Ruckenstein, [35], or in Lopez, et at , [36]. Combining these two equations gives the mass flow rate per unit width at a given location"x" , nx), in terms of the film geometry (thickness and thickness gradient) and a flow coefficient. r=
Ao' vo
(49)
In turn, the slope of the liquid-vapor interface is a dimensionless mass flow rate in the liquid film due to van der Waals forces. Assuming that all the liquid which flows through a plane perpendicular to the substrate at a given location (represented by thickness 0) evaporates in the thinner portion of the film, a contact line heat sink can be defined as (50) In this case the slope is a dimensionless contact line heat sink: (51)
Using r = -pVo in Equation (49) leads to considerable insight:
586
(52)
The slope equals the ratio of a representative shear stress in the flow field to the van der Waals force per unit area causing the flow. At equilibrium the slope is zero. Therefore, the slope represents a measure of the departure from equilibrium at a given thickness. Viewing the dimensionless contact line heat sink defined in Equation (51) in the same vein, the product of 0' and the parameter (LlhmA/vo) gives the contact line heat sink. Numerical Example. There is an extensive literature concerning the calculation of the van der Waals force. A recent book by Israelachvili [24] allows relatively easy entry into this literature. In Table 3, we use the approximate values for the Hamaker constant presented by Wayner [37] to calculate the interline heat flow parameter and a reference heat sink. In the third column of the following table, 0 10 8 m. (Unfortunately, the approximation for Teflon in this reference was based on an incorrect source and is not used here as an example of a surface with a low surface energy.) =
TABLE 3. Estimated values of the interline heat flow parameter and reference heat sink.
System
-
Pentane-Gold (293 K) Octane-Gold (293 K) Octane-Quartz (293 K)
6h m A
--
v
(watts)
5.3 x 10 9 2.6 x 10-9 0.42 x 10 9
m -� (watts/m) Llh A
5.3 x 10 1 2.6 x 10 1 0.42 x 10-1
For an angle of one degree, the slope is 0.0 17. Therefore, the contact line heat sink in the region 0 S 10-8 m for the Octane-Gold system discussed above is Q = 4 5 x 10-3 w/m when the slope is 0.017 at this thickness. This value might appear small and we would not expect a much larger value for many non-polar systems operating within these assumptions. (The most important one being passive flow due to a disjoining pressure gradient with a small slope .) On the other hand, this analysis represents the ideal limiting case of a stationary contact line with a steady state low evaporation rate for a small temperature difference and it fixes a stable boundary condition at the contact line. At higher fluxes, the contact line is known to oscillate and "boiling" in .
587
the thin film is possible. In addition, a shear stress due to a composition gradient can enhance flow and polar fluids have more impressive properties. Unfortunately, a curvature gradient impeding flow is also present. The value can be estimated by taking the derivative of the mass flow rate. Therefore, the limit given by Eq. (51) is only accurate at very low fluxes but demonstrates the phenomena. The above analysis can also be used to approximate an upper limit to the heat flux in the region 0 < 10-8 m which is only the tip of the evaporating meniscus. Assuming a triangle as an approximate (albeit poor) shape for the curved film, the minimum possible area under the film is 0/0' Therefore the maximum possible evaporative .flux per unit width in the above case of a small slope is estimated to be (53) A better estimate of the flux can be obtained, with more effort, using the more exact profile given in the original article by Wayner, et a1. [ 1 1] . Such a comparison would demonstrate that although significant physical insight is provided by this example, the problem is more complicated because of additional effects like curvature and surface shear. These effects are discussed below. We note that surface shear can be significant even in a very pure fluid because some distillation occurs as 0 -? o. Therefore, the use of a properly selected additive which also evaporates could enhance the heat sink. It is interesting to note that in the above ideal example it is possible to start with one of the four distinct forces of nature (the electromagnetic force between molecules as represented by the Hamaker constant or by recently improved models) and derive a dimensionless number that represents in the limit of very small slope the contact line heat sink of an evaporating pure liquid film using simplified transport equations. The observed change in interfacial slope in the contact line region is a dimensionless evaporation rate. A recent broad review of the details of the modeling of the intermolecular forces which makes this possible is given by Israelachvili [24]. Experimental data in [15, 22, 23] confirm that the liquid-vapor interfacial slope is a function of the evaporation rate. At a much thicker location outside the range of this analysis, the measured apparent contact was also found to be a function of the evaporation rate by Cook, et a1. [38] and by Hirasawa and Hauptarnan [39]. To place the above work in perspective, we can discuss the following four related publications concerning experiments which had different emphases. Wu and Peterson [40] studied a wickless micro heat pipe which had dimensions of 1 x 1 x 10- 100 mm. Since the fluid had a finite contact angle, they successfully used the classical equation of capillarity (without disjoining pressure) to describe the internal fluid dynamics of this integral device. Xu and Carey [41] used a completely wetting fluid to study film evaporation from a micro-grooved surface with grooves 64 11m wide and 190 J.lm deep. The classical equation of capillarity was used in the apex region of the groove and the disjoining pressure equation was used in the thin film region on the side walls to describe fluid flow. Although these two studies did not completely
5 88
validate the models, the models appeared to provide a realistic treatment of the integral data. In order to study the microscopic details of the augmented Young-Laplace model, Cook, et a1. [38] used a scanning microphotometer to determine the heat transfer characteristics of the evaporating contact line region of a film on an inclined flat plate partially immersed in a pool of liquid. Since the reflectivity of the liquid film on the substrate was a function of the film thickness, the tapered film was a natural interferometer. A completely wetting fluid was studied by measuring the film thickness profile in the thickness range 10-7 < �(x) <10 5 m. The results supported the hypothesis that fluid flow and evaporation in the contact line region of a thin film results from a change in the thin film thickness profile. Truong and Wayner [30] used a photos canning ellipsometer with an attached interferometer to simultaneously measure both regions of an equilibrium extended meniscus down to thickness of 25 nm. The accuracy of the augmented Young-Laplace equation for describing the isothermal equilibrium meniscus was confirmed. The use of the augmented Young-Laplace equation for the non-equilibrium case was confirmed in [15, 22, and 42]. Nucleation Equation (20) can be related to classical material in nucleate boiling as follows. Using only the second term on the right hand side which is the Clapeyron part, the differential precursor to Equation (20) becomes 3.2
�H
d In Pv = dT RT2
(54)
Assuming that �H, which is the molar heat of vaporization, is a constant and that PvVv RT gives =
(55) Using Equations (55 & 56) gives Equation (57) 20Pv = Plv + r
(56)
(57) which is a simple form of the activation equation for boiling nucleation at a cavity of radius r. A vapor bubble of radius fir" with a superheat greater than the value given by Eq. (57) will grow.
589
3.3 Efect of DUQoining Pres on Difion in an Arnold Cel In Figure (6) an Arnold cell is presented in which a very thin liquid pool of thickness II at the bottom evaporates into a stream of air flowing over the top of the cell.
Ps air + vapor
I.IqUi·d
Pq VI·
FIGURE 6. Arnold Cell In
this example the following two resistances to evaporation are compared: At the liquid-vapor interface kinetic theory gives Equation (58) for the mass flux as a function of a small vapor pressure difference at the liquid-vapor interface (Schrage, [5]).
1)
(58) The diffusion equation for the air plus vapor mixture above the interface is
2)
P-PB P DM rn = RT (H-ll) In
(59)
in which P is the total pressure, PB is the external vapor pressure and Pvi is the vapor pressure in the vapor near the interface. Due to disjoining pressure the equilibrium vapor pressure at constant temperature over the liquid film is a function of the film thickness as given by Equation (60). Plvi
=
psat exp
lA RT�
(GO)
590
psat is the equilibrium bulk vapor pressure at temperature T. In this problem. we want the evaporation of the film at thickness So to stop because Plvi = PB even though the bulk saturation pressure psat > PB. Therefore PB = psat exp
VlA . S = So .• A < 0 . •
We note that PB
<
(61)
psat because of the disjoining pressure. Alsg, exerted by
the solid on the liquid when S = So.
The pressure on the vapor side of the liquid-vapor interface. Pvi. is found as a function of S by equating Equations (58) and (59) and using Equations (60) and (61) (
2M
) 112 ( psat exp
-
1tRT
V lA
P-PB P DM - PVI. ) = RT In (--) P-P vi (R-o) - --
(62)
Using Eqs. (62 & 60), PYi and PZvi are now known as functions of S. The mass transfer rate is solved as a function of 0 using Equations (59 and 62). The thickness as a function of time is then obtained using do
=
�(S)
(63)
- rl
The results are presented in Figs. (7a-7c). In Fig. (7a)the following two curves are presented: one assuming Plvi is a function of 0 as given by Equation (60); the other assuming Plvi = p sat At very large time, S -7 00 if adsorption occurs (curve 2). Fig. (7b) shows Plvi ,Pvi, and PB. (The difference between PIvi and Pvi is very small and cannot be distinguished on this scale.) Fig. (7c) shows (Plvi - Pvi) as a function of o. Although these effects seem very small they are extremely important in small passive heat exchangers and other technologies like semi-conductor processing and adhesion. For example, in drying a small adsorbed film can remain on the surface. In the example presented in Fig. (7) the following values for the hexane/air mixture were used: So = 10 A; H = 1 cm; Sin t = 20 P . A ; P = 1 atm; T = 298 K; RT = 40.87 moles/m3; M = 86.18; PI = 659 kg/m3, VI
=
1.30 x 10-4 rn3/mole; Dhexane = 7.7 x 10 -6 m2/sec; A :: -4 x 10-21 J;
psat (25C)
=
0 .2 atm.
59 1
.E
N
z
2.0
o
..,. x a.
en 1 .5
x c.o
u.i
�
en en w II: a.
en w z �
Q
1 .75
..
I �
«
0.005
0.01
TIME, sec
« a.
1
THICKNESS, 3 x 1 09, m 1 .5
(b)
(a)
2.5 N
Z
2.0
x ">
1 .0
E
N
0
a. , 0:;
e:. ..
1 .5
0.5 THICKNESS, 3 x 1 09, m 1 .5
2.0
(c) FIGURE 7. Results of calculation for Arnold cell described in text.
2.0
592
Marangoni Flows
3.4
In the following section, an expanded continuum model which includes a surface tension gradient is used to discuss the physicochemical phenomena of importance to the evaporating meniscus presented in Figure (2). However, in this case, we presume that the solid substrate is inclined at an angle of e relative to the horizontal. Neglecting inertia terms and the "y" component of velocity, the Navier Stokes equation for velocity in the x direction becomes -
ax
(64)
in which
PI = Pv - O'K + pg(o-y) cos e <1> = - + <1>B B on
(65) (66)
The Young-Laplace equation of capillarity, Eq. (65), is used to model the decrease in pressure on passing from the vapor to the liquid, caused by the curved interface. A potential energy function per unit volume, Eq. (66), is used to model the difference in behavior of a thin liquid film between two bulk phases relative to the same liquid in the bulk phases (this accounts for the London-van der Waals dispersion force effect using the model presented by Miller and Ruckenstein, [35]). This approach is equivalent to using a disjoining pressure (cited above) but circumvents the need to discuss disjoining pressure explicitly. B on
B 04
- -
B A = &3 on
0 � 40 nm
(67)
0 � 20 nm
(68)
Limitation on the use of these two approximate models are given in [30]. Equation (64) is solved for the velocity, u, using the following boundary conditions: y = O,
u=O
(69)
y = o,
au dO' tyx = 11 ay = dx
(70)
593
The boundary condition in Eq. (70) equates the surface shear at the liquid· vapor interface to the surface tension gradient. Since surface tension is a function of temperature and concentration, this boundary condition can have a large effect on the velocity distribution and therefore the flow. The resulting velocity distribution is u(y)
dP
1
cr'y
(-) oy) + � dx 2 �
(71)
= -
The mass flow rate in the film is r= P
o
03
r=-
3v
J
u dy
dP
0'02 03 ( )+3v dx 2v
= . -
' ' nBo 1.5 [(- + K)cr + 0K +
'
0
(72) B'
pg
cos a . pg sm . a]
(73)
In Equation (73), the following specific forces can be identified: (oK')
capillary pressure gradient
ao
surface shear force/volume
'
disjoining pressure gradient pg sin a
gravitational force/volume
Equation (73) can be nondimensionalized using the flow rate in a uniform liquid film flowing down a vertical flat plate due to gravity, fvp : r vp
-
pg OJ 3v
(74)
-
3vf 1.5a' Ka' oK' nB o' = + + + . 0 cos a · sin a pg03 pgo pg pg pg&1+1 ,
--
--
I
-
II
-
(75)
--
III
N
v
VI
The term including B' which is very small is neglected in the above. Terms III, IV, and V depend on the film profile which can be determined experimentally. Terms I and II depend on the surface tension gradient due to concentration and temperature gradients, and must be obtained by modeling the coupled transport equations. Term I accounts for Marangoni flow. We
5 94
find that, although the overall size of the region is very small, the physicochemical phenomena occurring in this region are complex and control many processes (e.g., the rewetting of a hot surface and evaporating multicomponent liquid films). The evaporative mass flux, �, leaving the film surface is obtained from Eq. (73) as •
dr
m = - dx
(76)
The evaporative heat flux, q, is (77) LlT and, therefore, U is left unspecified at this point. However, we can envision in a very approximate way at least three resistances, e.g., (78) a)
resistance in the solid, Slks
b)
resistance at the liquid-vapor interface, l/hlv.
c)
resistance in the liquid, BIkJ
The van der Waals dispersion force accounts for the resistance at the liquid vapor interface. There could also be a resistance to diffusion in the vapor. Equation (75) was used by Parks and Wayner [43] to analyze an evaporating binary meniscus which had been previously studied experimentally. The controlling process was found to change from region to region. However, for fairly thick films (0 > 10-6 m) and the conditions studied, cr' was found to be the most important term because of a composition gradient due to distillation. Eft of Conduction Resistance The above equations can be expanded to include the effect of conduction in the liquid on the resulting profile of the evaporating liquid film. In this case the constant temperature difference is between the substrate and the vapor. In this vein, Moosman and Homsy [13], Stephan and Busse [ 14], and Schonberg and Wayner, et al. [15, 16, 42] demonstrated that the conductive resistance across the thin liquid film has a significant influence on the evaporative process. Excluding the gravitational term, the resulting dimensionless form of Equation (46) with the addition of the resistance to conduction is
3.5
595
d ( 4» -31 Tl3 d� d� d
=
and
q, = -
-+ 10'\ 1
1
(79)
(1 + 4»
1 Tl3
(BO)
where the parameters
x:
and E
=
3 Nc are (B1)
in which a - Cl
M
)1/2
(B2)
RTvTZv
(B3) The parameter x: is a measure of the importance in the film of the resistance to thermal conduction. The parameter E is a measure of the importance of capillary pressure effects relative to disjoining pressure effects. This can be solved numerically using two far field conditions The first condition is (84) The film thickness is assumed to asymptotically approach the non evaporating thin film thickness mentioned previously. The second condition is
" � 00 , 4> �
-4>m with �
-+
-
00
(B5)
Using ellipsometry and microcomputer enhanced video microscopy (interferometry) with the experimental design presented in Fig. (B), we have recently found that the film thickness profile, S(x), of a completely wetting evaporating meniscus is as presented in Fig. (9) [15, 42].
596
FIGURE 8. Cross-sectional view of circular capillary feeder.
-- li o .. 1 5nm, a .. O.OW li o = 6.2nm, a = 0.2W ---- li o '" 5.6nm, a = 0.5W
\\ \ \, \\ \ '\ \ \
0
0
50
1 00
1 50
200
RELATIVE DISTANCE (X) Ilm
FIGURE 9. Square root of the heptane film thickness versus relative distance, A constant curvature would be represented by a straight line in this figure. The uppermost curve (Q=O) represents a system very close to equilibrium. We find that the thickness at the leading edge, °0 , decreases and that the curvature profile changes with evaporation (Q>O) as predicted by the models
597
presented herein. Because of the scale used, the change in slope in the thicker film is hot apparent. However, there is a definite change. Since a liquid can be easily deformed under stress, the thickness profile represents the pressure field in the meniscus. For this purpose, the following .dimensionless interfacial pressure difference model is used: (86)
where TJ = 0/00 is the dimensionless thickness, TJ" is the dimensionless curvature, no = -A °0- 3 > 0 is the disjoining pressure at the leading edge, and I: is the ratio of the characteristic capillary pressure to the characteristic disjoining pressure. We note that we have neglected in the approximate models presented herein the effect of film thickness on the surface tension and the Hamaker constant which we believe to be small for the thickness studied. Since the non-equilibrium processes of change-of-phase heat transfer and fluid flow are intrinsically connected because of their common dependence on the intermolecular force field , Equation (79) for the pressure field in the film applies. The numerical solution of this equation for the case Q = 0.2 W with E 1.5 and J( = 0.27, which is presented in Fig. (10) in terms of the pressure, was found to agree with the experimental results presented in Fig. (9). Therefore, the experimental results confirmed the model. =
1 �
(.) z w a: w
400
300
� 20
Ci w a: ::l w a: a.
13
100
30
FILM THICKNESS
40
( l))
50
60
nm
FIGURE. 10 Interfacial pressure difference versus film thickness. these calculations.
'Y = crLv
in
We find that the gradient in the disjoining pressure, n', associated with flow near the leading edge leads to a build-up in capillary pressure, crK, which
598
subsequently becomes the major cause of fluid flow. These characteristics for low evaporation rates and relatively large systems would also represent the phenomena in smaller systems with higher evaporation rates. Although both the capillary and the disjoining pressures lead to fluid flow and a reduction in vapor pressure, the causes of these stresses are different. The disjoining pressure represents an increase in the average intermolecular force of attraction on the molecules at the liquid-vapor interface from solid molecules replacing liquid molecules as the film thickness decreases. Whereas, capillary pressure represents a change in the surface area and the replacement of vapor molecules by liquid molecules as the radius of curvature decreases. Since an increase in the solid-liquid intermolecular force should not directly lead to an increase in the propensity for cavitation in a flat film, we have proposed that the maximum tendency for cavitation occurs near the location where the capillary pressure is a maximum In addition, an increase in n o leads to an increase in the maximum value of the capillary pressure where the interface is curved very near the leading edge of the meniscus. Using Eq. (87) for heptane with RTNI = 1.7 x 10 7 N/m 2 , which represents the change in chemical potential with film thickness, the value of n o can be shown to be extremely large when the surrounding vapor pressure, Pv ' is kept substantially below the saturation vapor pressure, Psat. This can be easily obtained by pulling a partial vacuum at constant T. nov!
=
Pv -RT ln p
sat
(87)
When vapor is removed from the liquid-vapor interface, evaporation causes the intermolecular force field to change as described by the nonisothennal thickness profile presented in Fig. (10) in terms of the pressure difference and in Fig. (9). The maximum size of an isothermal change can be estimated using Eq. (87). For PvlP sat = 0.81, 00 = 0.5 run, and n o = 3.6 x 10 6 N/m2 . We note that a substantial change in the stress field can be obtained in a thin film by simply changing the equilibrium vapor pressure. Equation (88) represents the dimensionless interfacial mass flux as a function of the dimensionless interfacial pressure difference . •
M
=
(1 +
<1» I
( 1 + ICTl )
(88)
A plot of Equation (88) is presented in Figure (11) for the data given above.
599 o
1.
2.
HEPTANE - 0 . 2W
HEPTANE - 0 . 5 W
o
ci 0
200 150 100 50 DIMENSIONLESS THICKNESS
250
DIMENSIONLESS MASS OR HEAT FLUX 1: 00 = 6.2 nm; qid = 24 1 w/m2 2 2 : 00 = 5.6 nm; qid = 4 1 7 w /m
FIGURE 1 1 . Dimensionless evaporative mass flux versus dimensionless thickness. ( 1: mid = 6.63 x 10 -4 kg/m2 s,; 2: mid = 1 . 15 x 10 3 kg/m2 s) -
Thus we experimentally demonstrate that the resistance to conduction in the liquid and to evaporation at the interface leads to a maximum value of the evaporative heat flux in an evaporating meniscus. We note that the maximum ideal value of the heat flux based on kinetic theory cannot be reached. An increase in the evaporation rate leads to a large increase in the stress gradient and the capillary pressure very near the leading edge of the meniscus. The capillary pressure at the base of the meniscus would be less because of the pressure drop associated with flow in the meniscus. Since the stress has to be balanced, the stress field in the whole system is both a function of the size and shape of the system and the evaporation rate. The experimental results and theoretical modeling enhances our understanding of the deatails of the evaporative process as follows. First, the contact line thickness, 00' and temperature are measured as a function of energy input. This allows the parameter K ( Eq. 81) to be calculated. Then a best fit of the data is obtained using the model Equation (79) by varying the dimensionless parameter e. The parameter E can then be used to obtain the Hamaker constant using Equation (81). The values of the contact line thickness and the Hamaker constant can be used to calculate the characteristic pressure TI o . Using the previous information, the temperature difference flT and the ideal heat flux, qid , can be calculated. The heat flux distribution can also be calculated using Eq. (88). Additional numerical results are given in [ 15].
600 3.6 Cavitation
A recent discussion of cavitation and stress in a small system presented the following material on cavitation [44]. Although both the capillary and the disjoining pressures lead to fluid flow and a reduction in vapor pressure, the causes of these stresses are different. The disjoining pressure represents an increase in the average intermolecular force of attraction on the molecules at the liquid-vapor interfac"e from solid molecules replacing liquid molecules as the film thickness decreases. Whereas, capillary pressure represents a change in the surface area and the replacement of vapor molecules by liquid molecules as the radius of curvature decreases. Since an increase in the solid-liquid intermolecular force should not directly lead to an increase in the propensity for cavitation in a flat film with a liquid-vapor interface, we propose that the maximum tendency for cavitation occurs nearer the location where the capillary pressure is a maximum. In addition, an increase in the drying rate would be associated with an increase in TI o and therefore the maximum value of the capillary pressure where the interface is curved very near the leading edge of the meniscus. The capillary pressure at the base of the meniscus would be less because of the pressure drop associated with flow in the meniscus. Since the stress has to be balanced, the stress field is both a function of the size and shape of the system and the local evaporation rate as observed in drying. As outlined by Hurd and Brinker [45] and others, an estimate of the absolute limit of the expansion of the liquid with the capillary pressure is given by the negative portion of the van der Waals loop. However, cavitation can occur at a lower value of the expansion and is a function of the maximum value of the capillary pressure (such as that given in Fig. (10», and other characteristics of the system. The dimensionless pressure difference, $, is a general measure of changes in the internal pressure and can be used to model fluid flow and evaporation. A schematic diagram representing the change of phase process in the evaporating meniscus is given in Fig.(l2) where the Gibbs energy is presented as a function of the pressure. On the saturation line for a bulk liquid, the vapor pressure increases and the Gibbs energy decreases with an increase in temperature. Evaporation naturally occurs from the higher temperature liquid to the lower temperature liquid. This changes in the meniscus under tension. At the base of a relatively large menis cus with a fluid temperature of Tlv the vapor pressure, Plv ' would be close to that of a bulk liquid. If a sink at Tv with Pv existed evaporation and vapor flow between locations "2" and " I " would occur. As fluid flows towards the interline along line 2-31-41, the effective pressure in the liquid decreases. The equilibrium pressure jump across the liquid-vapor interface is represented by a horizontal tie line of constant chemical potential, e.g. , 31-31v. As long as the vapor pressure at the liquid- vapor interface is greater than the vapor pressure of the sink, evaporation occurs.
60 1 saturation line
� C!) cc w z w (J) £Xl II
a
constant temperature increase in film
liquid
3,
3fv
vapor
�
P, PRESSURE
FIGURE 12. Gibbs energy verses pressure. Since the liquid is under tension, cavitation can also occur. An increase in the tension in the liquid leads to an increase in the propensity for cavitation because of the increase in the length of the horizontal tie line. if a bubble were to form in the liquid with a vapor pressure lower than the vapor pressure on the tie line (i.e. , a bubble larger than the equilibrium one) it would grow because the liquid with a higher chemical potential would tend to evaporate and form a vapor with a lower chemical potential. Conversely, a smaller bubble would collapse. The longer the tie line, the larger the range of sizes that would grow when randomly formed. However, we feel that So represents the most stable location in the thin film due to the large liquid solid intermolecular force field. Therefore, we propose that cavitation occurs at a location somewhere between the base of the meniscus and the interline. Rhetorically, can we further presume that it occurs at the peak value of the evaporation rate as given by Eq. (88)? The distribution for the simpler evaporation process is a measure of this non-equilibrium process.
4.
THE VAN DER WAAlS DISPERSION FORCE
A considerable portion of the above material depends on the intermolecular force commonly known as the van der Waals dispersion torce. A good discussion of intermolecular and surface forces is given in the book by Israelachvili [ 24] . Some of the material in this section follows the direction of this book. 4.1.
Derivation of the nonretarded van der Waals interaction fre energy (per unit area) between two flat surfaces across a vacuum, W= ·Al12 1tS2: A = Aij
First we analyze the molecule-surface interaction for a molecule at z = 0 a) interacting with the surface of a solid located at z = D as presented in Figure 1 3 .
602
ll x
molecule solid
p = Pi number
at
z
dens ity
of
at
z
=
= 0
D
mol e c u l es
ring volume = 2 1t x dx dz
FIGURE 13. Molecule-Surface Interaction. Using w(r) =
�
,
the hard sphere pair interactive potential between two
molecules, the net interactive energy for a single molecule at a distance D away from the surface is WeD) = J pw(r)dv = -21t Cp and for n = 6, WeD) = -1t C p/6D3
z=oo z=oo J dz J x=O z=D
(89) (90)
energy/molecule
4.2. Surface-surface interaction with number densities, Pi = Pj = P From Eq. (90) the interaction energy of this sheet of volume number pdz with
the infinite surface is
(pdz). Thus for the two surfaces separated by the
distance D, (91) Using the Hamaker Constant, A 1 2 = 1t2C P1P2 , and Pl = P2 W(O)
A
( energy/area)
=
p, D = o. (92)
603 A typical value of A is A 10 19 J. In this case A > 0 and there is a decrease in the potential energy as the two slabs move closer together thereby naturally decreasing the vacuum space. ""
p dx dy dz
molecules :
o
(dx dy)
= P 1 dz
= 1
z
dz
p. J
FIGURE 14. Surface-Surface Interaction. 4.3 The Force Law for Two Flat Surfaces Separated by a Vacuum using the Hamaker Constant Concept. (In this case, F is the van der Waa1s force per unit area.)
t vacuum
aw
-
ali
=
F=
A -
61tl)3
= - TI
(2) Since A>O, the two solids are attracted to each other. The disjoining pressure used in the other sections was for a liquid separating a solid and a vapor, therefore the liquid disjoined the solid from the vapor. Example in Adhesion: For two planar surfaces in contact (i.e., 5 0.2 run) the sticking pressure is F = Ai61t53 7 x 108 N/m2 7,000 atm. Therefore the sticking pressure is large and decreases as li3 . For a liquid, this concept is related to the internal pressure. ==
=
==
604 4.4 Calculation of van der Waals Forces from the DLP Theory The following material from Truong's review of the literature [23] outlines both the approximate and more accurate models for the evaluation of F(d). There are various inaccuracies associated with the classical Hamaker constant approach [46], e.g., the assumption of pairwise additivity. These problems are avoided in the DLP theory in which the forces are derived in terms of the dielectric properties of the materials [29, 47, 48]. The Dzyaloskinskii Lifshitz-Pitaevskii (DLP) theory enables one to calculate the
van der Waals forces (per unit area), F(B), between a solid (1) and a vapor (2) across a liquid film (3), from the temperature and the optical properties of the materials via the following equation:
(93) where
Qj(X)
=
(Si + PX)/(Si px) , -
and
Sj = (Ej/E3 - 1 + p2 ) 112 ,
i
=
1,2
The quantities kB,T,c,B are the Boltzmann's constant, the absolute temperature (K), the speed of light in vacuum, and the film thickness, respectively. EI , E2 and E3 are the frequency-dependent dielectric susceptibilities of the three media evaluated on the imaginary frequency axis
at m = i n . Here, the eigen frequencies n are defined as 21tkTnIYl where 21th is Planck's constant. The prime on the summation sign indicates that the n = 0 term is to be given half weight.
�
�
F(B) can either be positive or negative, If there is a repulsion between the solid and the vapor with a liquid film in between, F(B) is negative. This is the so-called repulsive van der Waals force and it tends to thicken the film (spreading case). In this case, one can also say that there is a stronger attraction between the liquid molecules and th� solid molecules than between two liquid molecules. On the other hand, F(B) is positive when there is an "attraction between the solid and the vapor" (finite contact angle case). This attractive van der Waals force tends to thin the film. Therefore the film is unstable in this case, which is important for dropwise condensation. To fully appreciate the usefulness of the DLP theory in the calculations of van der Waals forces, one must understand its limitations. First, the DLP theory assumes that the dielectric susceptibility of a continuum is the same throughout the material . This is not true since the dielectric characteristics
605
of a surface layer are different from those of the bulk (Jackson, [49]). Therefore, the theory is valid only when the separation between the surfaces i.e. , the thickness of the film -- is large compared to their interatomic distance. Second, the surface roughness is not taken into account in this theory. Third, if solids are brought into atomic contact, other short range forces may develop which are much larger than the van der Waals interactions. For example, the contribution of van der Waals interactions to the surface energy of metals is only about one-tenth of that due to metallic bonds (Buckley, [50]). In the limit of a very thin film (non-retarded regime, B � 20 nun), F(B) is given in the following asymptotic form, (Dzyaloskinskii, et aI. , [29]),
F(B) =
A
h
= 81t2@
J
00
[ El (i �)-E3(i �)] [E2(i� )-E3(i �)] [E 1(i � )+E3(i�)] [E2 (i � )+ £3(i�)]
-
(94)
while for thick film (retarded regime, B � 40 nm),
(SlO-P +
£10 £30
) (S20-P
£20 E30
)
}�
2 £20 p £10 (SlO+P -) ( S2o+P -) £30 £30
where S lO = (E1 IYE30
-
1 + p2) 112 and S20 = (£201£30 - 1 + p2) 1l2 .
(95 )
£10, £20, £30 are the static dielectric constants of the solid, vapor and film, respectively. In Equation (94), A is the well-known Hamaker constant: while B is defined as the retarded dispersion force constant in Equation (95). Note that only the dispersion part of the van der Waals forces is present in nonpolar liquids. For stable completely wetting films, both A and B (i.e., F( B» must be negative. The above asymptotic equations are valid only when T -+ O. At room temperature, calculations of the van der Waals forces using the asymptotic equations can differ as much as 25% from the results obtained from the complete equation (Rabinovich and Churaev [5 1], Truong and Wayner [30]). Furthermore, a comparison between the asymptotic equations and the complete equation showed that A and B are not constant (Gingell and Parsegian [52] , Christenson [53]). They are, however, a weak function of film thickness in their respective regimes. Although we have listed many limitations, the important basic connection between the heat transfer coefficient and the dielectric properties has been formulated.
606
Dielectric Susceptibility £(i�): The van der Waals forces can be calculated exactly from the DLP theory if the frequency-dependent dielectric functions of the participating media are known. These functions provide information about the strength and location of the energy absorption spectra at all frequencies. The dielectric function is a complex quantity and it can be expressed as a function of the real frequency w via the following equations [29], £(CI))
=
£'(00) + i£"(CI) =
[n(co) + ik(co)]2
(96)
(97)
where n is the real part of the refractive index and k is the absorption coefficient. Comparing Equations (96) and (97) leads to the following, £'(00) = n2 (co) - k2(co)
(98)
e"(co)
(99)
=
2n(co)k(co)
£"(00) is the measure of the energy dissipation of the electromagnetic field propagated in a medium. Through the Kramers-Kronig relation, we can relate £(i�) to £"(00) as follows, (Landau and Lifshitz [53]), E(i�)
=
1+
00 e"(co) dco -2 00-00 + �2 1t
(100)
Therefore, a complete knowledge of £"(00) via Equation (99) will yield the dielectric function evaluated on the imaginary axis (i.e., £(i�». However, optical data over a wide range of frequencies for most materials are often limited. Fortunately, Parsegian and Ninham [55-58] have introduced a new approach to determine £(i�) from scanty spectroscopic optical data in the literature. The above material is presented to give an outline of the most accurate approach to determine function F(8). Examples of its use are in Truong and Wayner [30]. 4.5 Approximate Model
Instead of using the complete equations developed by Lifshitz we shall use as an example the following simplified form for the interaction between two bodies ( 1,2) across another medium which was discussed in [24].
607
Liquid
3
Solid
1
i
--LB
In this case we are calculating the force of attraction between vapor slab. 2. and solid slab. 1 . across liquid slab 3.
A
=
Av=o + Av> o
(101) (102)
Av>o
=
(n �-n: ) (n�-n:) 3hve [ --/2 (n �+n�)1J2 (n� +n� )1/2 {(nt+n: )1J2 + 8
(103)
For spreading we need A < O. Therefore. E2 < E3 < E 1 . That is Evapor (usually taken as £2 = 1) < £ liquid < £ solid. This gives a repulsive force F = (AlmB3 ) acting between the vapor slab and the solid slab for a spreading system. 4.6
kT El
Numerical Example: Hamaker Constant
= 4.112 x 10 2 1 J at 298 K
=
3.8 (dielectric constant quartz)
=
1 (vapor)
£3
=
1.84 (pentane)
Using Equations ( 102 and 103) we find that Av=O
= =
) 3.8-1.84 1-1.84 (0.75) (4.12 x l0 -2 1 J ( 3.8+1.84 ) ( 1+1.84 )
-(0.75) (4.12 x 10-2 1 J) (0.102) = -3. 18 x 10-21 J
(104)
(105)
608 ==
Ve
=
main electronic absorption frequency in uv 3.1 x 1015 8-1
n�,3 index of refraction = E 2,3 nl
= 1.448
Av> O = =
8-. (2.096+ 1.84)1/2 (1+ 1.84) 1/2 [(2.096+ 1.84) 112+( 1+ 1.84) 112+(1 + 1.84)112] -0.958 x 10-20 J
Therefore, A = Av>o + Av=o
(106)
=
-1.276
x
10-20 J
4.7 Combining Rules: Hamaker Constant (Approximate equations for simple systems are useful because data on Aii are available.)
(107) interaction of media
with media "i" across a vacuum
o for air
or A slv
=
A n - Als
(108)
Therefore, the Hamaker constant for the liquid film represents the difference between cohesion and adhesion. If adhesion is stronger than cohesion, the liquid forms a completely wetting film. This can be theoreticaly determined from the dielectric susceptibilities of the liquid and substrate. These approximate equations were used by Wayner [37] to demonstrate the effect of the macroscopic optical properties of the system on the heat sink capability of an evaporating thin film. 4.8 Surface Energy The surface energy, 0", of a liquid can be calculated from the Hamaker constant using
609 A 0 - --
5
24n: D
D
=
0. 165 nm for hydrocarbons.
(109)
Equation ( 109) gives the relationship between the DLP theory and the classical surface tension.
5. .
SUMY
The above material outlines recent developments in interfacial phenomena and how they can be utilized in change of phase heat transfer. Evaporating thin liquid films were emphasized. The experimental and theoretical results demonstrate that it is possible to start with the intermolecular force concept (as described by the response of the materials to a fluctuating electromagnetic field) and detenrune the heat transfer coefficient and heat sink of an evaporating ultra-thin film from first principles. The successful application of the material to a relatively simple example of an evaporating spreading system with a non-polar fluid should lead to the use of this material in more complicated systems. Experimentally and theoretically, we find that the obtainable heat flux is less than that calculated using simpler models because of resistances in the liquid, at the liquid-vapor interface, and in the vapor space. Higher fluxes are probably possible with extremely small or turbulent and/or transient systems. On the other hand, small systems tend to be laminar. An understanding of these resistances and how they depend on the intermolecular force field is important to the proper utilization of small systems in improving technology. The basic principles have many applications in engineering.
NOMENCLATURE
A
A a b
B
Cl D d e E f F( 5) g H h H.
= =
Hamaker constant, area
N(6n:) defined by Eq. (82) = defined by Eq. (83) = constant in Eq. (67) = constant (evaporation coefficient) = diffusion coefficient, separation distance = differential change = internal energy per molecule = surface energy = fugacity = surface force/area, potential energy/ volume = gravitational force per unit mass = molar enthalpy, distance in Arnold cell = enthalpy/mass or volume, heat transfer coefficient, Planck's constant = Planck's constantl2n: =
610
K k
M m Nc n
P PI Pv Q Q* q
R r S s
T t
U u V v x y
a
�
o 0' E
cp r 'Y
11
�
�
n 0'
a
't
p
=
curvature Boltzman's constant, thermal conductivity, absorption coefficient = molecular weight = mass of a molecule, interfacial mass flux = dimensionless group, see Eq. (37) = index of refraction, molar density = pressure = "effective pressure" in liquid = pressure in vapor = contact line heat sink. =
= = = =
=
dimensionless contact line heat sink
heat flux
gas constant radius of curvature, distance between molecules distance in solid, spreading coefficient
=
entropy
=
time
= =
temperature
overall heat transfer coefficient velocity = average velocity, molar volume = volume per molecule = parallel to flow direction - axis = interfacial heat transfer coefficient difference =
=
=
=
=
=
liquid film thickness slope o f liquid-vapor interface dielectric constant, dimensionless group E 3Nc van der Waals potential energy/volume. dimensionless pressure =
difference mass flow rate per unit width of film =
= =
film tension
dimensionless film thickness
=
dimensionless position
=
chemical potential per molecule or mole. dynamic viscosity disjoining pressure
=
=
=
=
=
surface free energy per unit area
shear stress angle of inclination, contact angle fluid density, number of density of molecules
v
=
kinematic viscosity
�
=
frequency of electromagnetic wave imaginary axis
(j)
=
61 1
Subscripm and Superscripts
B g i id 1 Iv m o s sl dsv sat v vp
x
=
external partial pressure in Arnold cell, bulk includes gravity = interface, average value = ideal = liquid = liquid-vapor interface = unit mass = reference = solid = solid-liquid interface = solid-vapor interface = saturated = vapor = vertical plate = evaluated at x = derivative
=
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5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.
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