کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
272267 | 505016 | 2012 | 5 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Refractory metallic foams can increase heat transfer efficiency in gas-to-gas and liquid metal-to-gas heat exchangers by providing an extended surface area for better convection, i.e. conduction into the foam ligaments providing a “fin-effect,” and by disruption of the thermal boundary layer near the hot wall and ligaments by turbulence promotion. In this article, we describe the design of a high-temperature refractory regenerator (closed-loop recuperator) using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling of actual foam geometries obtained through computerized micro-tomography. The article outlines the design procedure from geometry import through meshing and thermo-mechanical analysis and discusses the challenges of fabrication using pure molybdenum and TZM. The foam core regenerator is more easily fabricated, less expensive and performs better than refractory flat plate-type heat exchangers. The regenerator can operate with a maximum hot leg inlet temperature of 900 °C and transfer 180 kW to the cold leg using 100 g/s helium at 4 MPa. Future high heat flux experiments on helium-cooled plasma facing components will utilize the high temperature and high pressure capabilities of this unique regenerator. Similar components will be required to adapt fusion power reactors to high-efficiency Brayton power conversion systems and enable operation of advanced divertor and blanket systems.
► Refractory foams enhance heat transfer.
► High-temperature helium regenerators are required in fusion.
► Micro-tomography can produce high fidelity CFD models of porous media.
► Clever design required to minimize pressure drop and enhance heat transfer.
► High-temperature refractory regenerators have been designed and built.
Journal: Fusion Engineering and Design - Volume 87, Issues 5–6, August 2012, Pages 764–768