Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
649101 Applied Thermal Engineering 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The experimental performance of an open industrial scale cooling tower, utilising small approach temperature differences (1–3 K), for rejection of heat at the low water temperatures (11–20 °C) typical of chilled ceilings and other sensible air–water heat dissipation systems in buildings, is examined. The study was carried out under temperate maritime climatic conditions (3–18 °C wet-bulb temperature range). Initially a theoretical analysis of the process at typical conditions for this climate was conducted, which indicated that a water to air (L/G) mass flow rate ratio of less than 1.0 was required for effective operation. Consequently for these low L/G ratios, the thermal performance of the experimental tower was measured and correlated. A new correlation is proposed which shows a significant increase in the NTU level achieved, for the required L/G ratios (0.3–0.9). As the cooling tower in this application is predominantly a mass transfer device under summer conditions, the evaluation of the total volumetric heat and mass transfer coefficient (kga s−1 m−3) is of particular relevance and is also determined.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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