Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
659480 International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

With the aim of improving heat exchanger compactness, this study investigates how the optimum configuration of an air–liquid plate heat exchanger changes as the heat exchanger depth decreases. In this respect, optimization of an air–liquid plate heat exchanger with a given frontal area and a given depth is achieved. The optimum fin pitch and plate pitch are obtained to maximize the heat transfer rate based on heat transfer and pressure loss correlations in finned channels. Then, the focus of this study is placed on how the optimum channel configuration changes when the heat exchanger depth decreases for compactness. The results illustrate that the heat transfer performance can remain unchanged if the geometric parameters, such as the plate thickness, the plate pitch, the fin thickness, and the fin pitch, are reduced proportionally to the square root of the flow depth reduction given that the flow remains laminar. This finding is arranged into a simple scaling rule to obtain the configuration of a more compact heat exchanger from an existing configuration. In addition, the scaling arguments are extended to practical situations where the fin thickness and the plate thickness are not properly reduced following the scaling rule due to limitations on available material thicknesses.

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