Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7056489 | International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer | 2015 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Experimental studies were carried out to investigate the effects of micro-channel geometry on the thermal and hydraulic performance of absorber plates for compact (thin and light-weight) solar thermal collectors. Three plates with channel depths 0.25Â mm, 0.5Â mm and 1Â mm were studied. Each plate had sixty channels which were 270Â mm long and 2Â mm wide. Experiments were run at typical operating conditions for flat plate solar collectors. The results showed a Reynolds number dependent Nusselt number; this was due to axial thermal conduction. The Nusselt number was observed to increase as the aspect ratio approached unity. Measured friction factors were similar in trend to the predictions for rectangular channels, although the overall rise in fluid temperature resulted in slightly lower friction factors. The plate with 0.25Â mm deep channels was found to have best thermo-hydraulic performance; thermo-hydraulic performance reduced slightly with increase in hydraulic diameter. The results showed that thermal improvement can be achieved by increasing the fluid velocity, however, pumping the thermal fluid above a pump power per plate area of 0.3Â W/m2 resulted in marginal improvement. The results are beneficial for the design of micro-channel absorber plates.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
M.A. Oyinlola, G.S.F. Shire, R.W. Moss,