Title: BOILING HEAT TRANSFER
1BOILING HEAT TRANSFER
- P M V Subbarao
- Associate Professor
- Mechanical Engineering Department
- IIT Delhi
A Means to induct Bountifulness to a Fluid. A
Basic means of Power Generation A science which
made Einstein Very Happy!!!
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3James Watt A Statue !!!
- Mrs. Campbell, Watt's cousin and constant
companion, recounts, in her memoranda, written in
1798 - Sitting one evening with his aunt, Mrs. Muirhead,
at the teatable, she said - "James Watt, I never saw such an idle boy take a
book or employ yourself usefully - for the last hour you have not spoken one word,
- but taken off the lid of that kettle and put it
on again, - holding now a cup and now a silver spoon over the
steam, watching how it rises from the spout, - and catching and connecting the drops of hot
water it falls into. - Are you not ashamed of spending your time in this
way? "
4Natural Convection in A Pool of Saturated Liquid
Tsat
Onset of Convection
Tsurface
5Further Behavior of Saturated Liquid
Increasing DT
6High Overshoots !!!
A
B
A Onset of Natural convection
B Onset of Nucleate Boiling
Heat Flux
Overshoot
Wall Superheat (DTTs Tsat)
7Boiling
- In a steam power plant convective heat transfer
is used to remove heat from a heat transfer
surface. - The liquid used for cooling is usually in
a compressed state, (that is, a subcooled
fluid) at pressures higher than the normal
saturation pressure for the given temperature. - Under certain conditions some type of boiling can
take place. - It is an important process in nuclear field
when discussing convection heat transfer. - More than one type of boiling can take
place within a - nuclear facility.
8Nuclear Power Plant
9Steam Boiler
10Classification of Boiling
- Microscopic classification or Boiling Science
basis - Nucleated Boiling
- Bulk Boiling
- Film Boiling
- Macroscopic Classification or Boiling Technology
basis - Flow Boiling
- Pool Boiling
11 Nucleate Boiling
- The most common type of local boiling encountered
in nuclear facilities is nucleate boiling. - In nucleate boiling, steam bubbles form at the
heat transfer surface and then break away and are
carried into the main stream of the fluid. - Such movement enhances heat transfer because the
heat generated at the surface is carried directly
into the fluid stream. - In the main fluid stream, the bubbles collapse
because the bulk temperature of the fluid is not
as high as the heat transfer surface temperature
where the bubbles were created. - This heat transfer process is sometimes
desirable because the energy created at the
heat transfer surface is quickly and
efficiently "carried" away.
12Bulk Boiling
- As system temperature increases or system
pressure drops, the bulk fluid can reach
saturation conditions. - At this point, the bubbles entering the coolant
channel will not collapse. - The bubbles will tend to join together and form
bigger steam bubbles. - This phenomenon is referred to as bulk boiling.
- Bulk boiling can provide adequate heat
transfer provided that the steam bubbles
are carried away from the heat transfer
surface and the - surface is continually wetted with
liquid water. - When this cannot occur film boiling results.
13Film Boiling
- As the temperature continues to increase, more
bubbles are formed than can be efficiently
carried away. - The bubbles grow and group together,
covering small areas of the heat transfer
surface with a film of steam. - This is known as partial film boiling.
- Steam has a lower convective heat transfer
coefficient than water. - The steam patches on the heat transfer surface
act to insulate the surface. - As the area of the heat transfer surface
covered with steam increases, the
temperature of thesurface increases
dramatically, while the heat flux from
the surface decreases. - This unstable situation continues until the
affected surface is covered by a stable blanket
of steam. - The condition after the stable steam blanket has
formed is referred to as film boiling.
14Boiling Curve
W/m2.s
0C
15- Four regions are represented in Figure.
- The first and second regions show that as heat
flux increases, the temperature difference
(surface to fluid) does not change very much. - Better heat transfer occurs during nucleate
boiling than during natural convection. - As the heat flux increases, the bubbles become
numerous enough that partial film boiling
(part of the surface beingblanketed with
bubbles) occurs. - This region is characterized by an increase
in temperature difference and a decrease in
heat flux. - The increase in temperature difference thus
causes total film boiling, in which steam
completely blankets the heat transfer surface.
16 Departure from Nucleate Boiling and Critical
Heat Flux
- In practice, if the heat flux is increased, the
transition from nucleate boiling to film boiling
occurs suddenly, and the temperature difference
increases rapidly, as shown by the dashed line in
the figure. - The point of transition from nucleate
boiling to film - boiling is called the point of
departure from nucleate boiling, commonly written
as DNB. - The heat flux associated with DNB is commonly
called the critical heat flux (CHF). - In many applications, CHF is an important
parameter.
17- For example, in a reactor, if the critical heat
flux is exceeded and DNB occurs at any location - in the core, the temperature difference
required to transfer the heat being
produced from the surface of the fuel rod
to the reactor coolant increases greatly.
- If, as could be the case, the temperature
increase causes the fuel rod to exceed its design
limits, a failure will occur. - The amount of heat transfer by convection can
only be determined after the local heat transfer
coefficient is determined. - Such determination must be based on
available experimental data. - After experimental data has been correlated by
dimensional analysis, it is a general practice to
write an equation for the curve that
has been drawn through the data and
to compare experimental results with those
obtained by analytical means.
18Flow Boiling
- Flow boiling occurs when all the phases are in
bulk flow together in a channel e.g., vapor and
liquid flow in a pipe. - The multiphase flow may be classified as
adiabatic or diabatic, i.e., without or with heat
addition at the channel wall. - An example of adiabatic flow would be oil/gas
flow in a pipeline, or air/water flow. - In these cases the flow patterns would change as
the inlet mass flow rates of the gas or liquid
are altered or as the velocity and void
distributions develop along the channel.
19Adiabatic Flow Through A Pipe
20Diabatic Flow Through A Pipe
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22Diabatic Boiling Along A Furnace Wall Tube
Furnace Exit
Hot Exhaust gases
Heat Radiation Convection
Flame
Burner
23Natural Circulation Steam Generator
24Natural Circulation Nuclear Reactor
25Forced Circulation Steam Generator
26Forced Circulation Nuclear Reactor
27Once Through Steam Generator
28Super Critical Nuclear Reactor
29Slip in Multi-Phase flow
- For example in a riser tube of a steam generator
the vapor rises faster than the liquid due to
buoyancy effects. - One may term this velocity inequality as "slip"
between the vapor and the liquid. - The ratio of these velocities is called the "slip
ratio". - A better description of the phenomena is to
consider it as a relative velocity difference
between the phases, Vg - Vl . - Flow boiling heat transfer can occur under two
different boundary conditions, either a specified
wall heat flux or a specified wall temperature. - The former case is an idealized example of a
boiler tube in a fossil fuel boiler and the
latter case is an idealized example of a riser
tube in a nuclear steam generator.
30Multi Phase Heat Transfer
- One of the many applications of multiphase
heat-transfer is to be able to predict the
temperature of the wall of a boiling surface for
a given heat flux or the variation of wall heat
flux for a known wall temperature distribution. - In this section we focus on the methodology to
estimate the wall temperature or the wall heat
flux depending on the appropriate boundary
condition. - We focus on describing the regions of heat
transfer, locating the onset of nucleate boiling
and finally estimating the wall condition.
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32Single-Phase Liquid Heat Transfer
- Figure shows an idealized form of the flow
patterns and the variation of the surface and
liquid temperatures in the regions designated by
A, B, and C for the case of a uniform wall heat
flux. - Under steady state one-dimensional conditions the
tube surface temperature in region A (convective
heat transfer to single-phase liquid), is given
by
33- and where
- q is the heat flux,
- P is the heated perimeter,
- G is the mass velocity,
- A is the flow area and is the liquid specific
heat. - Also DTfw is the temperature difference between
the wall surface and the mean bulk liquid
temperature at a given length z from the tube
inlet, - h is the heat transfer coefficient to
single-phase liquid under forced convection.
34- The liquid in the channel may be in laminar or
turbulent flow, in either case the laws governing
the heat transfer are well established for
example, heat transfer in turbulent flow in a
circular tube can be estimated by the well-known
Dittus-Boelter equation.
- This relation is valid for heating in fully
developed vertical - upflow in z/D gt 50 and Re gt 10,000.
- For the case of a given constant wall
temperature, the temperature difference will - decrease, as well as the heat flux.
- From an energy balance this is represented by a
logarithmic decrease in the - temperature difference.
35The Onset of Nucleate Boiling
- If the wall temperature rises sufficiently above
the local saturation temperature pre-existing
vapor in wall sites can nucleate and grow. - This temperature, TONB, marks the onset of
nucleate boiling for this flow boiling situation.
- From the standpoint of an energy balance this
occurs at a particular axial location along the
tube length, ZONB. - Once again for a uniform flux condition,
We can arrange this energy balance to emphasize
the necessary superheat above saturation for the
onset of nucleate boiling
36Now that we have a relation between DTONB and
ZONB we must provide a stability model for the
onset of nucleate boiling. one can formulate a
model based on the metastable condition of the
vapor nuclei ready to grow into the world. There
are a number of correlation models for this
stability line of DTONB. Using this approach,
Bergles and Rohsenow (1964) obtained an equation
for the wall superheat required for the onset of
subcooled boiling.
37Their equation is valid for water only, given by
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39Subcooled Boiling
- The onset of nucleate boiling indicates the
location where the vapor can first exist in a
stable state on the heater surface without
condensing or vapor collapse. - As more energy is input into the liquid (i.e.,
downstream axially) these vapor bubbles can grow
and eventually detach from the heater surface and
enter the liquid. - Onset of nucleate boiling occurs at an axial
location before the bulk liquid is saturated. - Likewise the point where the vapor bubbles could
detach from the heater surface would also occur
at an axial location before the bulk liquid is
saturated. - Now this axial length over which boiling occurs
when the bulk liquid is subcooled is called the
"subcooled boiling" length. - This region may be large or small in actual size
depending on the fluid properties, mass flow
rate, pressures and heat flux. - It is a region of inherent nonequilibrium where
the flowing mass quality and vapor void fraction
are non-zero and positive even though the
thermodynamic equilibrium quality and volume
fraction would be zero since the bulk
temperature is below saturation.
40The first objective is to determine the amount of
superheat necessary to allow vapor bubble
departure and then the axial location where this
would occur. A force balance to estimate the
degree of superheat necessary for bubble
departure.
this conceptual model the bubble radius rB, is
assumed to be proportional to the distance to the
tip of the vapor bubble,YB , away from the heated
wall. One can then calculate this distance
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42 The superheat temperature, is then found by
using the universal temperature profile relation.
43Now using the local energy balance one can relate
the local bulk temperature, TfB, to the superheat
temperature difference,
44Saturated Boiling and the Two-PhaseForced
Convection Region
- Once the bulk of the fluid has heated up to its
saturation temperature, the boiling regime enters
saturated nucleate boiling and eventually
two-phase forced convection. - We once again want to be able to find the wall
condition for this situation e.g., wall
temperature for a given heat flux. - One should note that the heat transfer
coefficient is so large that the temperature
difference between the wall and the bulk fluid is
small allowing for large errors in the
prediction, without serious consequences. - The saturated nucleate boiling and two-phase
forced convection regions may be associated with
an annular flow pattern. - Heat is transferred by conduction or convection
through the liquid film and vapor and is
generated continuously at the liquid film/vapor
core interface as well as possibly at the heat
surface. - Extremely high heat transfer coefficients are
possible in this region values can be so high as
to make accurate assessment difficult. - Typical figures for water of up to 200 W/m2 K
have been reported.
45Following the suggestion of Martinelli, many
workers have correlated their experimental
results for heat transfer rates in the two-phase
forced convection region in the form
The convection heat transfer coefficient is
46POOL BOILING
- Pool boiling is the process in which the heating
surface is submerged in a large body of stagnant
liquid. - The relative motion of the vapor produced and the
surrounding liquid near the heating surface is
due - primarily to the buoyancy effect of the vapor.
Nevertheless, the body of the liquid as a whole
is essentially at rest. - Though the study on the boiling process can be
traced back to as early as the eighteen century,
the extensive study on the effect of the very
large difference in the temperature of the
heating surface and the liquid, DT, was first
done by Nukiyama (1934).
47 Onset of Nucleate Boiling
- Vapor may form from a liquid
- (a) at a vapor-liquid interface away from
surfaces, - (b) in the bulk of the liquid due to density
fluctuations, or - (c) at a solid surface with pre-existing vapor or
gas pockets. - In each situation one can observe the departure
from a stable or a metastable state of
equilibrium. - The first physical situation can occur at a
planar interface when the liquid temperature is
fractionally increased above the saturation
temperature of the vapor at the vapor pressure in
the gas or vapor region. - Thus, the liquid "evaporates" into the vapor
because its temperature is maintained at a
temperature minimally higher than its vapor
"saturation" temperature at the vapor system
pressure. - Evaporation is the term commonly used to describe
such a situation which can also be described on a
microscopic level as the imbalance between
molecular fluxes at these two distinctly
different temperatures.
48- To find the particular heat flux and superheat
pair natural convection mode of heat transfer
that would exist prior to boiling is considered.
- For water at atmospheric pressure this model
predicts an "onset of nucleate boiling" for a
superheat less than 10C, with a cavity size of
about 50 microns. - In practice the superheat may be as high as 100C
for very smooth, clean metallic surfaces.
49Pool Boiling Critical Heat Flux
- Critical heat flux (CHF) in pool boiling is an
interesting phenomenon. - If one controls the input heat flux, there comes
a point where as the heat flux is increased
further the heater surface temperature undergoes
a drastic increase. - This increase originally was not well understood.
- Kutateladze (1951) offered the analogy that this
large abrupt temperature increase was caused by a
change in the surface geometry of the two phases.
- In fact, Kutateladze first empirically correlated
this phenomenon as analogous to a gas blowing up
through a heated porous plate cooled by water
above it. - At a certain gas volumetric flow rate (or
superficial velocity, ) the liquid ceases to
contact the heated surface and the gas forms a
continuous barrier.
50- where the constant, Co, is found to be in the
range of 0.12 to 0.18.
51Film Boiling and the Minimum FilmBoiling Point
- Once the critical heat flux is exceeded the
heater surface is blanketed by a continuous vapor
film i.e., film boiling. - Under this condition one must find the heat
transfer resistance of this vapor film as well as
consider the additional effect of radiation heat
transfer at very high heater surface temperatures
through this vapor film (gt 10000 C). - Bromley (1950) used the approach first developed
by Nusselt for film condensation to predict the
film boiling heat transfer coefficient for a
horizontal tube
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