whlock said:
I am not really a heat transfer guy so I hope someone here can help me out here. I would like to know the formula to get this.
Here is what I ma facing:
I have a mandrel (basically a piece of cylindrical H-11 steel). It has OD of 3.5 inches and 37” in length. It has a core hole of about 7/8” Dia and 37 “ length. Water pumped into the core hole at 10 GPM thru a 3/4” dia pipe. The H-11 steel has .110 BTU/lb specific heat capacity.
I want to be able to lower the temp of the mandrel from 850 to 200 deg F. How much water do I need?
Please help.
This is an interesting heat transfer problem, but it has some complexities to it. The mandrel temperature is way above the boiling point of water (I'm assuming the pressure in the system is on the order of 1 atm.) Therefore, there is going to be some water vaporization (boiling) near the wall, and maybe further in. So there is some aspect to this involving two phase flow in the core hole, and the presence of water vapor near the wall can also slow down the rate of heat transfer. Another complexity is that the temperature is going to be varying with both time and spatial position within the mandrel as well as within the water in the core.
Solving a problem like this all at once by writing and numerically solving the complicated PDEs for the system can be difficult and time consuming. It is much better to simplify as much as possible, breaking it down into bite sized chunks, and bounding the answer (i.e., finding the minimum possible time to cool the mandrel, and the minimum possible amount of water needed). This might give you all you really need to understand your system quantitatively.
First of all let's take a look at the water in the core. Calculate the volume of the core in ft
3. What is the volumetric throughput rate in ft
3/min. From these two results, you can calculate the mean residence time of the water passing through the core (sec). What is that value? From the volumetric throughput rate, you can also calculate the mass flow rate of water through the core. What is that value in lb/hr? Do you think that, with that short a residence time and high a throughput rate, the average temperature of the water is going to increase much in passing through the core? To get a quantitative idea of how much the average water temperature changes in passing through the core, you need to have a rough idea of the heat transfer coefficient at the outer diameter of the core. Are you familiar with the term "heat transfer coefficient" and its definition?
After you answer these questions, I will help you further by discussing some reasonable approximations to bound the answer, and will show you how to set up the differential equations to describe the water temperature as a function of location through the core tube, the heat flux at the outer diameter between the water and the mandrel, and the temperature vs time of the mandrel.
Chet