Abstract

In this paper, an experimental study of flow condensation was carried out of R134a in a multiport mini channel and a mini channel with pin fin array. The former comprised 20 parallel rectangular channels with an equivalent diameter of 0.64 mm. The latter is a narrow rectangular mini channel containing 10 rows of diamond pin fins with a staggered configuration, and height and longitudinal/transverse pitch of 0.5 mm and 2 mm respectively. To acquire the local value of heat flux and heat transfer coefficient, air jet impingement cooling devices were adopted to condense the vapor of refrigerants. The effects of vapor quality, mass flux, heat flux, and saturation pressure on flow condensation heat transfer coefficient were investigated with the operating conditions: vapor quality from 1 to 0, mass flux from 160 to 450 kg/(m2s), heat flux from 10.0 to 39.8 kW/m2, and saturation pressure from 600 to 1500 kPa. The experimental results indicated that the pin fin array significantly improves the condensation heat transfer coefficient up to nearly 186 % compared to the multiport mini channel in the high vapor quality region. For both channels, the local heat transfer coefficient increases with an increase in vapor quality, mass flux, and heat flux whereas decreases with increase in saturation pressure. The influence of heat flux and mass flux on heat transfer coefficient was more pronounced in the high vapor quality region than in the low vapor quality region. A sensitivity analysis was performed at different vapor quality levels. The most influential parameters in the smooth channel and the pin fin array are saturation pressure and mass flux, respectively. The relative contribution of heat flux is more obvious in the high vapor quality region. Some of the existing correlations have good prediction performance for the smooth channel experimental data in this paper, and the corresponding MAD is within 20 %. However, their deviations are much greater for the applications of pin fin array.

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