Abstract

Moving the load peak to consume electrical power is valuable in air conditioning systems. Consequently, the current study presents an experimental thermal investigation of an ice storage system. For this purpose, a twin concentric helical coil (TCHC) is utilized. The coil is submerged in distilled water in an insulated tank. The main aim is to explore the effect of geometrical/operating conditions for the TCHC on percentage energy stored/regained, solidified/melted mass fraction, and average charging/discharging rate. The main parameters are twin coil pitch and tube diameter while keeping the cold heat transfer fluid (HTF) inlet conditions at −12 °C and 10 L/min. The results disclosed that the discharge time increases by about 79% for total energy gained as the coil pitch rises from 30 to 50 mm at a smaller tube diameter of 9.52 mm. At the same time, the discharge time is doubled when the tube diameter is 15.88 mm. Furthermore, the complete solidification needs half the time (time reduced to 50%) to be achieved as the tube diameter increases from 9.52 mm to 15.88 mm (68% increases in diameter) for lower pitch (P = 30 mm).

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