Abstract

A non-equilibrium post dryout heat transfer model for calculating the wall temperature distribution in vertical upflows is presented in this study. The model is based upon the three path heat transfer formulation developed by MIT researchers (Laverty & Rohsenow 1964, Forslund & Rohsenow 1968, Hynek et al. 1969 and Plummer et al. 1974) that involves heat transfer from wall to vapor, from wall to droplets in contact with the wall and from vapor to liquid droplets in the vapor core. Downstream gradients for the bulk vapor temperature, vapor quality, droplet size and vapor velocities are identical to those used by Hynek et al. (1969) and Plummer et al. (1974). Conditions at the dryout location are calculated using a modified version of a technique developed by Hynek et al. (1969). A procedure for determining an average droplet diameter based on a size distribution is introduced. Migration of droplets through the boundary layer and droplet deposition flux are predicted with the model of Ganić & Rohsenow (1979). Heat transfer from the wall to the impinging liquid droplets is calculated with a correlation by Holman & McGinnis (1969). Mechanisms contributing to wall to droplet heat transfer are identified as (a) droplet-wall contact, (b) intensive droplet evaporation inside the boundary layer, and (c) destruction of the boundary layer due to droplet migration to, and rebound from, the hot surface. The significance of the average droplet size and size distribution is demonstrated through its control over the free stream evaporation and droplet deposition rates. Predicted uniform heat flux wall temperature profiles for water, nitrogen and freon 12 are in good agreement with the data of Era et al. (1966), Bennett et al. (1967), Forslund & Rohsenow (1968), Ling et al. (1971), Groeneveld (1972) and Janssen & Kervinen (1975).

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