Addressing the adverse cold air inflow effects for a short natural draft dry cooling tower through swirl generation
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Kaiser, Antonio S
Lu, Yuanshen
Klimenko, Alexander Y
Dong, Peixin
Hooman, Kamel
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Abstract
Short natural draft dry cooling towers (NDDCTs) are susceptible to cold air inflow. A transient simulation on Gatton tower is carried out to study the time-dependent cold air inflow characteristic. Our results show that, the cold air inflow penetrates inside the tower after a short period of pseudo-steady state, and a steady state with the cold air inflow is finally formed. We also investigate the possibility of inducing swirling motions to counter the cold inflow. The results demonstrate that, by reducing the local vortices caused by the specific tower structure, and thinning the boundary layer thickness, swirl is able to decrease the cold air inflow effect. Finally, feasibility of the suggested approach was verified by comparing the energy required to create the swirl with the extra heat transfer from the heat exchangers in the tower which would have not been materialized because of the cold inflow. It was observed that, an extra 40 kW heat transfer gain can be anticipated if only 1 W is spent to induce the swirl.
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International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
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145
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Engineering
Mathematical sciences
Physical sciences
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Technology
Thermodynamics
Engineering, Mechanical
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Dai, Y; Kaiser, AS; Lu, Y; Klimenko, AY; Dong, P; Hooman, K, Addressing the adverse cold air inflow effects for a short natural draft dry cooling tower through swirl generation, International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 2019, 145