Abstract:
An experimental investigation of heat transfer in pool boiling
of pure liquids : distilled water, acetic acid, and acetone; and binary
mixtures: water-glycerine, water-ethylene glycol, water-acetic acid,
and acetone-water was carried out at 1 atmosphere pressure. Acetic
acid and acetone were of chemically pure grade; whereas glycerine
and ethylene glycol of commercial grade. Two test sections of brass
tubes of 25.6 mm., and 27 mm. outside diameter were used. The
outer surface of smaller diameter tube was silver-plated to resist
the corrosive action of acetic acid. The test section was oriented
horizontaUy in the pool of liquid in the vessel. Liquid and surface
temperatures were measured by means of copper-constantan
3 3
thermocouples. Heat fluxes in the range of S.9 x 10 to 39.97 x 10
2
Kcal/hr.m were used. Liquid temperatures were varied to cover
from non-boiling through subeooled to saturated boiling regions. The
data were taken for wide range of compositions for all the binary
mixtures. Li all the series of test runs the heat flux was approached
progressively to the highest value starting at a low heat flux.
The experimental data on the pool boiling of saturated water
have been found to compare v/ell with the data of others (30, 49, 57, 58)
at 1 atmosphere pressure. The experimental data on the saturated
boiling of water-ethylene glycol mixture showed a good agreement with
the data of Sternling and Tichacek (-15).
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The experimental data on boiling of saturated binary mixture
showed a minimum in the values of heat transfer coefficient when
plotted against the concentration of more volatile component. The
concentration corresponding to this minimum value of heat transfer
coefficient compared well with the predicted value by the method of
Grigorev (18), Tolubinskii et al (14) and van Stralen (16) for all the
mixtures.
As a result of data analyses, the following correlation has been
found best to represent the experimental data on subeooled and saturated
boiling of 4 binary liquid mixtures studied in the present investigation
with a standard deviation of 31.88 %and average deviation of 31.84 %.
0.6 -0.5 0.37 -0.034
NuB = 0.0576 (PeB) (K^) (K, ) {KQ)
The maximum error of + 31 % covered about 95 %:l 697 data points.
The experimental data on subeooled and saturated pool boiling
of '. pure liquids have been correlated by the following equation with a
standard deviation of 20.54 % and average deviation of 20.16 %.
0.6 -0.5 0.37
NuB =0.084 (PeB) (K ^ (Kt )
About 133 data points were found to be represented by the above
correlation within a maximum error of + 24 %. The merit of this
correlation has been examined with respect to other correlations
available in the literature.