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Transient multiphysics coupled model for multiscale droplet condensation out of moist air

Zheng, Shao Fei ; Wu, Zi Yi ; Gao, Yi Ying ; Yang, Yan Ru ; Sundén, Bengt LU and Wang, Xiao Dong (2023) In Numerical Heat Transfer; Part A: Applications 84(1). p.16-34
Abstract

As a key physical process, water vapor condensation has attracted significant attention because of its potential in engineering applications. The non-condensable gas in the surrounding vapor has a significant influence on condensation heat transfer. Considering as a crucial aspect, this work developed a transient multiphysics coupled solver to investigate droplet condensation in a moist air environment (considering dry air as the non-condensable gas). The current solver couples the time-dependent vapor-liquid phase-change heat transfer, mass transport of water vapor, and two-phase fluid flow. In contrast to the classical thermal resistance theory model, this solver can capture the dynamic and strong coupling characteristics during... (More)

As a key physical process, water vapor condensation has attracted significant attention because of its potential in engineering applications. The non-condensable gas in the surrounding vapor has a significant influence on condensation heat transfer. Considering as a crucial aspect, this work developed a transient multiphysics coupled solver to investigate droplet condensation in a moist air environment (considering dry air as the non-condensable gas). The current solver couples the time-dependent vapor-liquid phase-change heat transfer, mass transport of water vapor, and two-phase fluid flow. In contrast to the classical thermal resistance theory model, this solver can capture the dynamic and strong coupling characteristics during condensation comprehensively. The results demonstrate that for small-scale droplets, vapor condensation is driven by the coupled internal conduction-dominated heat transfer and external vapor diffusion. As the droplet grows and the contact angle increases, internal convection driven by the Marangoni effect becomes increasingly important. The enhanced fluid mixing inside the droplet can affect both the internal heat transfer and the external vapor diffusion. Because of the significant diffusion resistance, the droplet growth rates in a moist air environment are reduced up to 1-2 orders of magnitude compared with the case of pure steam. For large-scale droplets, the internal convection can increase the droplet growth rate up to 18.7%. Furthermore, the contact angle, the subcooling temperature, and the relative humidity have significant influences on droplet condensation in a moist air environment. This work not only promotes the mechanistic understanding of condensation heat transfer in a moist air ambient but also provides a flexible solver for vapor-liquid phase change problems.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Droplet condensation, moist air, non-condensable gas, transient multiphysics coupling
in
Numerical Heat Transfer; Part A: Applications
volume
84
issue
1
pages
16 - 34
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85135025124
ISSN
1040-7782
DOI
10.1080/10407782.2022.2105059
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
48213172-7591-4246-9b17-5ef90c24585b
date added to LUP
2022-10-06 10:19:24
date last changed
2023-11-21 11:55:29
@article{48213172-7591-4246-9b17-5ef90c24585b,
  abstract     = {{<p>As a key physical process, water vapor condensation has attracted significant attention because of its potential in engineering applications. The non-condensable gas in the surrounding vapor has a significant influence on condensation heat transfer. Considering as a crucial aspect, this work developed a transient multiphysics coupled solver to investigate droplet condensation in a moist air environment (considering dry air as the non-condensable gas). The current solver couples the time-dependent vapor-liquid phase-change heat transfer, mass transport of water vapor, and two-phase fluid flow. In contrast to the classical thermal resistance theory model, this solver can capture the dynamic and strong coupling characteristics during condensation comprehensively. The results demonstrate that for small-scale droplets, vapor condensation is driven by the coupled internal conduction-dominated heat transfer and external vapor diffusion. As the droplet grows and the contact angle increases, internal convection driven by the Marangoni effect becomes increasingly important. The enhanced fluid mixing inside the droplet can affect both the internal heat transfer and the external vapor diffusion. Because of the significant diffusion resistance, the droplet growth rates in a moist air environment are reduced up to 1-2 orders of magnitude compared with the case of pure steam. For large-scale droplets, the internal convection can increase the droplet growth rate up to 18.7%. Furthermore, the contact angle, the subcooling temperature, and the relative humidity have significant influences on droplet condensation in a moist air environment. This work not only promotes the mechanistic understanding of condensation heat transfer in a moist air ambient but also provides a flexible solver for vapor-liquid phase change problems.</p>}},
  author       = {{Zheng, Shao Fei and Wu, Zi Yi and Gao, Yi Ying and Yang, Yan Ru and Sundén, Bengt and Wang, Xiao Dong}},
  issn         = {{1040-7782}},
  keywords     = {{Droplet condensation; moist air; non-condensable gas; transient multiphysics coupling}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{16--34}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Numerical Heat Transfer; Part A: Applications}},
  title        = {{Transient multiphysics coupled model for multiscale droplet condensation out of moist air}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10407782.2022.2105059}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/10407782.2022.2105059}},
  volume       = {{84}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}