Its
fairly clear that air flow and core area are two of the most significant
factors as together they determine the basic Mass flow possible through the
cooler. If that is not sufficient to carry away the heat you are trying
to reject then all else is moot.
In
K&W there are two coefficients they focus on, Kh
the heat transfer coefficient which is dependent on the characteristics of the
core, Kp
the pressure drop coefficient - again based on core characteristics. They
end up with a combined coefficient that rates how well the core transfers heat
based on the pressure drop this is Kv = Kh/Kp. These
coefficients are dependent on such things as the openness ratio, the hydraulic
diameter of the individual passage in the core and the thickenss of the
core. Both Kh
and Kp are also weakly
dependent on the Reynolds number of the air flow throught the core. I say
weakly because they relate to the inverse fourth power of the Reynolds number
or 1/(Re)^(1/4).
Interestingly enough because it is an inverse relationship the heat transfer is
better to the air with lower velocity through the core. Not quite certain
that I fully understand why, except it appears to do with the shear force and
friction between the air flow in the core passage and the the passage
walls. However, while heat is apparently passed from the core walls to
the air better at the lower Reynolds numbers, the downside is that low Reynold
number also means lower air velocity throught the core which in turn
means Low mass flow which is not good for
cooling.
So
from the equations in K&W that there is an optimum balance between the heat
transfer due to the lower Reynolds effect and the heat removed due to higher
mass flow through the core. Too much of one and not enough of the other and
your cooling is suboptimal.
FWIW
The Reynolds number (a
dimensionless parameter) includes “characteristic length” of the
channel, so although the heat transfer coefficient is increasing with increased
velocity, the “residence time” of the air is decreasing, meaning
less time for the air to heat up. But the ¼ power of the Re in the demoninator
is only one piece of the equation (isn’t it?). Somewhere in the
numerator is the mass flow (velocity) which wins out every time. For a given
core, higher velocity removes more heat. But of course, there are other limits
on velocity.
Or am I missing
something. It’s been a long time since I worked on details of convective
heat transfer.
Al