2.1.1.3. Design and Operational Parameters in the Simulation
Rotors are typically made of aluminum. Two bands of metal foils, typically of 20 cm width, one corrugated and one flat are coiled as shown in
Figure 3. This honeycomb-similar structure has many small flow channels that allow gas to pass through in the axial direction.
As shown in
Figure 3, due to the manufacturing process, the metal foils are coiled into a spiral. In a spiral the curvature along the radius decreases continuously. For example, the outer edge of the rotor has the lowest curvature. Due to this curvature effect, the wave crests (highest point of a wave) stretch apart and the wave troughs (lowest point of a wave) are compressed. Therefore, the distance between the wave troughs is smaller than the distance between the wave crests. Due to this effect, the wavelength is not equal at wave crest and wave trough. This is a challenge that in practice would make it unfeasible to develop a model considering each individual tube inside the rotor. Therefore, this work simplifies the geometry as shown in
Figure 4, which can be described based on the following design parameters:
Material thickness : thickness of the foil used to manufacture the rotor.
Wave height : distance between two coils in which the waves are formed.
Wave radius : radius of the circle that is formed by the corrugated foil when the waved layer changes direction.
Inclination angle : refers to the angle formed between the straight part of the wave and the flat aluminum layer.
Rotor length
: distance that the gas flows inside the rotor as shown in
Figure 2.
Wavelength : the distance between two wave crests; dependent on the previous design parameters , , , . Since the model assumes a flat geometry, distances at wave crest, wave through and wave middle are identical.
Wave height-to-length ratio
is used for certain heat transfer models and is defined as follows:
Using the parameters described, the length of a waved duct
, which is within the length
, is calculated as follows:
Based on this geometrical description, the void fraction
and the volumetric specific surface
is defined as follows:
Operating parameters also have an impact on rotor thermal efficiency :
The value of gas velocity
is affected by density changes caused by variations of temperature along the channel. Nevertheless, the mass flow remains constant. Therefore, in the present work, sometimes the velocity will be shown in mass flux (mass flowrate per surface area expressed in kg·m
−2·s
−1) as follows:
2.1.1.4. Simulation Concept and Numerical Methods
For the simulation, the following assumptions were made:
Equal and steady state gas mass flow on both sides of the rotor.
No leakages at the rotor sealing.
No purge sector considered.
The heat transfer mechanism of the whole rotor can be described based on the heat transfer in a single channel: Hot air is blown into the channel and heats up the channel for a certain time. This time span corresponds to the time of half a revolution of the rotor. The channel then enters the other sector of the housing where cold air is blown through the channel in the opposite direction for the same period. This cold air heats up by drawing the energy from the channel.
The process of cooling down and heating up of a channel is repeated continuously. The gas outlet temperature of a single channel is continuously changing along the rotation as shown in
Figure 5. However, after the rotor system has reached steady-state, at any given angle the outlet temperature from a channel is constant over time. Therefore, the resulting outlet gas temperature of the stream composed by the individual flow of each channel remains constant, which is the average outlet gas temperature over a half-cycle in
Figure 5.
Figure 5 shows that where the rotor enters the cold sector (for angles in the range 0° to 5°), the temperature outlet profile shows a higher gradient. The reason for this is the carry-over gas from the hot sector. The time
it takes to flush the carry-over gas out of the volume of one channel depends on the internal gas velocity:
For the operating conditions in
Figure 5,
is about 10% of the time of a half cycle. Therefore, for almost the first 18° during the rotation, just the carry-over gas from the process gas comes out to the supply air.
For numerical rotor simulation, some authors have used the approximated closed solutions method proposed by Kays and London [
37] using the
method, where the problem is simplified by assuming a constant heat transfer coefficient along the tube [
13,
14,
17,
20,
21,
23,
27,
28,
29,
31,
32,
38]. Others have used finite difference methods for solving the same problem. In both cases, several authors have defined the axial heat conduction (in the direction of the flow) to zero, or radial heat conduction (perpendicular to the flow) to infinite. A detailed review on different approaches can be seen in the work of Klein and Eigenberger [
30]. In this paper, it is assumed that thermal conductivity in the radial direction in the solid is infinite (which is the same to radial constant temperature). Additionally, the Biot number for the aluminum in the rotor conditions is in the order of magnitude of 10
−5 0.1, which is usually the limit for considering it as a lumped-system model Therefore the temperature gradients inside the aluminum are negligible.
Following the approach of previous literature [
35,
36], to solve Equations (5) and (6), these are discretized with central differences to a number of
grid points. Central differences have the benefit of being more accurate than forward or backward differences, since the truncation error is smaller. The time derivative is discretized according to the Euler implicit method, which is also known as the backward Euler method. This leads to a system of equations based on temperature differences in axial direction and in time. Common methods such as Gaussian elimination are constrained by numerical stability as the time step size
decreases for a reasonable time resolution [
39]. Therefore, the Newton–Raphson method is used. This method is also applicable when the physical properties, as in this case, depend on temperature. These equations were used in this work to develop an algorithm in C#. This method is robust in these cases and provides the aimed performance.
The design parameters have been incorporated for defining the step length
, the hydraulic diameter
, the void fraction
, the volumetric specific surface of the rotor
, and the inclination angle
. This data are required for the energy balance Equations (5) and (6), and the heat transfer coefficient models in
Section 2.1.1.4 and
Section 2.1.1.5.
Different methods are used to calculate the different thermodynamic properties. Some data are based on correlations found in literature, others can be calculated using well-known thermodynamic laws or self-developed correlations based on literature data. A complete overview of the different methods is shown in
Table 1.
2.1.1.5. State-of-the-Art on Nusselt Number Models
In the following section, we depict the different models used in this work for predicting the heat transfer coefficient
based on the Nusselt number
, and the advantages and disadvantages of each model are discussed. The Nusselt number is defined by:
where the hydraulic diameter
is defined by flow area
and perimeter
as follows:
The above equation results in:
To date, models for the heat transfer coefficient consider either constant heat flux transfer to the wall in the radial direction (also called H boundary condition) or constant wall temperature (also called the T boundary condition). The H boundary condition applies to counter-flow heat exchange, in which the wall heat flux to the fluid is constant along the direction. The T boundary condition applies to constant temperature along the channel in the direction but also periferically. These two boundary conditions serve as extreme cases. Actually, the rotor is expected to behave between these two boundary conditions.
Since the gas flows into the rotor in opposite directions in each sector of the housing, the temperature profiles along the channel inside the rotor are similar to those in a counter-flow heat exchanger. However, this does not apply at the inlet and the outlet of the channel where the boundary conditions affect the temperature profile considerably, and in cases where the rotational speed of the rotor is sufficiently slow, such that the rotor channels tend to reach the gas temperature. In these two cases, the heat transfer models should get closer to the T boundary condition.
Sine Duct Model
Shah and London [
44] propose different values for
, depending on geometry. In the H boundary condition, the authors also provide data for the H1 condition. H1 is a subcategory that applies to highly conductive materials, like copper and aluminum. The value of
is always higher than the value of
. The data from Shah and London [
44] have the advantage that they refer to a similar geometry to that of the rotor. However, it only refers to fully developed flow.
Circular Tube Model
Gnielinski [
33] reports two circular channels models: the constant heat flux model and the constant wall temperature model. The advantage of the circular channel model is that they are well studied and models for predicting the Nusselt number in the hydrodynamic developing entry region are available. Gnielinski [
33] presents a model for constant heat flux, the H boundary condition, for circular tubes in developing flow, which allows calculation of the local Nusselt number.
This model is valid in the range 1000 >
> 0.7 and laminar flows. Since in this work the gas is air in the 273–350 K range, the Prandtl number is above 0.7. Since the internal gas velocity in the channel is below 5.5 m/s, and the diameter
< 3 mm, the value of the Reynolds number is lower than 1000 at
= 1.3 kg/m
3 and
= 2.2 × 10
−5 Pa∙s. The flow can be considered laminar due to
< 2100 [
27] in the aforementioned temperature range. Since both conditions are met, this model can be used.
In a similar way, Gnielinski [
33] reports for constant wall temperature, the T boundary condition, which is valid for a wider range of the Prandtl number with
> 0.1.
Proposed Local Internal Nusselt Number for Sine Ducts (LINUS) Model
Since there is currently not a model in the literature considering both effects, i.e., geometry effect and hydrodynamic/thermal entry region effect, this study proposes a new model combining the advantages of both models reported above. The basic idea of this new model is to define the value of
on developed flow based on a correlation of the data gathered by Shah and London [
44] that considers the geometry and to define
in the entry region based on the equations from Gnielinski [
33] for each boundary condition. This proposed LINUS model is as follows:
From the data from Shah and London [
44], correlations using
as defined in Equation (11) are obtained as shown in Equation (22) with the parameters from
Table 2:
In
Figure 6 the Nusselt numbers obtained from these correlations are shown.
Based on the equations from Gnielinski [
33], for the constant heat boundary condition
is calculated as follows:
where
in Equation (25) is calculated according to Equation (22) from the models from Shah and London [
44]. Therefore, this model combines the Nusselt number for the sine geometry for developed flow from Shah and London [
44] with the models for Nusselt number on the hydrodynamic developing region in Equations (23)–(25) from Gnielinski [
33].
Also based on the equations from Gnielinski [
33], in the constant wall temperature boundary condition
is calculated as follows:
where
in Equation (28) is calculated according to Equation (22) from the models from Shah and London [
44], following the same logic as Equation (25).
Please note that in both boundary conditions, because it is based on the equations reported by Gnielinski [
33], if
is high enough, the value of
tends to
because
and
tend to zero. For example, in the operating conditions of this study if
, the effect of the entry region is negligible and the difference between the values of
and
is less than 1%.
A comparison of the simulation results based on of these Nusselt number models (i.e., sine duct, circular duct or the proposed LINUS model with both boundary conditions) to experimental data is shown in the results section.