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Keywords = overall heat transfer coefficient

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17 pages, 4284 KB  
Article
Simulation of Photothermal Effects in Biological Tissues and Exploration of Temperature Fitting Method
by Wenxuan Li, Chirui Wan, Peng Xu, Xiaofeng Xie, Fuhong Cai and Feifan Zhou
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(8), 3689; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16083689 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 319
Abstract
The photothermal effect is an important part of biological tissue optics. The reasonable use of temperature changes caused by the photothermal effect is of great value for the treatment of lesions. However, it is not easy to measure changes in light and heat [...] Read more.
The photothermal effect is an important part of biological tissue optics. The reasonable use of temperature changes caused by the photothermal effect is of great value for the treatment of lesions. However, it is not easy to measure changes in light and heat temperatures in tissues experimentally. This paper combines Monte Carlo simulation and finite-element numerical calculation based on the Pennes biological tissue heat transfer equation to simulate light transmission and distributions of light and heat in biological tissues, including single-layer uniform biological tissue simulations and a classic three-layer skin optical model. Through the simulation of single-layer uniform biological tissue, the overall trend and range of biological tissue temperature change under different parameters are obtained in this work. Third, in the classic three-layer skin optical model simulation, this work combines a data-fitting method to derive a formula relating internal temperature and tissue depth to the absorption coefficient. Compared with the simulation standard results, the error of the above fitting formula is within 1.2%, and it can be applied in the field of photothermal therapy in the future to help medical workers understand the range of temperature changes in biological tissues. Full article
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26 pages, 4663 KB  
Article
Optical-Thermal Analysis of a Thermal Receiver with Second Optics for High-Temperature Gas Heating with Solar Tower System
by Cuitlahuac Iriarte-Cornejo, Resty L. Durán, Victor M. Maytorena, Jesús F. Hinojosa and Sául F. Moreno
Thermo 2026, 6(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/thermo6020025 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 323
Abstract
Heating gases to high temperatures is essential for supplying energy to thermal and thermochemical processes. This study presents the optical–thermal design of a mini heliostat field coupled with a tubular solar receiver equipped with second optics, aiming to heat nitrogen to approximately 850 [...] Read more.
Heating gases to high temperatures is essential for supplying energy to thermal and thermochemical processes. This study presents the optical–thermal design of a mini heliostat field coupled with a tubular solar receiver equipped with second optics, aiming to heat nitrogen to approximately 850 K. The secondary optical system redistributed up to 40% of the incident solar flux from the front to the rear surface of the receiver, improving radial temperature uniformity and significantly reducing thermal gradients along the tube wall. An overall optical efficiency of 65.25% was achieved, accounting for atmospheric attenuation, shading, blocking, and the cosine effect. A coupled computational model was developed by solving the conservation equations of mass, momentum, and energy, with the spatially resolved solar flux distribution obtained via ray tracing used as a thermal boundary condition. The simulation results, validated with an empirical correlation, include solar flux contours, nitrogen temperature distributions, surface temperatures, and heat transfer coefficients. The configuration with a 12 mm vertex spacing between secondary reflectors demonstrated the best thermal performance, reducing the maximum tube surface temperature by 11% and improving radial symmetry, while maintaining nitrogen outlet temperatures near the design target of 850 K. These results confirm the suitability of the system for high-temperature applications such as solar pyrolysis using nitrogen as the heat transfer fluid to deliver the required thermal energy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advances in Solar Heating and Cooling, 2nd Edition)
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26 pages, 2747 KB  
Article
Experimental Investigation of Industrial Scale Wraparound Loop Heat Pipes for Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning System Application
by Agung Tjiptadi, Khrisna Weda Pratama, Adlan Muhammad Faras, Wisnu Indrawan, Arif Rahman, Sholahudin and Nasruddin Nasruddin
Energies 2026, 19(7), 1729; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19071729 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 378
Abstract
This study experimentally investigates the thermal performance of wraparound loop heat pipes (WLHP) using R134a as the working fluid and copper tubing with an outer diameter of 8.5 mm. A dedicated experimental apparatus was developed to evaluate thermal resistance under varying heat loads [...] Read more.
This study experimentally investigates the thermal performance of wraparound loop heat pipes (WLHP) using R134a as the working fluid and copper tubing with an outer diameter of 8.5 mm. A dedicated experimental apparatus was developed to evaluate thermal resistance under varying heat loads (200–500 W), inclination angles (15° and 30°), and coolant temperatures (5–15 °C) at a constant coolant flow rate of 3.2 L/min. Key performance metrics, including evaporator wall temperature and overall thermal resistance, were analyzed to identify optimal operating conditions. The results reveal that increasing the heat load significantly reduces thermal resistance, reaching a minimum of 0.056 °C/W at 500 W. An inclination angle of 30° improved heat transfer, lowering the evaporator temperature by approximately 5 °C compared to 15°. Moreover, lower coolant temperatures enhanced the temperature gradient between the evaporator and condenser, further improving heat transfer. Principal component analysis (PCA) was employed for dimensionality reduction and identification of the dominant thermal variables affecting system performance. Based on the experimental dataset, a regression model was developed to predict thermal resistance, achieving a coefficient of determination of R2 = 0.96. These findings confirm the WLHP’s potential as an efficient and reliable passive thermal management system for medium- to high-power applications in tropical and industrial environments. Full article
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32 pages, 12978 KB  
Article
Study on Convective Heat Transfer and Energy Efficiency Characteristics of a Vortex-Inducing–Microchannel Composite Structure for Machine Tool Thermal Control Plates
by Zhoujie Zhao, Chao Gao, Xu Zhou, Yuxuan Ran, Lingtao Weng and Weiguo Gao
Machines 2026, 14(4), 384; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines14040384 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 334
Abstract
To realize high heat transfer capacity with low energy consumption in machine tool thermal control systems under high-flow-rate conditions, a vortex-inducing–microchannel composite enhanced thermal control plate is proposed. Numerical simulations combined with experimental validation are conducted to investigate the effects of vortex-inducing geometry [...] Read more.
To realize high heat transfer capacity with low energy consumption in machine tool thermal control systems under high-flow-rate conditions, a vortex-inducing–microchannel composite enhanced thermal control plate is proposed. Numerical simulations combined with experimental validation are conducted to investigate the effects of vortex-inducing geometry and microchannel configuration under unified boundary conditions. Heat transfer capacity, pressure drop, coefficient of performance (COP), and performance evaluation criterion (PEC) are employed for comprehensive assessment. The results show that vortex induction enhances fluid mixing and boundary layer renewal, while microchannels effectively suppress pressure loss and energy consumption. Their synergistic coupling enables a balanced optimization between heat transfer enhancement and flow resistance control. Compared with a conventional thermal control plate, the proposed composite structure achieves over 20% improvement in heat transfer capacity and more than 50% increase in COP within the tested operating range. Among the investigated configurations, circular and square vortex-inducing structures combined with microchannels exhibit superior overall performance, with the circular configuration reaching a maximum COP enhancement of 72% at a flow rate of 7 L/min. This study provides practical guidance for structural selection and parameter optimization of composite thermal control plates for machine tools. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Design, Control and Application of Precision Robots)
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15 pages, 1089 KB  
Article
Application of Lie Group Transformation to Laminar Magnetohydrodynamic Flow Between Two Infinite Parallel Plates Under Uniform Magnetic Field
by Anood M. Hanafy, Mina B. Abd-el-Malek and Nagwa A. Badran
Axioms 2026, 15(4), 254; https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms15040254 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 286
Abstract
This study aims to advance the understanding of laminar magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) fluid flow between two parallel plates subjected to a uniform transverse magnetic field, motivated by its significant applications in engineering and industrial systems such as nuclear reactor cooling, MHD generators, and electromagnetic [...] Read more.
This study aims to advance the understanding of laminar magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) fluid flow between two parallel plates subjected to a uniform transverse magnetic field, motivated by its significant applications in engineering and industrial systems such as nuclear reactor cooling, MHD generators, and electromagnetic pumping devices. The governing equations are simplified using a one-parameter Lie group symmetry transformation, which exploits the inherent symmetry properties of the system to reduce the original unsteady partial differential equations to a system of ordinary differential equations. The reduced equations are solved exactly under appropriate boundary and initial conditions, ensuring mathematically consistent and physically realistic solutions. A comprehensive analysis is conducted to examine the influence of key physical parameters, along with the applied magnetic field, on the velocity, temperature, and concentration profiles. The selected parameter ranges encompass a broad spectrum of physically relevant cases, enabling a detailed assessment of their effects. The results indicate that the transverse magnetic field exerts a damping effect on the flow, reducing the velocity profile due to the Lorentz force. Moreover, an increase in the Schmidt number accelerates the achievement of a steady-state concentration, while higher Prandtl numbers reduce the temperature profile. In contrast, the radiation parameter enhances the temperature distribution. In addition, the skin-friction coefficient is presented graphically, and the Nusselt number is evaluated to characterize the heat transfer performance. Overall, the findings provide valuable insight into the effects of magnetic, thermal, and solutal parameters on laminar MHD flow between parallel plates. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mathematical Analysis)
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25 pages, 18341 KB  
Article
Underload or Overload? Unveiling the Contradiction Between the Distribution of Urban Green Spaces and Their Carrying Capacity During Summer Heat Periods
by Guicheng Liu, Zifan Gui and Jie Ding
Land 2026, 15(4), 524; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040524 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 253
Abstract
Rapid urbanization has intensified the mismatch between urban green space (UGS) and urban spatial vitality (USV), hindering sustainable development. To address this, we developed the Urban Green Space Vitality Adaptation Model (UGSVAM) and analyzed 64 subdistricts in central Nanjing. Specifically, this study asks: [...] Read more.
Rapid urbanization has intensified the mismatch between urban green space (UGS) and urban spatial vitality (USV), hindering sustainable development. To address this, we developed the Urban Green Space Vitality Adaptation Model (UGSVAM) and analyzed 64 subdistricts in central Nanjing. Specifically, this study asks: Does the mismatch exist? What are its spatiotemporal patterns? What factors drive it? Methodologically, we use the Gini coefficient and Lorenz curve to assess overall UGS-USV adaptation, then construct the Urban Green Space Vitality Density (UGVD) indicator to quantify the match level, classifying units as overloaded, underloaded, or balanced. OLS and GWR reveal global and local influencing mechanisms, while quadrant analysis supports differentiated planning. Results show: (1) UGS-USV adaptation in Nanjing is weak, with Gini coefficients of 0.466 (weekday) and 0.456 (weekend). UGVD exhibits a spatial pattern of a primary overload core in the central city, a secondary core in the southwest, and peripheral decline, with the southeast underloaded. Overloaded units also show notable temporal variation. (2) Globally POI density and intersection density promote UGVD, while excessive transport facilities, air pollution, and high temperatures inhibit it—ecological factors have stronger weekend effects. (3) Locally, the northeast is more sensitive to POI density, the southwest to transport and heat, and the Jiangbei New Area could enhance green space carrying capacity through transport optimization and spatial integration. The UGSVAM integrates spatial diagnosis, mechanism analysis, and planning response, offering a transferable framework for refining green space governance in high-density cities. Full article
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15 pages, 842 KB  
Article
Nighttime Validation and Local Sensitivity of a Reduced-Order Thermal Balance for Above-Ground Outdoor Pools
by Seweryn Lipiński, Łukasz Dziubiński and Paweł Chwietczuk
AppliedMath 2026, 6(3), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/appliedmath6030046 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 242
Abstract
The paper presents a mathematical validation and a local sensitivity analysis of a reduced-order thermal balance model designed to predict nighttime heat losses from an above-ground outdoor pool. The model expresses the total heat flux as a linear function of the water–air temperature [...] Read more.
The paper presents a mathematical validation and a local sensitivity analysis of a reduced-order thermal balance model designed to predict nighttime heat losses from an above-ground outdoor pool. The model expresses the total heat flux as a linear function of the water–air temperature difference through an effective overall heat-transfer coefficient aggregating convective, evaporative, and radiative mechanisms, as well as cover-related effects. The analysis is explicitly restricted to quasi-steady nighttime conditions. Field data were segmented into 13 independent nighttime realizations (T ≈ 5.5–26.9 °C, wind ≈ 0.00–1.32 m∙s−1). Across the entire dataset, the model achieved a mean relative error of 0.39% and a maximum absolute deviation of 3.72%, with no monotonic error growth versus T or wind speed. Normalized local sensitivities reveal that the convective (hc) and evaporative (he) components dominate the response, whereas the radiative contribution is smaller under typical nighttime boundaries; the cover-permeability factor gains influence as wind speed increases. The additive structure limits independent identifiability of individual mechanisms, supporting an interpretation in terms of effective parameters. The results delineate the domain where the reduced-order formulation is predictive without refitting and provide a compact, interpretable reference for analyzing energy-balance models of open-water systems under nighttime operation. Full article
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14 pages, 2978 KB  
Article
Experimental Study on Desorption and Heat Storage Characteristics of Magnesium Sulfate Hydrate in a Moving-Bed Heat Exchange System
by Liang Wang, Shuang Li, Chuanqi Shi, Yun Jia and Bin Ding
Processes 2026, 14(6), 919; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14060919 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 339
Abstract
Thermochemical heat storage technology serves as an effective approach for efficient recovery and cross-seasonal storage of low-grade waste heat. However, traditional packed-bed heat exchange methods in industrial applications are prone to material contamination and performance degradation due to impurities in waste heat gases. [...] Read more.
Thermochemical heat storage technology serves as an effective approach for efficient recovery and cross-seasonal storage of low-grade waste heat. However, traditional packed-bed heat exchange methods in industrial applications are prone to material contamination and performance degradation due to impurities in waste heat gases. To address this, this study proposes and constructs a thermochemical heat storage system based on moving-bed indirect heat exchange, using magnesium sulfate heptahydrate (MgSO4·7H2O) as the heat storage medium. The system investigates its desorption and heat storage characteristics within the moving bed. A small-scale moving-bed experimental platform was established, incorporating a vacuum-assisted system to promptly remove water vapor generated during desorption. The experimental system examines the effects of different operating parameters (e.g., inlet water temperature and flow rate) on particle temperature fields, desorption rates, and overall heat transfer performance. Results demonstrate that MgSO4·7H2O exhibits excellent heat storage stability and reaction controllability in the medium-low temperature range (60–95 °C). Increasing inlet water temperature and flow rate enhances desorption processes, but high temperatures also lead to increased temperature gradients, reducing waste heat recovery rates. Practical applications require optimizing the balance between heat transfer enhancement and desorption time. Compared to conventional heat storage particles, the moving-bed system using magnesium sulfate heptahydrate achieves approximately 30% higher overall heat transfer coefficient. Compared to traditional packed beds, the moving-bed heat exchange method demonstrates superior heat transfer uniformity and storage efficiency. This study validates the feasibility of the “moving-bed + thermochemical heat storage + vacuum desorption” technology under non-clean heat source conditions, providing experimental evidence and technical references for efficient industrial waste heat recovery and high-density storage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Multi-Phase Flow and Heat and Mass Transfer Engineering)
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31 pages, 12332 KB  
Article
Heat Transfer Properties of CuCrZr/AlSi7Mg Heat Sinks with Gradient Material and Gradient Structure Manufactured by Laser Powder Bed Fusion
by Zeer Li, Guotao Zhong, Mingkang Zhang, Fengqing Lu, Yajuan Wang and Sihua Yin
Coatings 2026, 16(3), 318; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16030318 - 5 Mar 2026
Viewed by 410
Abstract
The continuous increase in power density of electronic devices imposes stringent requirements on the design of lightweight, high-efficiency heat sinks. To overcome the limitations of conventional single-gradient or monomaterial heat sinks—namely, their suboptimal heat-transfer efficiency and poor structural adaptability—this study proposes a dual-gradient, [...] Read more.
The continuous increase in power density of electronic devices imposes stringent requirements on the design of lightweight, high-efficiency heat sinks. To overcome the limitations of conventional single-gradient or monomaterial heat sinks—namely, their suboptimal heat-transfer efficiency and poor structural adaptability—this study proposes a dual-gradient, triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS)-based multimaterial heat sink architecture fabricated from CuCrZr and AlSi7Mg. Thermal performance was quantified experimentally using infrared thermography, while the underlying flow-field mechanisms were investigated numerically via computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations employing the standard k–ε turbulence model. With the TPMS material volume ratio fixed at 3:3 (CuCrZr:AlSi7Mg), the Z-axis gradient configuration P-Z4-5 delivered the best overall thermal performance, achieving a heat-transfer coefficient (HTC) of 1557.63 W·m−2·K−1 and a thermal resistance as low as 1.83 K·W−1 at an inlet velocity of 5 m·s−1. In contrast, the Y-axis gradient configuration P-Y3-6 yielded the most uniform temperature distribution, exhibiting a maximum surface temperature difference of only 21.5 °C under the same inlet condition. Velocity and turbulence distribution analyses reveal that the dual-gradient design enhances both the narrow-tube effect and flow-induced disturbances; furthermore, increasing the inlet velocity from 5 m·s−1 to 21.65 m·s−1 significantly intensifies vorticity-driven fluid mixing. Among all configurations evaluated, P-Z4-5 exhibited the highest j/f factor (i.e., the ratio of Colburn j-factor to Fanning friction factor), followed by P-Z3.5-5.5 and P-Z3-6. These findings establish a promising new pathway for the development of high-performance, lightweight heat sinks tailored for next-generation high-power electronics. Full article
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30 pages, 12806 KB  
Article
Effect of Thickness on Thermo-Hydraulic Performance of a DPHE with Twisted Perforated Tapes: A Numerical Study
by Ashraf Emad Almerane and Aizat Abas
Thermo 2026, 6(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/thermo6010018 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 586
Abstract
While twisted tape inserts are widely used for heat transfer enhancement, the specific impact of tape thickness remains under-explored. This study provides a systematic numerical investigation into the thermo-hydraulic performance of a double-pipe heat exchanger equipped with twisted perforated tape (TPT) inserts of [...] Read more.
While twisted tape inserts are widely used for heat transfer enhancement, the specific impact of tape thickness remains under-explored. This study provides a systematic numerical investigation into the thermo-hydraulic performance of a double-pipe heat exchanger equipped with twisted perforated tape (TPT) inserts of varying thicknesses (1, 1.5, and 2 mm). Using a validated 3D SST k−ω model across Re = 1000–12,000, the research establishes a mechanistic distinction between flow regimes. The results indicate that the 2 mm TPT yields the highest enhancement, achieving a 78.6% increase in the average Nusselt number (Nuavg) and a 67.8% improvement in the overall heat transfer coefficient at Re = 12,000. Quantitative analysis of secondary flow intensity and turbulence kinetic energy confirms a transition from geometry-induced swirl at low Re to turbulence-driven shear at high Re. Despite a pressure drop penalty of up to 3.26 times the plain tube, the thermal performance factor remained above unity for all cases, peaking at 1.17 at Re ≈ 4000. These findings establish tape thickness as a first-order design variable for optimizing high-performance thermal systems. Full article
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21 pages, 6652 KB  
Article
Investigation of Flow Boiling Heat Transfer Performance of Grooved Metal Foam (Ni, Cu) Evaporators
by Junteng Cao, Huajie Li, Xianbo Nian, Chaoyi Zhang, Yuankun Zhang and Chunsheng Guo
Micromachines 2026, 17(3), 286; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17030286 - 25 Feb 2026
Viewed by 497
Abstract
To meet the miniaturized cooling demands of high-heat-flux electronic devices, metal foams—featuring high specific surface area and multiscale porous structures—are considered promising candidates for enhancing flow boiling evaporation. However, pore density (PPI) and grooved geometry (channel aspect ratio, AR) jointly regulate vapor–liquid distribution, [...] Read more.
To meet the miniaturized cooling demands of high-heat-flux electronic devices, metal foams—featuring high specific surface area and multiscale porous structures—are considered promising candidates for enhancing flow boiling evaporation. However, pore density (PPI) and grooved geometry (channel aspect ratio, AR) jointly regulate vapor–liquid distribution, rewetting, and flow resistance, thereby constraining overall performance. Here, flow boiling experiments were conducted on nickel and copper foams with pore densities of 100, 500, and 1000 PPI and AR values of 0.7, 1.0, and 1.3. Heat transfer coefficient (HTC), wall superheat (ΔT), and pressure drop (Δp) were systematically evaluated, complemented by transient two-phase simulations revealing vapor fraction, temperature, and pressure drop distributions. A pronounced non-monotonic pore-density dependence is observed: 500 PPI achieves an optimal balance between heat-transfer enhancement and flow resistance, whereas 100 PPI suffers from vapor accumulation and temperature non-uniformity, and 1000 PPI is penalized by excessive permeability resistance and pore-scale confinement. An optimal AR of 1.0 promotes efficient vapor venting and stable rewetting. Under the optimal configuration (500 PPI, AR =1.0), a limiting heat flux of 348.6 W/cm2, corresponding to the HTC of 55.4 kW/(m2 · K), and a limiting HTC of 130.3 kW/(m2 · K) are achieved, providing quantitative design guidelines for metal-foam two-phase evaporators. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E:Engineering and Technology)
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21 pages, 10772 KB  
Article
Structured Design Methodology for Compact Plate Heat Exchangers
by Md Zishan Akhter, Mohammad Faisal, Ahmed Shaaban, Kamil Jaworczak and Philip Hart
Energies 2026, 19(4), 914; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19040914 - 10 Feb 2026
Viewed by 497
Abstract
The increasing demand for compact and high-performance thermal management systems in the industrial and energy sectors has renewed interest in plate-type heat exchangers for high heat-flux dissipation. These exchangers offer high surface-area-to-volume ratios, modular architecture, and scalable construction, making them suitable for applications [...] Read more.
The increasing demand for compact and high-performance thermal management systems in the industrial and energy sectors has renewed interest in plate-type heat exchangers for high heat-flux dissipation. These exchangers offer high surface-area-to-volume ratios, modular architecture, and scalable construction, making them suitable for applications requiring advanced cooling within restricted space. This study presents a structured thermo-hydraulic design framework for compact plate heat exchangers operating under fixed wall-temperature boundary conditions. The framework integrates geometric scaling, surface-morphology variation, and multi-parameter performance evaluation to assess the balance between convective enhancement and hydraulic losses. Water at 25 °C serves as the working fluid due to its favorable thermophysical properties and economic viability. A constant wall temperature of 100 °C is applied as a fixed boundary condition to provide a consistent thermal driving potential for comparing different geometries in a range of industrially relevant operating regimes. Three primary design variables are examined: (i) a baseline flat-plate configuration used to establish the fundamental flow–thermal response; (ii) systematic variation of inter-plate spacing to characterize the hydraulic–thermal tradeoff; and (iii) surface-morphology variation using chevron and sinusoidal corrugations to enhance convection through secondary flow generation and boundary-layer modulation. The key performance metrics include wall heat flux, overall heat-transfer coefficient, thermal resistance, and pressure-drop penalty. These indicators are evaluated to identify configurations that are thermally effective and hydraulically feasible. The results show that an inter-plate spacing of 7 mm provides a favorable balance between confinement and convective enhancement under the present operating conditions. Sinusoidal corrugations yield the most favorable thermo-hydraulic performance (PEC 1.30) while maintaining low frictional losses. The proposed framework provides a transferable physics-based methodology for comparative assessment and early-stage design of compact heat exchangers under fixed pumping-power constraints. The approach is broadly applicable to renewable-energy systems and compact thermal management in industrial applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Heat Transfer and Fluid Flows for Industry Applications)
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24 pages, 23804 KB  
Article
Numerical Analysis of Heat Transfer Process and Mechanisms for High-Temperature Air Flowing Across Staggered Lined Fine Tubes
by Qinyi Zhang, Yi Feng, Chunxiao Zhu, Jiaxin Zheng, Xin Xu, Min Du, Zhengyu Mo and Licheng Sun
Energies 2026, 19(3), 796; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030796 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 330
Abstract
This study investigates the flow and heat transfer mechanisms of high-temperature air flowing across staggered lined fine tubes in a SABRE-type precooler. Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) was employed to model three-dimensional unsteady flow under constant-property and variable-property air models at inlet temperatures of 400–800 [...] Read more.
This study investigates the flow and heat transfer mechanisms of high-temperature air flowing across staggered lined fine tubes in a SABRE-type precooler. Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) was employed to model three-dimensional unsteady flow under constant-property and variable-property air models at inlet temperatures of 400–800 K. The results show that increasing temperature substantially enhances vorticity, turbulent kinetic energy, heat flux, and Nusselt number, while flow separation and pressure drop are intensified. However, when temperature-dependent air properties are incorporated, the wake width increases and the separated shear layers become thicker, while the turbulence/unsteadiness intensity decreases. Consequently, the near-wall shear is reduced and the heat transfer coefficients are lower. Compared with variable-property predictions, constant-property models overestimate the average Nusselt number by 20–40% and the local pressure drop by 40–65%, and they underestimate the air-side temperature drop along the tube rows. These findings demonstrate that real-gas effects significantly alter both aerodynamic resistance and thermal performance. Overall, accurate representation of temperature-dependent air properties is essential for the reliable design, evaluation, and optimization of micro-tube precoolers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Heat Transfer Performance and Influencing Factors of Waste Management)
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24 pages, 5941 KB  
Article
Demonstration Performance Evaluation of an Air-Based PVT-Assisted Air-Source Heat Pump System
by Jin-Hee Kim, Sang-Myung Kim, Ha-Young Kim and Jun-Tae Kim
Energies 2026, 19(3), 736; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030736 - 30 Jan 2026
Viewed by 389
Abstract
Photovoltaic thermal systems are capable of simultaneously generating electricity and recovering thermal energy from the rear surface of photovoltaic modules. When integrated with an air-source heat pump, the thermal energy recovered from an air-based photovoltaic thermal system can be utilized as an auxiliary [...] Read more.
Photovoltaic thermal systems are capable of simultaneously generating electricity and recovering thermal energy from the rear surface of photovoltaic modules. When integrated with an air-source heat pump, the thermal energy recovered from an air-based photovoltaic thermal system can be utilized as an auxiliary heat source, thereby improving heating performance and reducing electricity consumption. In this study, a demonstration-scale performance assessment of an air-based photovoltaic thermal-assisted air-source heat pump system was conducted in a real building located in Asan, South Korea. Performance analysis was based on measured operational data collected over a one-month period in March 2024, corresponding to late-winter to early-spring conditions when heating demand was still present. During the measurement period, the average plane-of-array solar irradiance was approximately 600 W/m2, with peak values reaching up to 1000 W/m2. Under these conditions, the air-based photovoltaic thermal collector provided average electrical and thermal power outputs of 1.96 kW and 2.2 kW, respectively, while peak outputs reached 3.3 kW for electricity generation and 3.8 kW for thermal energy recovery. The daily thermal energy production remained relatively stable, ranging from 17.8 to 21.7 kWh. Furthermore, approximately 45–60% of the recovered thermal energy was effectively transferred to a buffer tank through an air-to-water heat exchanger, indicating stable solar heat recovery and storage performance. When the recovered thermal energy was supplied to the air-source heat pump during daytime heating operation, a preheating effect was observed, resulting in reduced electricity consumption and improved heating performance. The coefficient of performance increased from 2.24 during nighttime operation to 2.81 under solar-assisted daytime conditions, corresponding to a notable reduction in electricity consumption under solar-assisted daytime operation, compared with nighttime operation without PVT preheating. Overall, the results indicate that, under the tested late-winter to early-spring heating conditions, the integrated air-based photovoltaic thermal and air-source heat pump system can enhance heating performance and reduce electricity consumption, demonstrating its practical feasibility as a solar-assisted heating solution rather than representing generalized annual performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section G: Energy and Buildings)
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12 pages, 2261 KB  
Article
Fractional Modeling of Coupled Heat and Moisture Transfer with Gas-Pressure-Driven Flow in Raw Cotton
by Normakhmad Ravshanov and Istam Shadmanov
Processes 2026, 14(3), 481; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14030481 - 29 Jan 2026
Viewed by 388
Abstract
This study introduces a multidimensional mathematical model and a robust numerical algorithm with second-order accuracy for modeling the complex coupled processes of heat and moisture transfer with gas-pressure-driven flow, based on time-fractional differential equations (with Caputo derivatives of order 0 < α ≤ [...] Read more.
This study introduces a multidimensional mathematical model and a robust numerical algorithm with second-order accuracy for modeling the complex coupled processes of heat and moisture transfer with gas-pressure-driven flow, based on time-fractional differential equations (with Caputo derivatives of order 0 < α ≤ 1), which capture the memory effects and anomalous diffusion inherent in heterogeneous porous media. The proposed model integrates conductive and convective heat transfer; moisture diffusion and phase change; and pressure dynamics within the pore space and their bidirectional couplings. It also incorporates environmental interactions through boundary conditions for heat and moisture exchange with the ambient air; internal heat and moisture release; transient influx of solar radiation; and material heterogeneity, where all transport coefficients are spatially variable functions. To solve this nonlinear and coupled system, we developed a high-order, stable finite-difference scheme. The numerical algorithm employs an alternating direction-implicit approach, which ensures computational efficiency while maintaining numerical stability. We demonstrate the algorithm’s capability through numerical simulations that monitor and predict the spatiotemporal evolution of coupled transport temperature, moisture content, and pressure fields. The results reveal how heterogeneity, diurnal solar radiation, and internal sources create localized hot spots, moisture accumulation zones, and pressure gradients that significantly influence the overall dynamics of storage and drying processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Process Control and Monitoring)
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