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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Absorbing media, interaction phenomena in, Absorption of thermal radiation: Absorption coefficient, Absorption spectra in gases, Absorptivity: Acentric factor: Acetaldehyde: Acetic acid: Acetic anhydride: Acetone: Acetonitrile: Acetophenone: Acetylene: Acetylenes Ackerman correction factor in condensation, Acoustic methods, for fouling mitigation, Acoustic vibration of heat exchangers, Acrolein: Acrylic acid: Active systems for augmentation of heat transfer: Additives: Adiabatic flows, compressible, in duct, Admiralty brass, Advanced models for furnaces, Agitated beds, heat transfer to, Agitated vessels, Ahmad scaling method for critical heat flux in flow boiling of nonaqueous fluids, Air: Air-activated gravity conveyor, Air-cooled heat exchangers: Air preheaters, fouling in, Albedo for single scatter in radiation, Alcohols: Aldehydes: Aldred, D L, Allyl alcohol: Allyl chloride (-chloropropane) Alternating direction (ADR) method, for solution of implicit finite difference equations, Aluminum, spectral characteristics of anodized surfaces, Aluminum alloys, thermal and mechanical properties, Aluminium brass, Ambrose-Walton corresponding states method, for vapour pressure, Amides: Amines: Ammonia: tert-Amyl alcohol: Analogy between heat and mass and momentum transfer Analytical solution of groups, for calculation of thermodynamic Anelasticity, Angled tubes, use in increasing flooding rate in reflux condensation, Aniline: Anisotropy of elastic properties, Annular distributor in shell-and-tube heat exchangers, Annular ducts: Annular (radial) fins, efficiency Annular flow (gas-liquid): Annular flow (liquid-liquid), Annular flow (liquid-liquid-gas), Anti-foulants, Antoine equation, for vapour pressure, Aqueous solutions, as heat transfer media, Arc welding of tubes into tube sheets: Archimedes number, Area of tube outside surface in shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Argon: Arithmetic mean temperature difference, definition, Armstrong, Robert C Aromatics: ASME VIII code, for mechanical design of shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Assisted convection: Attachment, of fouling layers, Augmentation of heat transfer Austenitic stainless steels, Average phase velocity in multiphase flows, Axial flow reboilers, Axial wire attachments, for augmentation of condensation, Azeotropes, condensation of

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A
Absorbing media, interaction phenomena in, Absorption of thermal radiation: Absorption coefficient, Absorption spectra in gases, Absorptivity: Acentric factor: Acetaldehyde: Acetic acid: Acetic anhydride: Acetone: Acetonitrile: Acetophenone: Acetylene: Acetylenes Ackerman correction factor in condensation, Acoustic methods, for fouling mitigation, Acoustic vibration of heat exchangers, Acrolein: Acrylic acid: Active systems for augmentation of heat transfer: Additives: Adiabatic flows, compressible, in duct, Admiralty brass, Advanced models for furnaces, Agitated beds, heat transfer to, Agitated vessels, Ahmad scaling method for critical heat flux in flow boiling of nonaqueous fluids, Air: Air-activated gravity conveyor, Air-cooled heat exchangers: Air preheaters, fouling in, Albedo for single scatter in radiation, Alcohols: Aldehydes: Aldred, D L, Allyl alcohol: Allyl chloride (-chloropropane) Alternating direction (ADR) method, for solution of implicit finite difference equations, Aluminum, spectral characteristics of anodized surfaces, Aluminum alloys, thermal and mechanical properties, Aluminium brass, Ambrose-Walton corresponding states method, for vapour pressure, Amides: Amines: Ammonia: tert-Amyl alcohol: Analogy between heat and mass and momentum transfer Analytical solution of groups, for calculation of thermodynamic Anelasticity, Angled tubes, use in increasing flooding rate in reflux condensation, Aniline: Anisotropy of elastic properties, Annular distributor in shell-and-tube heat exchangers, Annular ducts: Annular (radial) fins, efficiency Annular flow (gas-liquid): Annular flow (liquid-liquid), Annular flow (liquid-liquid-gas), Anti-foulants, Antoine equation, for vapour pressure, Aqueous solutions, as heat transfer media, Arc welding of tubes into tube sheets: Archimedes number, Area of tube outside surface in shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Argon: Arithmetic mean temperature difference, definition, Armstrong, Robert C Aromatics: ASME VIII code, for mechanical design of shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Assisted convection: Attachment, of fouling layers, Augmentation of heat transfer Austenitic stainless steels, Average phase velocity in multiphase flows, Axial flow reboilers, Axial wire attachments, for augmentation of condensation, Azeotropes, condensation of
B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Film Condensation of Pure Vapour

DOI 10.1615/hedhme.a.000185

2.6 CONDENSATION
2.6.2 Film Condensation of Pure Vapour

A. Introduction

The various resistances to heat transfer during condensation are described in Section 184B. In condensation of a pure vapour, the main resistance is that of the film of condensate which forms on the cooled surface. With a laminar condensate film, heat transfer is by conduction so a thin film will give a lower resistance and therefore a higher heat transfer coefficient than a thick film. Turbulence in the film acts to increase the heat transfer coefficient. Vapour shear has the effect of thinning the film, inducing turbulence, and therefore of increasing the heat transfer coefficient. Other factors which affect the condensate heat transfer coefficient are waves on the film surface, droplet entrainment and deposition, condensate splashing, and condensate subcooling.

Section B provides methods for heat transfer with condensation on a vertical surface, which in a heat exchanger would normally be a vertical tube. Figure 1 illustrates condensation on a vertical surface when the vapour is considered to be stagnant and there is therefore no effect of vapour shear on the condensate film. The condensate drains vertically downwards under gravity, with a flowrate steadily increasing from zero at the top. At the very low film Reynolds numbers at the top of the surface the condensate flow is laminar and wave-free. At some point down the tube surface a transition occurs where waves form on the condensate film. This transition is due to instabilities at the vapour-liquid interface, and it can be characterised by the film Reynolds number. At a much higher Reynolds number there is a transition from laminar-type flow to turbulent flow. In the laminar region the heat transfer coefficient decreases as the Reynolds number increases. The rate of decrease becomes smaller in the laminar-wavy region because of the disturbances caused by the waves. In the turbulent region the higher effective viscosity causes the film to become thicker. However the overall effect in the turbulent region is that the heat transfer coefficient increases as the Reynolds number increases. This is because the increased convection due to turbulence more than compensates for the thickening film. Liquid metals can behave differently, as shown in Section F.

Figure 1 Condensation on a vertical surface in the absence of vapour shear

The effect of a downwards vapour velocity is to increase the heat transfer coefficient by both thinning the film and inducing turbulence (see Section B). An upward vapour velocity will tend to have the opposite effect. However a phenomenon known as flooding occurs before vapour velocities are high enough to affect heat transfer significantly. This phenomenon is where the upwards vapour flow prevents the condensate from draining from the bottom of the surface. This is discussed in Section B(e).

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