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Baffle leakage in shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Baffles in shell-and-tube heat exchangers: Baker flow regime map for horizontal gas-liquid flow, Balance equation (applied to complete equipment), Band dryer: Bandel and Schlunder correlations, for boiling in horizontal tubes, Basket-type evaporator, Barbosa, J R Jr, Bateman, G, Bayonet tube heat exchangers, constructional features of, Bayonet tube evaporators, Beaton, C F, Beer-Lambert law, Bejan, A, Bell-Delaware method for shell-side heat transfer and pressure drop in shell-and-tube heat exchangers, Bell and Ghaly method for calculation of multicomponent condensation, Benard cells in free convection in horizontal fluid layers, Bends: Benzaldehyde: Benzene: Benzoic acid: Benzonitrile: Benzophenone: Benzyl alcohol: Benzyl chloride: Berenson equation for pool film boiling from a horizontal surface, Bergles, Arthur E, Bernoulli equation, application to flow across cylinders, Bimetallic tubes: Binary mixtures: Bingham fluid (non-Newtonian), Biofouling, Biot number: Biphenyl: Bismarck A, Black liquor, in pulp and paper industry, fouling of heat exchangers by, Black surface: Blackbody radiation, Blades, in scraped surface heat exchangers, Blake-Carmen-Kozeny equation, Blasius equation for friction factor, Blenkin, R, Blunt bodies, drag coefficients for, Boilers: Boiling: Boiling curve: Boiling length: Boiling number, definition, Boiling point, normal, Boiling range (in multicomponent mixtures): Boiling surface in boiling in vertical tubes, Boiling Water Reactor (BWR), fouling problems in, Bolted channel head in shell-and-tube exchanger, Bolted cone head in shell-and-tube heat exchanger, Bolted joints, thermal contact resistance in, Bolting, Bolting of flanges in shell-and-tube heat exchangers, Boltzmann's constant, Bonnet head, in shell-and-tube heat exchanger, Borishanski, V M, Borishanski correlation for nucleate pool boiling, Bott, T R, Boundary layer: Boussinesq approximations: Boussinesq number, definition, Bowring correlations for critical heat flux, Bracket supports for heat exchangers: Brauner, N, Brazed plate exchanger, Brazing in plate fin heat exchanger construction, Bricks, drying of, Brine recirculation, in multistage flash-evaporation, Brinkman number, Brittle fracture, Bromine: Bromley equation for film boiling from horizontal cylinders, Bromobenzene: Bromoethane: Bromomethane: Bromotrifluoromethane (Refrigerant 13B1): Brush and cage system, for fouling mitigation, BS 5500 code for mechanical design of shell-and-tube heat exchangers (see also PD 5500), Bubble crowding as mechanism of critical heat flux, Bubble flow: Bubbles: Bulk viscosity, Bundle-induced convection in kettle reboilers, Bundle layout, in condensers Buoyancy effects: Buoyancy-induced flow in channels, free convective heat transfer with, Busemann-Crocco integral, application in boundary layer equations, 1,2-Butadiene: 1,3-Butadiene: Butane: 1-Butanol: 2-Butanol: Butene-1: cis-2-Butene: trans-2-Butene: Butterworth, D, Butyl acetate: t-Butyl alcohol: Butylamine: Butylbenzene: n-Butylbenzene: n-Butylcyclohexane: Butylcyclopentane: Butylene oxide: Butyr-aldehyde: Butyric acid: Butyronitrile: Bypass (shell-and-tube bundle):
C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Introduction

DOI 10.1615/hedhme.a.000204

2.9.1 Introduction

A. Radiation heat transfer in thermal design

When does one consider radiation heat transfer, and when does one not? One does not consider radiation inside of a fluid that is highly opaque to the source spectrum. In a fluid such as water, the radiation is merely a contributor to what we know as thermal conductivity. Similarly, one docs not consider radiation inside a fluid that is perfectly transparent to the source spectrum. If there is no physical mechanism by which the fluid can absorb energy from radiation passing through it, then it follows from thermodynamics that it cannot emit radiation either, and it cannot be either heated or cooled by radiation. Such a fluid is said to be diathermanous. The walls surrounding such a fluid, however, may exchange heat radiation, but only if they are not isothermal. Thus one does not ordinarily consider radiation within the passages of a heat exchanger containing oil, water, or air. The first two are opaque. The last is diathermanous.

When two walls at different temperatures are in view of each other or one wall is in view of a participating medium (one neither opaque not diathermanous), the radiation heat flux (W/m2) tends to be high when ΔCsT4 is high, where Cs is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant, 5.6697 × 10–8 W/m2 K4. When ΔT is small compared to the absolute temperature level, ΔCsT4 can be written 4CsTm3ΔT, where Tm is the mean temperature level. At 300 K, the value for 4CsTm3 is slightly over 6 W/m2 K, on the same order as a natural-convection heat transfer coefficient. At Tm = 2,000 K, the value is nearly 300 times greater. From such a value, 1,800 W/m2 K, one can see why radiation contributes to film-boiling heat transfer. Radiation is important when temperatures are high, distances are large (because convective heat transfer coefficients go as passage size D as D–1/5 for turbulent flow or D–1 for laminar flow), or under vacuum conditions when convective heat transfer coefficients are low because of the low fluid density.

B. Thermodynamic surfaces and surface systems

The thermal designer needs to know surface heat fluxes adjacent to the interface between phases. When one phase is highly opaque and the other is not, the opaque surface system concept is used. Figure 1 depicts a surface system. The s surface lies just outside the highly opaque phase: the u surface lies just within it. The m surface lies sufficiently below the phase interface so that (1) no radiation crossing the s and u surfaces is transmitted to the m surface, and (2) the radiation flux crossing the m surface is given by the radiation-diffusion equation and is included with the conduction. For no flow through the surfaces and negligible transient heat storage in the mass between the m and u surfaces, one has

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