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Heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics of heat exchangers based on triply periodic minimal and periodic nodal surfaces

The popularity of additive manufacturing has increased interest in the use of triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS) in engineering applications due to their potential for superior mechanical, heat and mass transfer properties. Periodic nodal surfaces (PNS) are a class of periodic continuous surfac...

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Published in:Applied thermal engineering 2022-06, Vol.209 (C), p.118192, Article 118192
Main Authors: Iyer, Jaisree, Moore, Thomas, Nguyen, Du, Roy, Pratanu, Stolaroff, Joshuah
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c435t-c8a99fe8723d9398e073e5e9fe17fa887231bafa49fd509d1ea1146525fa25af3
cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c435t-c8a99fe8723d9398e073e5e9fe17fa887231bafa49fd509d1ea1146525fa25af3
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container_issue C
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container_title Applied thermal engineering
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creator Iyer, Jaisree
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Nguyen, Du
Roy, Pratanu
Stolaroff, Joshuah
description The popularity of additive manufacturing has increased interest in the use of triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS) in engineering applications due to their potential for superior mechanical, heat and mass transfer properties. Periodic nodal surfaces (PNS) are a class of periodic continuous surfaces that also divide the space into non-intersecting, smooth and continuous domains like TPMS and can potentially have superior mechanical, heat and mass transfer properties. To evaluate the potential for superior performance, in this manuscript we characterize the flow and heat transfer properties of seven TPMS and PNS based structures by numerically computing the friction factors and Nusselt numbers in the laminar flow regime. This is the first study to evaluate the use of PNS as heat exchangers. In addition, it adds to the limited quantitative data available on the flow and thermal properties of TPMS. The friction factors associated with most of the TPMS and PNS based structures in this study are about an order of magnitude higher than that for laminar flow in tubes. These structures also had higher Nusselt numbers compared to tubes, with the enhancement increasing with increase in Reynolds number. Among the TPMS and PNS studied, Schwarz-D had the best heat transfer performance while Schwarz-P was the poorest performing structure. Basic heat exchanger design calculations showed that to remove the same amount of heat and operate under the same pressure conditions, the Schwarz-D based heat exchanger was 3–10 times smaller than a tubular heat exchanger. This shows how TPMS or PNS can be used to design heat exchangers with superior performance, especially in applications where space and weight are at a premium. •First demonstration of the use of non-TPMS Periodic Nodal Surfaces as heat exchanger.•Under laminar flow most TPMS/PNS had friction factors 3–10 times higher than pipes.•Under laminar flow most TPMS/PNS had Nusselt numbers 1–15 times higher than pipes.•TPMS/PNS heat exchangers can be significantly smaller than tubular heat exchangers.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.118192
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subjects Additive manufacturing
ENGINEERING
Fluid flow
Friction factor
Heat exchanger
Heat exchangers
Heat transfer
Laminar flow
Mass transfer
MATERIALS SCIENCE
Mechanical properties
Minimal surfaces
Nusselt number
Periodic nodal surface
Pressure distribution
Pressure drop
Reynolds number
Thermodynamic properties
Triply periodic minimal surface
Tubes
title Heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics of heat exchangers based on triply periodic minimal and periodic nodal surfaces
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