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Heat
Exchangers
What
Is Heat Exchanger?
Types
Of Heat Exchangers
engineeringinsider
A heat exchanger is a
device designed to efficiently transfer
or “exchange” heat from one matter to another (between a solid object and a
fluid, or between two or more fluids).
When a fluid is used to
transfer heat, the fluid could be a liquid, such as water or oil, or could be
moving air.
The fluids may be
separated by a solid wall to prevent mixing or they may be in direct contact.
Their applications
include:
1.
Space
heating
2.
Refrigeration
3.
Air
conditioning
4.
Power
stations
5.
Chemical
plants
6.
Petroleum
refineries
7.
Natural-gas
processing
8.
Sewage
treatment
The classic example of a
heat exchanger is found in an IC (Internal Combustion) Engine in which a
circulating fluid known as engine coolant flows through radiator coils and air flows past the coils, which
cools the coolant and heats the incoming air.
Another example is
the heat sink, which is a passive heat exchanger that
transfers the heat generated by an electronic or a mechanical device to a fluid
medium, often air or a liquid coolant.
Heat is transferred by conduction
through the exchanger materials which separate the mediums being used.
A shell and tube heat
exchanger passes fluids through and over tubes, whereas an air-cooled heat
exchanger passes cool air through a core of fins to cool a liquid.
There
are various types of heat exchangers -
1.
Shell
and tube heat exchanger
2.
Plate
heat exchangers
3.
Plate
and shell heat exchanger
4.
Adiabatic
wheel heat exchanger
5.
Plate
fin heat exchanger
6.
Pillow
plate heat exchanger
7.
Fluid
heat exchangers
8.
Waste
heat recovery units. Dynamic scraped surface heat exchanger
9.
Phase-change
heat exchangers
10.
Direct
contact heat exchangers
11.
Micro-channel
heat exchangers
Heat exchangers are
commonly used for cooling of hot gasses and liquids, especially in industrial
and manufacturing processes.
They can also be used to
generate heat; for example, an Exhaust Gas Heat Exchanger can use the heat from
exhaust gasses to heat up a water circuit, which can then be used around a
building.
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