DaoBrabo
Mechanical
- Apr 8, 2015
- 6
Hey guys.
I've been checking some manufacturer's website to learn more about solar collectors, and the evacuated tube collectors with heat pipes really grabbed my attention. It says there that heat pipes have water inside them vaporizing at about 30ºC. If that's true, then how come the potable water that exchanges heat in the heat pipe condenser gets heated way above that temperature? I mean, I don't the specs of the collector, but this is what I'm wondering:
If you design a heat pipe with a certain internal pressure associated to it, that's going to define the saturation temperature of the work fluid (water) in there. Can one consider that the inside pressure will increase considerably when the radiation heats up the pipe and therefore also increase the saturation temperature? It's important to remember the heat pipe is evacuated to a certain point.
On another perspective, I'm wondering if the fact that you only have a small amount of water mass in there makes it possible for the heat source to bring the vapor to a higher temperature and therefore heat the potable water to also higher temperatures, but I don't think that's true, since the thermal gradient along the longitudinal direction is negligible (we're dealing with a phase change device)and the vapor moves way too fast.
I hope someone can help me see this whole scenario correctly. Thanks a lot!!
I've been checking some manufacturer's website to learn more about solar collectors, and the evacuated tube collectors with heat pipes really grabbed my attention. It says there that heat pipes have water inside them vaporizing at about 30ºC. If that's true, then how come the potable water that exchanges heat in the heat pipe condenser gets heated way above that temperature? I mean, I don't the specs of the collector, but this is what I'm wondering:
If you design a heat pipe with a certain internal pressure associated to it, that's going to define the saturation temperature of the work fluid (water) in there. Can one consider that the inside pressure will increase considerably when the radiation heats up the pipe and therefore also increase the saturation temperature? It's important to remember the heat pipe is evacuated to a certain point.
On another perspective, I'm wondering if the fact that you only have a small amount of water mass in there makes it possible for the heat source to bring the vapor to a higher temperature and therefore heat the potable water to also higher temperatures, but I don't think that's true, since the thermal gradient along the longitudinal direction is negligible (we're dealing with a phase change device)and the vapor moves way too fast.
I hope someone can help me see this whole scenario correctly. Thanks a lot!!