cfd analysis of solar flat plate collector

Upload: dimuthu-prasad-wijethunge

Post on 14-Apr-2018

225 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    1/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    337

    CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate CollectorProf. P.W.Ingle1, Dr. A. A. Pawar2, Prof. B. D. Deshmukh3, Prof. K. C. Bhosale4

    1Assistant Professor Mechanical Engineering Department, S.R.E.S. College of Engineering, Kopargaon, Maharashtra,2Professor Mechanical Engineering Department, RSCOE, Thathwade, Pune,

    3,4Assistant Professor Mechanical Engineering Department, S.R.E.S. College of Engineering, Kopargaon, Maharashtra

    Abstract - This thesis attempts to present numericalsimulation of solar collector developed exclusively for grape

    drying. Solar drying of grapes is much feasible technically and

    economically. There has been a remarkable achievement in

    solar drying of grapes due to sustained research and

    development associated with the adoption of advanced

    technologies.

    Simulation is an important tool for design and operation

    control. For the designer of a drying system, simulation makes

    it possible to find the optimum design and operating

    parameters. For the designer of the control system, simulation

    provides a means to device control strategies and to analyze

    the effects of disturbances.

    In the present thesis the computational fluid dynamics

    (CFD) tool has been used to simulate the solar collector for

    better understanding the heat transfer capability. 3D model of

    the collector involving air inlet, wavy structured absorber

    plate,glass cover plate, and pebble block is modeled by

    ANSYS Workbench and the unstructured grid was created in

    ANSYS ICEM. The results were obtained by using ANSYS

    FLUENT software.

    The objective of this work is to compare theoretically and

    experimentally work done with the work done by usingcomputational fluid dynamics (CFD) tool with respect to flow

    and temperature distribution inside the solar collector. The

    outlet temperature of air is compared with experimental

    results and there is a good agreement in between them

    KeywordsSolar Collector, Drying, Temperature ANSYS,

    CFD

    I. INTRODUCTIONSolar energy is the most considerable energy source in

    the world. Sun, which is 1.495x1011 (m) far from the earth

    and has a diameter of 1.39x109 (m), would emit

    approximately 1353 (W/m2) on to a surface perpendicular

    to rays, if there was no atmospheric layer. The worldreceives 170 trillion (KW) solar energy and 30% of this

    energy is reflected back to the space, 47% is transformed to

    low temperature heat energy, 23% is used for

    evaporation/rainfall cycle in the Biosphere and less than

    0.5% is used in the kinetic energy of the wind, waves and

    photosynthesis of plants.

    Solar energy systems consist of many parts. The most

    important part of these systems is the solar collector where

    the heat transfer from sun to absorber and absorber to fluid

    occurs. In order to affect the performance of these systems,

    generally modifications on solar collectors are performed.

    With the rapid development in civilization, man has

    increasingly become dependent on natural resources to

    satisfy his needs. Drying fruits and vegetables such asgrapes, pepper, pawpaw, etc is one of those indispensable

    processes that require natural resources in the form of fuels.

    Solar dryer is fast becoming a preferred method of drying

    fruits, food grains considering the potential of saving

    significant amounts of conventional fuel. The major factor

    that limits the solar energy for drying application is that it

    is a cyclic time dependent energy source. Therefore, solar

    systems require energy storage to provide energy during

    the night and overcast periods. In addition, one of the major

    requirements in using solar energy for drying application is

    the development of a suitable drying unit, which should be

    fast and energy efficient[1].

    Solar energy collectors are special kind of heatexchangers that transform solar radiation energy to internal

    energy of the transport medium. The major component of

    any solar system is the solar collector. Of all the solar

    thermal collectors, the flat plate collectors though produce

    lower temperatures, have the advantage of being simpler in

    design, having lower maintenance and lower cost. To

    obtain maximum amount of solar energy of minimum cost

    the flat plate solar air heaters with thermal storage have

    been developed. Solar air heater is type of solar collector

    which is extensively used in many applications such as

    residential, industrial and agricultural fields.[2]

    Solar collectors are the key component of active solar-

    heating systems. They gather the sun's energy, transform its

    radiation into heat, then transfer that heat to a fluid (usually

    water or air). The solar thermal energy can be used in solar

    water-heating systems, solar pool heaters, and solar space-

    heating systems.

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    2/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    338

    A. Flat-plate collectors

    Flat-plate collectors are the most common solar collectorfor solar water-heating systems in homes and solar space

    heating. A typical flat-plate collector is an insulated metal

    box with a glass or plastic cover (called the glazing) and a

    dark-colored absorber plate. These collectors heat liquid or

    air at temperatures less than 80C.

    The objective of present study is to perform CFD

    simulation of flat plate collector with air flow. The CFD

    model was validated with experimental results. Based on

    the results of the experiments CFD analysis of air on solar

    flat plate collector is carried out. There are certain

    limitations for experimental results thus data at each and

    every point cannot be obtained, hence CFD is the tool

    which handles complex situations where experimental isnot applicable because of limitations and cost effectiveness

    problem. The overall aim of this work is to understand the

    flow and temperature distribution of air through solar flat

    plate collector[3].

    II. PROBLEM STATEMENTThe objective of present study is to perform CFD

    simulation for solar air collector. The results obtained by

    CFD simulation are been validated with experimental

    results.The experimental conditions taken for solar air

    collector, the same has been used for CFD simulation. The

    overall aim of this work is to understand the flow behavior

    and temperature distribution of air inside the solar collectorand compare the outlet temperature of air with

    experimental results.The 3D model consisting of the solar air collector

    involving air inlet, wavy structured absorber plate , glass

    cover plate, and pebble block is model by ANSYS

    Workbench and the unstructured grid was created in

    ANSYS ICEM. The results were obtained by using

    ANSYS FLUENT software

    The overall dimension for solar air collector is

    2000X1000X130 mm3 with 4 mm thick glass plate which is

    placed at around 126 mm from the top side of the collector.

    The wavy structured absorber plate of 2000 mm length,

    1000 mm wide and 2 mm in thickness. Inlet of solar aircollector is of circular cross section with diameter of 70

    mm. There are two outlets to the solar collector with

    circular cross section having diameter 60 mm.

    Fig.1 Isometric view of Solar flat plate collectorIII. NUMERICAL SIMULATION BY SOFTWARE

    Computational system dynamics is the analysis of the

    systems involving fluid flow, heat transfer and associated

    phenomenon such as chemical reactions by means of

    computer-based simulation. The technique is very powerful

    and spans a wide range of industrial and non-industrial

    applications areas. Some examples are: aerodynamics of

    aircrafts and vehicles, hydrodynamics of ships, combustion,

    turbo machinery, electrical and electronic engineering,chemical process engineering, external and internal

    environment of buildings, marine engineering,

    environmental engineering, hydrology and oceanography,

    metrology, biomedical engineering etc. from the 1960s

    onwards, the aerospace industry has integrated CFD

    technique into design, R & D and manufacture of aircrafts

    and jet engines. More recently the methods have been

    applied to the design of internal combustion engines,

    combustion chambers of gas turbines and furnaces.

    Furthermore, motor manufacturers now routinely predict

    drag forces, under bonnet airflow and the in-car

    environment with CFD. Increasingly CFD is becoming a

    vital component in the design of industrial products andprocesses.

    The ultimate aim of development in the CFD field is to

    provide a capability comparable to other CAE (Computer-

    Aided Engineering) tools such as stress analysis codes.

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    3/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    339

    The main reason why CFD has lagged behind is the

    tremendous complexity of the underlying behavior, whichprecludes a description of the fluid flows this is at the same

    time economical and sufficiently complete. The availability

    of affordable high performance computing hardware and

    the introduction of user friendly interference have led to a

    recent upsurge of interest and CFD is poised to make an

    entry into the wider industrial community in the 1990s.

    Clearly the investment costs of a CFD capability are not

    small, but the total expense is not normally as great as that

    of a high quality experimental facility. Moreover, there are

    several unique advantages of CFD over experimental-based

    approaches to fluid systems design.

    1. Substantial reduction of lead times and costs of new

    design.2. Ability to study systems where controlled experimental

    are difficult or impossible to perform. (e.g. very large

    systems)

    3. Ability to study systems under hazardous conditions at

    and beyond their normal performance limits. (e.g. safety

    studies and accident scenarios)

    4. Practically unlimited level of detail of results.

    In contrast CFD codes can produce extremely large

    volumes of results at virtually no added expense and it is

    very cheap to perform parametric studies, for instance to

    optimize equipment performance[4].

    A. Basics in CFD

    CFD codes are structured around the numerical

    algorithms that can tackle fluid flow problems. In order to

    provide easy asses to their solving power all commercial

    CFD packages include sophisticated user interfaces to input

    problem parameters and to examine the results. Hence all

    code contains three main elements:

    1. Pre-processor

    2. Solver

    3. Post-processor

    B. Numerical Modeling of solar air collector

    The procedure adopted to simulate the solar air collector

    by CFD tool is as follows:

    a.The 3D model is been modeled by using ANSYSWORKBENCH software as shown in Fig.2

    b.After creation of 3D model, the unstructured grid isbeen created by using ANSYS ICEM software as

    shown in fig 3 and fig.4

    c.The unstructured grid created consist around 1.5 croreelements.

    d.The unstructured grid which is created then importedin ANSYS FLUENT software and the experimentalconditions are used while simulating the solar air

    collector.

    e.The model was defined by using 3D segregated solverwith steady condition, energy equation, and K-epsilon

    of viscous model.

    f. The fluid chosen to simulate solar collector is air. Theair properties used in this simulation is shown in table

    no.1

    g.The boundary conditions used in this simulation areshown in table no.2 and 3.

    h.After setting all boundary conditions in fluentsoftware, to solve the numerical equations the

    initialization by inlet is to be done.i. To visualize the residuals of iterations versesconvergence limit, the residual monitor is set to be in

    ON state condition.

    j. To get the final results the numbers of iterations areset around 10000. The results for these simulations

    were converged at around 4000 to 6000 iterations.

    k.As the number of elements are more to get theconverged results the time taken for these simulations

    will be more with single processor.

    l. Finally after getting the proper converged results theair flow distribution and heat transfer inside the solar

    air collector is been plotted in the form of Contour

    plots.

    m.The outlet temperature is been calculated fromANSYS FLUENT after getting converged results and

    been compared with the experimental results.

    Fig.2. 3D model of solar air collector visualizing the absorber plate

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    4/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    340

    Fig.3 3D mesh of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    Fig. 4 Meshing by using ANSYS fLUENT

    TABLE 1.

    PROPERTIES OF AIR

    Property Value

    Mass flow rate of air 0.0105 Kg/sec

    Density 1.165 kg/m3

    Thermal Conductivity 100 W/m K

    Specific Heat 1005 J/kg K

    TABLE 2

    PROPERTIES OF PEBBLE BLOCK

    Property Value

    Density 1350 Kg/m3

    Thermal Conductivity 100 W/m K

    Specific Heat 300-600 J/kg K

    TABLE 3

    PROPERTIES OF GLASS

    Property Value

    Density 1000 Kg/m3

    Thermal Conductivity 1.75 W/m K

    Specific Heat 910 J/kg K

    C. Assumptions considered for simulation

    1. Air is used as working fluid, it is compressible

    fluid.

    2. Problem is considered 3D and steady state.

    3. Surface considered in geometry are smooth air

    flow over it is frictionless.

    4. Ambient temperature is considered constant.

    5. Flow is assumed to be turbulent.

    6. Turbulence specification method of turbulent

    intensity and viscosity ratio with 5 % and 10respectively. By default these values are can be

    taken 3 % and 3 respectively or calculated as per

    model. Here it is been assumed that turbulence will

    be more so approximately value has been taken by

    doing trial and error for convergence of model

    results[5].

    IV. RESULT AND DISCUSSIONThe results obtained from the CFD analysis of solar flat

    plate collector are presented in this section. The simulation

    is carried out for different times of the day i.e.9 am to 5

    pm. Then the results obtained by this simulation compared

    with the experimental results as shown in fig 4. The curvesare plotted to indicate experimental and simulated outlet

    temperatures versus time. From fig 4 it seems that the

    difference between experimental and simulated outlet

    temperature for different times is almost 5C.

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    5/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    341

    TABLE 4

    COMPARISON OF EXPERIMENTAL AND CFD RESULTSTimeHrs

    SolarIntensity

    (W/m2)

    Ambienttemperature

    (0C)

    Collectortemperature

    obtained by

    CFD(0C)

    Collectortemperature

    (0C)

    9 am 621.7 32.5 60.87 55.7

    10

    am

    750.5 34.7 73.75 60.5

    11

    am

    879.5 37 85.34 67.4

    12 909 38.9 93.38 76.5

    1 pm 948 38.5 96.10 78.1

    2 pm 909.5 41.1 93.40 75.2

    3 pm 790 40 84.84 68.8

    4 pm 597.5 35 68.14 60.3

    5 pm 357 33 43.06 42

    Graph 1.Comparison of CFD and experimental results for day1

    Also the temperature distribution and flow distribution

    are obtained by CFD simulation. The contour plots

    obtained for temperature distribution and velocity

    distribution in streamlines are shown in fig 5(a), 5(b), 5(c),

    5(d).

    Fig.5(a)Streamlines for temperature distribution

    Fig.5(b) Streamlines for temperature distribution at 9 am of the day

    Fig.5(c) Streamlines for velocity distribution

  • 7/27/2019 CFD Analysis of Solar Flat Plate Collector

    6/6

    International Journal of Emerging Technology and Advanced Engineering

    Website: www.ijetae.com (ISSN 2250-2459,ISO 9001:2008 Certified Journal, Volume 3, Issue 4, April 2013)

    342

    Fig.5(d) Streamlines for velocity distribution at time 9am of day

    V.CONCLUSIONThere is a good agreement between the experimental and

    simulated results for outlet air temperatures. Although there

    are some small discrepancies due to some experimental

    imperfectness matters, we still have a good confidence in

    the CFD simulation program that can be used in the future

    for more complex solar collector problem.

    It is found from the CFD analysis that the flow of air in

    the solar flat plate collector is not properly distributed. In

    order to overcome this issue we can introduce baffles at the

    inlet of collector which improves the efficiency of of solar

    flat plate collector.

    REFERENCES

    [1] D.R.Pangavhane, R.L.Sawhney, Review of research &development work on solar dryers for grape drying, energy

    conversation and management 43(2002) 45-61

    [2] Decho Thueaktphum, Kittitep Fuenkajorn, A rock fills based solarthermal energy storage for housing, SienceAsia 36(1010) 237-243

    [3] Mohamed Selmi, Mohammed J. Al-Khawaja and AbdulhamidMarafia, Validation of CFD simulation forflat plate solar energycollector,Renewable Energy 33 (2008) 383387 .

    [4] Kumaresan G, Iniyan S and Velraj R, Experimental and CFDanalysis of a solar based cooking unit, Institute for Energy Studies,

    CEG Anna University, Chennai - 600025, India.

    [5] Fabio Struckmann, Analysis of a Flat-plate Solar Collector, 2008MVK160Heat and Mass Transport,May 08, 2008, Lund, Sweden

    [6] . K. Vasudeva Karanth, Manjunath M. S. and N. Yagnesh Sharma,Numerical Simulation of a Solar Flat Plate Collector using Discrete

    Transfer Radiation Model (DTRM) A CFD Approach,Proceedings of the World Congress on Engineering 2011 VolIII,WCE 2011, July 6 - 8, 2011, London, U.K.

    [7] David Luna, Yves Jannot, Jean-Pierre Nadeau, An oriented-designsimplified model for the efficiency of a flat plate solar air collector,

    Applied thermal engineering 30 (2010) 2808-2814

    [8] G. D. Rai, Solar Energy Utilization, Khanna Publishers, page no.156- 199