Case Studies in Thermal Engineering (Nov 2024)
Thermal resistance capacity model for transient simulation of capillary-box heat exchangers
Abstract
In this paper, a novel simplified hybrid model is developed to simulate the transient thermal behaviors of capillary-box heat exchangers (CBHEs) buried in the seabed, serving as the front-end heat exchangers in seawater source heat pump system (SWHPs). The thermal resistance and capacity (TRC) approach is applied for derivation of the governing equations inside and outside the heat exchangers. Also, an analytical solution is integrated to model heat transfer in the seabed base. The effects of seawater seepage on the thermal performance of CBHEs are taken into account in the present model. The state-space representation is used to solve the governing equations. The model is verified against experimental data, achieving very good agreement with the mean bias error (MBE) of 7.2 %. A comparison with a three-dimensional computational fluid dynamic (CFD) model indicates that the TRC model's maximum relative error and MBE are 0.7 % and 2.0 % lower than those of the CFD model. Additionally, the ratio of the time required by the CFD and TRC models for a 31-day run was 138. These results demonstrate that the TRC model is sufficiently accurate and fast in the thermal simulation of CBHEs. Furthermore, the thermal properties of CBHEs are examined using the present model. The model in this study provides practical implications for heat transfer analysis and design improvement of CBHEs utilized in SWHPs.