4.7 Article

Buoyancy-driven melting and solidification heat transfer analysis in encapsulated phase change materials

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2020.120525

Keywords

Latent heat storage; Melting; Solidification; Phase change material; Cylindrical encapsulation; Non-dimensional analysis; Heat transfer correlations; Nusselt number; Stefan number; Rayleigh number; Fourier number

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The study focuses on the application of encapsulated phase change materials in thermal energy storage, with emphasis on the selection of PCM and dynamic heat transfer characteristics for energy density. The research provides a general understanding of transient heat transfer in phase change media and engineering tools for designing energy storage units.
Controlled melting and solidification in encapsulated phase change materials (PCMs) is of practical interest, for example, in latent heat storage applications. The choice of PCMs and the dynamic heat transfer characteristics during phase change - affecting the transient charging/discharging rates - are decisive for the energy and power density of the heat storage option. For example, highly conductive, high melting point (above 700K) metal alloys have a potential advantage as a high energy and power density latent heat storage, compared to the widely used low conducting molten salt and paraffin wax. This advantage depends on the relative dominance of heat transfer modes that vary depending on the thermal properties of the PCM, shape of the encapsulation, and the load conditions, and must be quantified to warrant a fair comparison. We developed a 2D transient phase change model of encapsulated PCMs, accounting for phase change over a temperature range, volumetric expansion and contraction, and multimode heat transfer within the encapsulated PCM. The enthalpy-porosity method was used to model the phase change in a fixed grid. Validation was performed with literature data of low and high-conductivity PCM experiments (RT27 and lead). Two types of PCMs were subsequently investigated in detail: a highconducting binary-eutectic alloy Al-12.6Si and a low-conducting commercially available RT27 paraffin wax (Rubitherm GmbH). The model was used to compare the phase change process and the strength of the various modes of heat transfer in the PCM filled cylindrical stainless-steel encapsulations in horizontal and vertical orientation with constant temperature walls. A full parameter study and non-dimensional analysis are presented for different PCMs. The results quantified the influence of boundary conditions, thermophysical properties and geometrical parameters on the phase change process and the contribution of the natural convection within the encapsulation. The non-dimensional analysis linked the melt fraction and heat transfer rates to a combination of the Fourier, Stefan, Rayleigh and Nusselt numbers. Fitting of the exponents of non-dimensional number groups to the heat transfer calculations allowed to provide general correlations for melting time, melt fraction, heat transfer rates, and characteristics of melting. Such correlations provide general understanding of the transient heat transfer in phase change media and provide engineering tools for designing, for example, a latent heat storage unit. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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