hardingfv32 wrote:What is the issue with heat transfer between the aluminum (or copper) and water? How is this interface made better?
Brian
hardingfv32,
The heat transfer between the coolant boundary flow and radiator tube surface is convective, so you could improve the heat transfer rate at this interface by increasing the relative deltaT, increasing the specific heat of the coolant, increasing the thermal conductivity of the tube material, increasing the mass flow rate of the coolant, increasing the total core surface area available for heat transfer, increasing the temperature rise in the coolant across the core by making the flow more turbulent to promote mixing of the boundary flow, etc.
All other things being equal, a copper core would give better heat transfer than an aluminum core due to copper's higher thermal conductivity. While a copper core could be made more compact for the same heat rejection rate, it would also be much heavier.
One approach being used to make liquid-to-air heat exchangers lighter and more compact is to use a core made from a very dense matrix of very small diameter metal tubes with extremely thin walls. The very small tube ID ensures that most of the coolant flow contacts the tube surface, and the extremely thin tube wall gives efficient heat transfer.
http://www.mezzotech.com/applications.html
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