Topic
Latent heat
About: Latent heat is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 13503 publications have been published within this topic receiving 302811 citations.
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02 Feb 2001
TL;DR: In this article, a water distillation system is described, where a heat storage arrangement with a heat generating source for storing heat energy is used to heat a fluid medium flowing through it, and a heat exchange arrangement receives the hot fluid medium and transfer heat to a stream of vapour flowing under pressure from each flashing stage.
Abstract: Provided is a water distillation system (10) for distilling sea or brackish water. The system has a feed water arrangement (14 and 37) for supplying feed water from a feed water source (FEED) to one or more flashing stages (28). Each flashing stage has a water flash evaporator (29) for vaporising at least a part of the feed water therein, and a condenser (35) for receiving the vapour and to convert at least a part of the vapour into distilled water. A heat storage arrangement (20) provided with a heat generating source for storing heat energy is used to heat a fluid medium flowing through it. A heat exchange arrangement (24) receives the hot fluid medium and transfer heat to a stream of vapour flowing under pressure from each flashing stage. The vapour leaving the heat exchange arrangement being at a raised temperature is arranged to be condensed into water at the condenser and to transfer some of its latent heat to the evaporator.
81 citations
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TL;DR: To incorporate energy exchanges by shortwave and longwave irradiation, latent heat, conduction, and convection as well as the heat storage in the massive stem, the plant was subdivided into over 100 internal and external regions in the model and the average surface temperature was predicted within 1 C of the measured temperature for both winter and summer days.
Abstract: The influences of various diurnal stomatal opening patterns, spines, and ribs on the stem surface temperature and water economy of a CAM succulent, the barrel cactus Ferocactus acanthodes, were examined using an energy budget model. To incorporate energy exchanges by shortwave and longwave irradiation, latent heat, conduction, and convection as well as the heat storage in the massive stem, the plant was subdivided into over 100 internal and external regions in the model. This enabled the average surface temperature to be predicted within 1 C of the measured temperature for both winter and summer days.Reducing the stem water vapor conductance from the values observed in the field to zero caused the average daily stem surface temperature to increase only 0.7 C for a winter day and 0.3 C for a summer day. Thus, latent heat loss does not substantially reduce stem temperature. Although the surface temperatures averaged 18 C warmer for the summer day than for the winter day for a plant 41 cm tall, the temperature dependence of stomatal opening caused the simulated nighttime water loss rates to be about the same for the 2 days.Spines moderated the amplitude of the diurnal temperature changes of the stem surface, since the daily variation was 17 C for the winter day and 25 C for the summer day with spines compared with 23 C and 41 C, respectively, in their simulated absence. Ribs reduced the daytime temperature rise by providing 54% more area for convective heat loss than for a smooth circumscribing surface. In a simulation where both spines and ribs were eliminated, the daytime average surface temperature rose by 5 C.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) was used to simulate conjugate convective heat transfer with phase change in the solid walls, fins and PCM region.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, long-term measurements of carbon dioxide flux and the latent and sensible heat fluxes were performed using the eddy covariance (EC) method in Beijing, China over a 4-yr period in 2006-2009.
Abstract: . Long-term measurements of carbon dioxide flux (Fc) and the latent and sensible heat fluxes were performed using the eddy covariance (EC) method in Beijing, China over a 4-yr period in 2006–2009. The EC setup was installed at a height of 47 m on the Beijing 325-m meteorological tower in the northwest part of the city. Latent heat flux dominated the energy exchange between the urban surface and the atmosphere in summer, while sensible heat flux was the main component in the spring. Winter and autumn were two transition periods of the turbulent fluxes. The source area of Fc was highly heterogeneous, which consisted of buildings, parks, and highways. It was of interest to study of the temporal and spatial variability of Fc in this urban environment of a developing country. Both on diurnal and monthly scale, the urban surface acted as a net source for CO2 and downward fluxes were only occasionally observed. The diurnal pattern of Fc showed dependence on traffic and the typical two peak traffic patterns appeared in the diurnal cycle. Also Fc was higher on weekdays than on weekends due to the higher traffic volumes on weekdays. On seasonal scale, Fc was generally higher in winter than during other seasons likely due to domestic heating during colder months. Total annual average CO2 emissions from the neighborhood of the tower were estimated to be 4.90 kg C m−2 yr−1 over the 4-yr period. Total vehicle population was the most important factor controlling the inter-annual variability of Fc in this urban area.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the oscillation characteristics and the heat transfer performance of a closed-loop pulsating heat pipe (PHP) with deionized water, methanol, ethanol and acetone.
81 citations