Energy, Vol.140, 506-519, 2017
Design, fabrication and performance evaluation of a compact regenerative evaporative cooler: Towards low energy cooling for buildings
The urges of reducing energy use and carbon footprint in buildings have prompted the developments of regenerative evaporative coolers (RECs). However, the physical dimensions of RECs have to be designed enormous in order to deliver a large amount of supply airflow rate and cooling capacity. To tackle the issue, this paper develops a large-scale counter-flow REC with compact heat exchanger through dedicated numerical modelling, optimal design, fabrication and experimentation. Using modified epsilon-NTU method, a finite element model is established in Engineering Equation Solver environment to optimise the cooler's geometric and operating parameters. Based on modelling predictions, the cooler's experimental prototype was optimally designed and constructed to evaluate operating performance. The experiment results show that the cooler's attained wet-bulb effectiveness ranges from 0.96 to 1.07, the cooling capacity and energy efficiency ratio from 3.9 to 8.5 kW and 10.6 to 19.7 respectively. It can provide sub-wet bulb cooling while operating at high intake channel air velocities of 3.04-3.60 m/s. The superior performance of proposed cooler is disclosed by comparing with different RECs under similar operating conditions. Both the cooler's cooling capacity per unit of volume and per unit of airflow rate are found to be 62-108% and 21.6% higher respectively. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Indirect evaporative cooling;Dew point cooling;Heat and mass exchanger;Experimental and numerical investigations