Energy Conversion and Management, Vol.48, No.4, 1266-1272, 2007
Theoretical and experimental investigation of wickless heat pipes flat plate solar collector with cross flow heat exchanger
In this work, a wickless heat pipes flat plate solar collector with a cross flow beat exchanger was investigated theoretically and experimentally under the meteorological conditions of Cairo, Egypt. The author's earlier simulation program of wickless heat pipes flat plate solar water heaters was modified to be valid for the present type of wickless heat pipes solar collector by including the solution of the dimensionless governing equations of the present analysis. For verifying the modified simulation program, a wickless heat pipes flat plate solar collector with a cross flow heat exchanger was designed, constructed, and tested at different meteorological conditions and operating parameters. These parameters include different cooling water mass flow rates and different inlet cooling water temperatures. The comparison between the experimental results and their corresponding simulated ones showed considerable agreement. Under different climatic conditions, the experimental and theoretical results showed that the optimal mass flow rate is very close to the ASHRAE standard mass flow rate for testing conventional flat plate solar collectors. Also, the experimental and theoretical results indicated that the number of wickless heat pipes has a significant effect on the collector efficiency. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:theoretical analysis;experimental investigation;wickless heat pipe;two phase closed thermosyphon;flat plate solar collector;cross flow heat exchanger