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Page Title: Parallel and Counter-Flow Designs
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HEAT EXCHANGERS
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Thermodynamics Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow Volume 2 of 3
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Figure 9    Fluid Flow Direction

Heat Transfer HEAT EXCHANGERS Single-phase  heat  exchangers  are  usually  of  the  tube-and-shell  type;  that  is,  the  exchanger consists  of  a  set  of  tubes  in  a  container  called  a  shell  (Figure  8).    At  the  ends  of  the  heat exchanger, the tube-side fluid is separated from the shell-side fluid by a tube sheet.   The design of two-phase exchangers is essentially the same as that of single-phase exchangers. Figure 8    Typical Tube and Shell Heat Exchanger Parallel and Counter-Flow Designs Although ordinary heat exchangers may be extremely different in design and construction and may be of the single- or two-phase type, their modes of operation and effectiveness are largely determined by the direction of the fluid flow within the exchanger. The  most  common  arrangements  for  flow  paths  within  a  heat  exchanger  are  counter-flow  and parallel flow.   A counter-flow heat exchanger is one in which the direction of the flow of one of the working fluids is opposite to the direction to the flow of the other fluid.  In a parallel flow exchanger, both fluids in the heat exchanger flow in the same direction. Figure 9 represents the directions of fluid flow in the parallel and counter-flow exchangers. Under comparable conditions, more heat is transferred in a counter-flow arrangement than in a parallel flow heat exchanger. Rev. 0 Page 31 HT-02

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