GutsyBrewing
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- Apr 6, 2014
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I've seen the question of copper vs. SS wort chiller debated at length. The main argument I hear is that copper conducts heat 25x better than SS so it must cool faster. At the same time I have read many a post of people saying the SS chills just fine. So I began to wonder...what's the deal?
While copper is a better conductor, there is more at play in the heat transfer. There are actually three modes of heat transfer happening.
1. Convection from cooling water to inside wall of metal tube
2. Conduction through the tube
3. Convection from outside wall of tube to the wort
It turns out that the limiting mode is #3, convection from the tube to wort. This means that all that "extra" heat transfer that copper provides is not doing anything. Imagine you have a six lane highway that at one point only has one lane open. It doesn't matter how fast you COULD go with all lanes open, it only matters how fast the single lane is going.
I modeled the system and found that if you have no re-circulation in the wort (i.e. natural convection), the resistance to heat transfer in mode #2 is much lower than mode #3 (500 times for copper, 20 times for SS). In other words, that six-lane highway is actually more like a 500 lane highway that gets reduced to a single lane. With re-circulation, the factors drop to more like 200 for copper and 8 for SS. So having some kind of motion in the wort (whirlpool or re-circulation) is a huge benefit in the overall heat transfer.
The take away here is:
"Copper and SS chillers have nearly identical heat transfer capabilities because the heat transfer is NOT limited by conduction through the tube"
PS: I can show more details in a follow-up post for all those nerds out there
While copper is a better conductor, there is more at play in the heat transfer. There are actually three modes of heat transfer happening.
1. Convection from cooling water to inside wall of metal tube
2. Conduction through the tube
3. Convection from outside wall of tube to the wort
It turns out that the limiting mode is #3, convection from the tube to wort. This means that all that "extra" heat transfer that copper provides is not doing anything. Imagine you have a six lane highway that at one point only has one lane open. It doesn't matter how fast you COULD go with all lanes open, it only matters how fast the single lane is going.
I modeled the system and found that if you have no re-circulation in the wort (i.e. natural convection), the resistance to heat transfer in mode #2 is much lower than mode #3 (500 times for copper, 20 times for SS). In other words, that six-lane highway is actually more like a 500 lane highway that gets reduced to a single lane. With re-circulation, the factors drop to more like 200 for copper and 8 for SS. So having some kind of motion in the wort (whirlpool or re-circulation) is a huge benefit in the overall heat transfer.
The take away here is:
"Copper and SS chillers have nearly identical heat transfer capabilities because the heat transfer is NOT limited by conduction through the tube"
PS: I can show more details in a follow-up post for all those nerds out there