Your post is for a counterflow chiller, right ajdelange?
Yes, but the same model should serve for one in which wort and coolant flow in the same direction (not that one would want to operate a chiller that way).
Your post is for a counterflow chiller, right ajdelange?
Quite true.Yes, but the same model should serve for one in which wort and coolant flow in the same direction (not that one would want to operate a chiller that way).
It's still interesting, nonetheless that the heat flow into the chiller under these assumptions seems to just depend on the total rate of chiller water flow. Even though the parallel tubes start out by absorbing a lot more heat, the water in them heats up very quickly because the water flow through them is slow, thus lowering the temperature difference quickly.
But isn't lowering the temperature difference the point of cooling?
The smaller the difference is, the more heat has been absorbed by the water.
The object is to remove as much heat as possible quickly. Once the water in the chiller heats up so that there is not much temp. difference wrt the wort, there's not much heat energy being absorbed by the chiller water. Ideally, you'd want to have such a fast flow rate that the chiller water would hardly heat up at all, maintaining a very large temperature difference (and heat transfer) between the wort and the chiller water. At the other extreme, assume you only have a trickle of water through the chiller - the water heats up quickly and removes all the heat it is capable of, but then there is no more heat removed until more cool water comes through.
Ye, the point isn't to maximize the heat transferred to each unit of cooling water, but to maximize the heat transferred from the wort.
I kinda lost that somewhere while reading the thread.
Do you have any thoughts on the rest of my post above?
One way to look at this is to use the Log Mean Temperature Difference equation, or LMTD:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_mean_temperature_difference
Ooh, I remember that badboy from a course on interior climate about a year ago. (which nosed a bit on heat exchangers)
But I believe we more or less wrote the same, although you had a good explanation as to why it is that way
"You could blast a ridiculous amount of water through the cooler with only a slight difference in temperature and still cool it more than a lower flow with a higher temperature difference."
To clarify, the temperature difference referred to is between water going in and out of cooler. Not the one between coolant and wort.
More specifically what I was wondering was if you had any thoughts about making those measurements mentioned above and comparing the results?
I started to try and elaborate here but I lost track, not sure what you'd get out of comparing that in the end. But jaginger seemed to like the idea.
but couldn't you basically do the same just by measuring the temperature of a known quantity of wort or water and see how fast the temperature drops?