Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface

To efficiently harvest environmental micro-energy from shallow soil, simulated analysis, theoretical arithmetic and experimental verification are performed to explore the spatiotemporal rules of heat transfer on a soil/finned tube interface. Simulations are carried out for 36 types of different work...

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Main Authors: Yongsheng Huang, Wenbin Li, Daochun Xu, Yafeng Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-03-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/5/1159
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spelling doaj-cf18bf6b1c1c455981fe21e0d6874fbd2020-11-24T22:16:02ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202019-03-01195115910.3390/s19051159s19051159Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube InterfaceYongsheng Huang0Wenbin Li1Daochun Xu2Yafeng Wu3Key Lab of State Forestry Administration on Forestry Equipment and Automation, School of Technology, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, ChinaKey Lab of State Forestry Administration on Forestry Equipment and Automation, School of Technology, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, ChinaKey Lab of State Forestry Administration on Forestry Equipment and Automation, School of Technology, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, ChinaKey Lab of State Forestry Administration on Forestry Equipment and Automation, School of Technology, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, ChinaTo efficiently harvest environmental micro-energy from shallow soil, simulated analysis, theoretical arithmetic and experimental verification are performed to explore the spatiotemporal rules of heat transfer on a soil/finned tube interface. Simulations are carried out for 36 types of different working conditions, and the empirical formulas for temperature and heat flux are obtained. The temperature and heat flux can be calculated using the formulas if the soil temperature, soil moisture content and finned tube initial temperature are known. The simulations also show that the highest heat flux can reach approximately 0.30 mW/mm2, and approximately 1507.96 mW of energy can be harvested through the finned tube. Theoretical arithmetic indicates that the heat transfer rate of the copper finned tube is 76.77% higher than that of the bare tube, the highest rate obtained in any study to date. Results also show that the finned tube should be placed where the soil moisture is greater than 30% to get more heat from the soil. A field experiment is carried out in the city of Harbin in Northeast China, where a thermoelectric power generation device has been installed and temperature data have been monitored for a certain time. The results are in good agreement with those obtained from the simulation analysis. The heat transfer processes and heat transfer steady state on the soil/finned tube interface are revealed in this work and are of great importance for the use of geothermal energy.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/5/1159environmental micro-energyheat transferspatiotemporalfinned tubesoil
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yongsheng Huang
Wenbin Li
Daochun Xu
Yafeng Wu
spellingShingle Yongsheng Huang
Wenbin Li
Daochun Xu
Yafeng Wu
Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
Sensors
environmental micro-energy
heat transfer
spatiotemporal
finned tube
soil
author_facet Yongsheng Huang
Wenbin Li
Daochun Xu
Yafeng Wu
author_sort Yongsheng Huang
title Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
title_short Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
title_full Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal Rule of Heat Transfer on a Soil/Finned Tube Interface
title_sort spatiotemporal rule of heat transfer on a soil/finned tube interface
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2019-03-01
description To efficiently harvest environmental micro-energy from shallow soil, simulated analysis, theoretical arithmetic and experimental verification are performed to explore the spatiotemporal rules of heat transfer on a soil/finned tube interface. Simulations are carried out for 36 types of different working conditions, and the empirical formulas for temperature and heat flux are obtained. The temperature and heat flux can be calculated using the formulas if the soil temperature, soil moisture content and finned tube initial temperature are known. The simulations also show that the highest heat flux can reach approximately 0.30 mW/mm2, and approximately 1507.96 mW of energy can be harvested through the finned tube. Theoretical arithmetic indicates that the heat transfer rate of the copper finned tube is 76.77% higher than that of the bare tube, the highest rate obtained in any study to date. Results also show that the finned tube should be placed where the soil moisture is greater than 30% to get more heat from the soil. A field experiment is carried out in the city of Harbin in Northeast China, where a thermoelectric power generation device has been installed and temperature data have been monitored for a certain time. The results are in good agreement with those obtained from the simulation analysis. The heat transfer processes and heat transfer steady state on the soil/finned tube interface are revealed in this work and are of great importance for the use of geothermal energy.
topic environmental micro-energy
heat transfer
spatiotemporal
finned tube
soil
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/19/5/1159
work_keys_str_mv AT yongshenghuang spatiotemporalruleofheattransferonasoilfinnedtubeinterface
AT wenbinli spatiotemporalruleofheattransferonasoilfinnedtubeinterface
AT daochunxu spatiotemporalruleofheattransferonasoilfinnedtubeinterface
AT yafengwu spatiotemporalruleofheattransferonasoilfinnedtubeinterface
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