The rate of absorption of ammonia from air by water was studied in a 1 -foot-diameter tower packed with darbon Raschlg rings. The effect of gas rate, liquor rate, temperature, size of rings, degree of humidification of inlet gas, and reproducibility of a given tower filling were investigated. Results are expressed as over-all transfer coefficients. Individual film coefficients have also been cal-
Experimental results were obtained for the case of in-line flow of mercury through an unbaffled bundle of circular rods, and they were compared with theoretical predictions. The bundle consisted of 13 one-half-in-dia rods arranged in an equilateral triangular pattern, the pitch:diameter ratio being 1.750. Measurements were taken only on the central rod. Six different rods were tested. All rods in the bundle were electrically heated to provide equal and uniform heat fluxes throughout the bundle. The rods were of the Calrod type. The test rods had copper sheaths with fine thermocouples imbedded below the surface for measuring surface temperatures. Some rods were plated with a layer of nickel, followed by a very thin layer of copper, to provide “wetting” conditions, while others were chromeplated to provide “nonwetting” conditions. Heat-transfer coefficients were obtained under the following conditions: (a) Prandtl number, 0.02; (b) Reynolds number range, 7500 to 200,000; (c) Peclet number range, 150 to 4000; (d) “Wetting” versus “nonwetting”; (e) Both transition and fully established flow; (f) Variation of Lf/De ratio from 4 to 46. The precision of the results is estimated to be within 2 to 3 percent. An interesting finding, consistent with earlier predictions, was that the Nusselt number, under fully established turbulent-flow conditions, remained essentially constant, at the lower end of the turbulent flow regime, until a Reynolds number of about 40,000 was reached.
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