1. Introduction
As the core process of energy conversion and thermal management systems, condensation heat transfer has important applications in electric power, the chemical industry, aerospace, and microelectronics cooling. With the growth of global energy demand and environmental protection requirements, the development of high-efficiency condensing technology has become a key research direction to improve energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions. In recent years, the demand for the substitution of environmentally friendly refrigerants (e.g., R1234ze(E), R290, R600a, etc.) has driven in-depth research on their heat transfer characteristics, while the application of enhanced tubes (e.g., three-dimensional finned tubes, low-conductivity titanium tubes) has provided a new direction for heat transfer enhancement. Research on high-pressure vapors, environmentally friendly refrigerants, and complex fin structures has significantly advanced the development of this field.
In terms of high-pressure steam condensation, Nie et al. [
1] found experimentally that the heat transfer coefficient for the condensation of horizontal tubes under boiling conditions in the outer pool increases with mass flow rate and steam quality, but decreases with increasing pressure. Their proposed improved Akers correlation is more applicable to high-pressure scenarios (4–10 MPa) than the conventional Shah model, revealing the limitations of the existing models under high-pressure and high-flow-rate conditions. This finding provides an important basis for the optimization of passive waste heat discharge systems in nuclear power plants.
The enhancement mechanism of fin structure on condensation heat transfer has attracted much attention. Kumar et al. [
2] investigated the performance of R-134a on monolithic finned tubes with different fin heights (0.45–2.40 mm) and found that a 3.18-fold enhancement in heat transfer can be achieved with a 0.45 mm fin height, attributed to the surface-tension-driven thinning effect of the condensate film. However, the fin efficiency decreased with increasing height (99.1–95.1%), suggesting that too-tall fins can weaken performance due to liquid film retention. Similarly, Chen et al. [
3], for a new three-dimensional finned tube (C9+ tube), showed that its micro-ridge structure could disrupt liquid film continuity and still maintain its heat transfer enhancement at the submerged Reynolds number (
Rer < 1100) at moderate heat flux (40 kW/m
2), but the advantage disappeared at a high heat flux (80 kW/m
2).
However, the effect of enhanced structures on heat transfer performance presents complexity. Al-Badri et al. [
4] found that 3D finned tubes showed a significant enhancement of the condensation coefficient over standard finned tubes in single tubes, but the performance degradation was faster in bundles of tubes due to the cumulative effect of the liquid film. In falling-film evaporation experiments, three-dimensional finned tubes (e.g., Gewa-B5) may show heat transfer inhibition at higher heat fluxes due to secondary fin interference. In addition, the internal enhancement structure of the tube (e.g., spiral ribs) indirectly affects the overall performance by enhancing the convective heat transfer coefficient.
In 2011, Zhang et al. [
5] found that the condensation heat transfer coefficient of HCFC22 outside all three of their 3D ribbed tubes exceeded that of the light tube by a factor of 8.8. In 2012, Ali et al. [
6] found that the heat transfer coefficient of ethylene glycol condensing outside a columnar 3D ribbed tube could be up to 5.5 times that of a light tube. Webb et al. [
7] found that the membrane condensation heat transfer capacity of CFC11 on three 3D ribs, GEWA-SC, Turbo-C, and Tred-D, was 67%, 34%, and 17% higher than that of 2D ribs at 1024fp, respectively. In 1996, Rewert et al. [
8,
9] found that the condensation heat transfer coefficients of HCFC123 and HFC134a outside Turbo-CII and G-SC 3D ribs were up to 3 and 1.5 times that of 1024 fpm 2D ribs, respectively; the condensation heat transfer coefficient of HFC134a on Gewa C+ 3D ribbed tubes obtained by Belghazi et al. [
10] in 2002 was 30% higher than the highest value obtained by them for trapezoidal-ribbed 2D ribbed tubes with five different rib spacings. In 2006, Gstoehl et al. [
11] obtained condensation heat transfer coefficients of HFC134a outside Turbo-CSL and Gewa-C 3D ribs that were more than 50% higher than those of Turbo-Chil 2D ribs. The above results show that the single-tube membrane condensation heat transfer performance of 3D rib tubes is greatly improved compared with that of 2D rib tubes.
The influence of the submergence effect on the performance of tube bundles is complex. Mostafa et al. [
5] found through innovative experiments with a distributed liquid distributor that the submerged liquid consistently showed enhancement (maximum enhancement factor of 1.21) for two-dimensional low-finned tubes at low heat fluxes (20 kW/m
2), whereas it was effective for three-dimensional finned tubes only at
Rer < 600. Guo et al. [
6] used the homology method to accurately determine the immersion effect coefficient of six rows of new three-dimensional finned tube bundles and found that it decreased from 1.00 at
Rer = 75 to 0.78 at
Rer = 1860, and that the heat transfer coefficient was 5–25% higher than that of the traditional three-dimensional finned tubes, which verified that the optimization of finned topologies promotes liquid film discharge.
Progress has also been made in the study of the condensation characteristics of environmentally friendly refrigerants. Chen et al. [
3] compared the performance of HFO refrigerant R1233zd(e) on a light tube with that of a three-dimensional finned tube, found that the heat transfer coefficient of the finned tube reached up to 10.8 times that of the light tube, and proposed a modified model based on Nusselt’s theory (with a surface tension correction term). The low GWP (Global Warming Potential = 1) properties of this refrigerant make it an ideal replacement for R123, but its liquid film dynamics with complex finned tubes still need to be further investigated. The condensation heat transfer coefficients of R134a are higher than those of R1234ze(E) and R290 for both plain and enhanced titanium tubes, and the heat transfer enhancement ratio of enhanced tubes decreases with an increase in heat flux [
7]. Similarly, the condensation performance of R600a on monolithic finned tubes is significantly affected by fin density, with 1102 fpm finned tubes performing optimally [
8].
Notably, Ji et al. [
9] conducted condensation heat transfer experiments with 11 horizontal tubes with refrigerant R134a at a saturation temperature of 40 °C (1.01 MPa) with titanium, white copper (B10 and B30), stainless steel, and copper. The first four materials had lower thermal conductivity and enhanced tubes were used, which had integral fins and three-dimensional geometry. The experimental results show that the heat transfer coefficient of enhanced copper tubes is increased by a factor of about 1.6–2.1 compared to low-thermal-conductivity tubes with the same enhanced geometry. In addition, the average enhancement rates of the titanium, B10, B30, and stainless steel tubes were 8.48, 8.31, 8.22, and 7.52, respectively, when compared to ordinary tubes.
Although the application of low-thermal-conductivity materials (e.g., titanium and stainless steel) can adapt to corrosive environments, the difference in thermal conductivity can lead to changes in fin efficiency and temperature distribution, which in turn affects heat transfer. For example, the condensation heat transfer coefficient of aluminum–brass three-dimensional finned tubes is more than 30% higher than that of iron–copper–nickel two-dimensional finned tubes. In addition, the refrigerant types have different sensitivities to the tubes: the condensation performance of R404A is more susceptible to surface structure and thermal conductivity than that of R134a, whereas the evaporation coefficient of the R123 falling film is only 1/2–1/3 of that of R134a, which is likely to be related to the changes in wettability resulting from viscosity, and surface tension differences may be related to the change in wettability due to the difference in viscosity and surface tension [
10]. Ko et al. [
11] experimentally investigated the film condensation characteristics of R1234ze(E)/R1233zd(E) in a horizontal smooth tube (36–40 °C, subcooling 3–18 °C); the heat transfer coefficient decreased with increasing subcooling and was higher for smaller tube diameters and proposed Nu correlation formulas (±20%). After that, Ko et al. [
12] studied the film condensation characteristics of R134a, R1233zd(E), and R1234ze(E) in a horizontal smooth tube and three kinds of finned knurled enhanced tube (38 °C). The results showed that the heat transfer coefficients of the latter two in smooth tubes were about 10% lower than those of R134a, the enhanced tube E.T(C)-5 had the best performance, the number of fins had a greater effect on heat transfer than the number of knurls, and nine sets of heat transfer correlations with ±10% accuracy were established. Nagata et al. [
13] investigated the heat transfer characteristics of the low-GWP refrigerants R1234ze(E)/R1233zd(E) in horizontal copper tubes (19.12 mm), considering condensation and boiling heat transfer performance: they found that the experimental value of R1233zd(E) for condensation was 25% higher than it should have been in theory, boiling HTC matched the model, and that surface tension affects nucleate boiling. Honda et al. [
14] proposed a horizontal finned tube membrane condensation heat transfer model with ±20% error to validate a multi-fluid tube type. Yun et al. [
15] experimentally studied the condensation characteristics of R134a in a stainless steel finned tube (19/26 fpi) and found the following: a heat transfer coefficient up to 4.4/3.1 times that of a light tube at 20 °C, 19 fpi is better at Δ
T < 0.7 °C, and the Honda–Nozu model deviation is minimized.
However, the interaction between the physical properties of different refrigerants (e.g., surface tension, viscosity, latent heat) and tube characteristics (e.g., fin structure, thermal conductivity) still needs to be systematically investigated. In this paper, the condensation heat transfer characteristics of one smooth tube (ST) and two double-sided enhanced tubes (E1, E2) are investigated using the refrigerant R134a, and the tests are carried out at a saturation temperature of 40 °C. The results are summarized as follows. The refrigerant R134a flows on the outer surface of the heat transfer tubes while deionized water circulates inside the tubes. Under constant heat flux conditions, the heat flux density was kept at 30 kW/m2, the water-side flow rate was in the range of 1 to 3 m/s; under constant water-side inlet temperature, with the inlet temperature controlled at 12 °C, the water-side flow rate was 1 to 3 m/s; and, finally, the experiments were carried out at a saturation temperature of 35 °C, keeping the water flow rate at 2 m/s. The results of the tests are summarized below. On the basis of the experimental results, the heat transfer mechanism is analyzed.
3. Heat Transfer Data Processing
The heat generated in the experiments was calculated using Equation (1):
In the above formula, cpl,w represents the specific heat capacity of water in the experimental section, mw represents the flow rate of water, Texp,out and Texp,in represent the import and export temperature of water in the experimental section, respectively; the import and export temperatures of the hot water tank were used in case of the calculation for the boiling tube, and the import and export temperatures of the cold water tank were used in case of the calculation for the condensing tube.
The temperature difference generated throughout the experimental section was calculated using the log-mean temperature difference, as shown in Equation (2):
In the above equation,
Tsat denotes the saturation temperature and Tin and Tout are the different water-side inlet and outlet temperatures of the different experiments, respectively. The heat flow density based on the nominal diameter outside the tube is as follows:
The total heat transfer coefficient for the entire experimental section is calculated as in Equation (4):
The total heat transfer thermal resistance for the entire experimental section consists of the following components:
In the above equation,
Rf and
Rwall denote the fouling thermal resistance and pipe wall thermal resistance, respectively, where the pipe wall thermal resistance is calculated by Equation (7):
Neglecting the effect of fouling thermal resistance, the outer tube heat transfer coefficient
ho is calculated with the effect of fouling thermal resistance not considered:
The water-side heat transfer coefficient is calculated using
Ci with the associated Gnielinski formula [
17], as shown in Equation (9):
The friction coefficients in the above equations can be obtained from the Filonenko correlation for smooth tubes [
18].
where the correction factor
Ci is calculated using the Wilson graphical method [
19], as follows:
5. Conclusions
In this paper, the thermal properties of condensation heat transfer of one smooth tube and two bilaterally enhanced tubes are investigated for different water flow rates and heat flow densities at a certain saturation temperature. The following conclusions can be drawn from the analysis of the experimental data:
(1) When the saturation temperature and heat flow density remain unchanged but there is a change in the water-side flow rate, the refrigerant side of the tube outside the heat transfer coefficient is almost unchanged; the total heat transfer coefficient becomes larger, but the growth tendency of the total heat transfer coefficient slows down. The water-side heat transfer coefficient gradually increases. By comparing the experimental data of the smooth tube and reinforced tubes, we found that the enhanced heat transfer performance of the reinforced tubes is more obvious when the water velocity is increased, and that it is about 300% of the efficiency of smooth tubes, which suggests that the use of reinforced tubes is an effective strategy when designing high-efficiency heat transfer systems
(2) With heat flow densities lower than 94 kW/m2, the condensation heat transfer coefficient of the E1 tube is 2–5% higher than that of the E2 tube. Both tubes’ condensation heat transfer coefficients are 11.63–14.42 and 10.94–14.67 times higher than that of a smooth tube with the same size and the same material, respectively. At a heat flux density of 94 kW/m2, the heat transfer coefficient of E2 exceeds that of E1, and the decreasing trend of E1 is significantly higher than that of E2. A lower percentage for the rate of decrease in heat transfer coefficient is observed. As the heat flux increases from 50 kW/m2 to 97 kW/m2, the rate of decrease in E1 is 6.1%, while the rate of decrease in E2 is 1.5%.
(3) At constant water velocity, as the heat flux density increases, the heat transfer coefficient outside the tube first decreases and then increases. The corresponding actual heat transfer area of E1 increases, so its heat transfer effect is better relative to E2. At a heat flow density lower than 40 kW/m2, E1 is 2–5% more efficient than E2, and after the heat flow density reaches 40 kW/m2, the E1 and E2 heat transfer coefficients gradually close in on each other, and the E1 heat transfer coefficient is about 100 W/m²K higher than that of E2.