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Investigating the Effect of Tube Diameter on the Performance of a Hybrid Photovoltaic-Thermal System Based on Phase Change Materials and Nanofluids.

Saeed AlqaedJawed MustafaFahad Awjah AlmehmadiMathkar A AlharthiMohsen SharifpurGoshtasp Cheraghian
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The finite element (FEM) approach is used in this study to model the laminar flow of an eco-friendly nanofluid (NF) within three pipes in a solar system. A solar panel and a supporting phase change material (PCM) that three pipelines flowed through made up the solar system. An organic, eco-friendly PCM was employed. Several fins were used on the pipes, and the NF temperature and panel temperature were measured at different flow rates. To model the NF flow, a two-phase mixture was used. As a direct consequence of the flow rate being raised by a factor of two, the maximum temperature of the panel dropped by 1.85 °C, and the average temperature dropped by 1.82 °C. As the flow rate increased, the temperature of the output flow dropped by up to 2 °C. At flow rates ranging from low to medium to high, the PCM melted completely in a short amount of time; however, at high flow rates, a portion of the PCM remained non-melted surrounding the pipes. An increase in the NF flow rate had a variable effect on the heat transfer (HTR) coefficient.
Keyphrases
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