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Effect of geometry and operational parameters on the dehumidification performance of a desiccant coated heat exchanger

by Tomas Venegas, Ming Qu, Kashif Nawaz, Lingshi Wang
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Science and Technology for the Built Environment
Publication Date
Page Numbers
729 to 741
Volume
28
Issue
6

Solid desiccant dehumidification systems are an alternative to vapor-compression-based air dehumidification systems. They use solid desiccant materials to adsorb air moisture in space cooling. DCHE can integrate the cooling component in the heat exchanger to achieve higher dehumidification capacity. Comprehensive numeric modeling would be necessary to assist in the design and operation of the DCHE under development to achieve maximum performance. This paper provides the details of a heat and mass transfer model developed for this purpose. The model aims to cover a gap in existing models by independently modeling heat transfer on the solid desiccant, fin, and tube. The model results were compared with an experimental reference for validation. The air outlet humidity and temperature results for dehumidification and regeneration showed a deviation lower than 15% from the experiment. The validated model was used to perform a parametric study for a series of design and operating conditions. The parametric analysis showed that an increase of 25% in desiccant layer thickness and thermal contact resistance between solid elements reduces moisture removal by 9.1% and 1%, respectively. These results indicate the need to independently model the desiccant layer.