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Vortex tube

The vortex tube, also known as the Ranque-Hilsch vortex tube, is a mechanical device that separates a compressed gas into hot and cold streams. The gas emerging from the hot end can reach temperatures of 200 °C (390 °F), and the gas emerging from the cold end can reach −50 °C (−60 °F).[1] It has no moving parts and is considered an environmentally friendly technology because it can work solely on compressed air and does not use Freon.[2] Its efficiency is low, however, counteracting its other environmental advantages.

Separation of a compressed gas into a hot stream and a cold stream

Pressurised gas is injected tangentially into a swirl chamber near one end of a tube, leading to a rapid rotation—the first vortex—as it moves along the inner surface of the tube to the far end. A conical nozzle allows gas specifically from this outer layer to escape at that end through a valve. The remainder of the gas is forced to return in an inner vortex of reduced diameter within the outer vortex. Gas from the inner vortex transfers energy to the gas in the outer vortex, so the outer layer is hotter at the far end than it was initially. The gas in the central vortex is likewise cooler upon its return to the starting-point, where it is released from the tube.

Method of operation edit

To explain the temperature separation in a vortex tube, there are two main approaches:

Fundamental approach: the physics edit

This approach is based on first-principles physics alone and is not limited to vortex tubes only, but applies to moving gas in general. It shows that temperature separation in a moving gas is due only to enthalpy conservation in a moving frame of reference.

The thermal process in the vortex tube can be estimated in the following way:

The main physical phenomenon of the vortex tube is the temperature separation between the cold vortex core and the warm vortex periphery. The "vortex tube effect" is fully explained with the work equation of Euler,[3] also known as Euler's turbine equation, which can be written in its most general vectorial form as:[4]

 ,

where   is the total, or stagnation temperature of the rotating gas at radial position  , the absolute gas velocity as observed from the stationary frame of reference is denoted with  ; the angular velocity of the system is   and   is the isobaric heat capacity of the gas. This equation was published in 2012; it explains the fundamental operating principle of vortex tubes (Here's a video with animated demonstration of how this works[5]). The search for this explanation began in 1933 when the vortex tube was discovered and continued for more than 80 years.

The above equation is valid for an adiabatic turbine passage; it clearly shows that while gas moving towards the center is getting colder, the peripheral gas in the passage is "getting faster". Therefore, vortex cooling is due to angular propulsion. The more the gas cools by reaching the center, the more rotational energy it delivers to the vortex and thus the vortex rotates even faster. This explanation stems directly from the law of energy conservation. Compressed gas at room temperature is expanded in order to gain speed through a nozzle; it then climbs the centrifugal barrier of rotation during which energy is also lost. The lost energy is delivered to the vortex, which speeds its rotation. In a vortex tube, the cylindrical surrounding wall confines the flow at periphery and thus forces conversion of kinetic into internal energy, which produces hot air at the hot exit.

Therefore, the vortex tube is a rotorless turboexpander.[6] It consists of a rotorless radial inflow turbine (cold end, center) and a rotorless centrifugal compressor (hot end, periphery). The work output of the turbine is converted into heat by the compressor at the hot end.

Phenomenological approach edit

This approach relies on observation and experimental data. It is specifically tailored to the geometrical shape of the vortex tube and the details of its flow and is designed to match the particular observables of the complex vortex tube flow, namely turbulence, acoustic phenomena, pressure fields, air velocities and many others. The earlier published models of the vortex tube are phenomenological. They are:

  1. Radial pressure difference: centrifugal compression and air expansion
  2. Radial transfer of angular momentum
  3. Radial acoustic streaming of energy
  4. Radial heat pumping

More on these models can be found in recent review articles on vortex tubes.[7][8]

The phenomenological models were developed at an earlier time when the turbine equation of Euler was not thoroughly analyzed; in the engineering literature, this equation is studied mostly to show the work output of a turbine; while temperature analysis is not performed since turbine cooling has more limited application unlike power generation, which is the main application of turbines. Phenomenological studies of the vortex tube in the past have been useful in presenting empirical data. However, due to the complexity of the vortex flow this empirical approach was able to show only aspects of the effect but was unable to explain its operating principle. Dedicated to empirical details, for a long time the empirical studies made the vortex tube effect appear enigmatic and its explanation – a matter of debate.

History edit

The vortex tube was invented in 1931 by French physicist Georges J. Ranque.[9] It was rediscovered by Paul Dirac in 1934 while he was searching for a device to perform isotope separation, leading to development of the Helikon vortex separation process.[10] German physicist Rudolf Hilsch [de] improved the design and published a widely read paper in 1947 on the device, which he called a Wirbelrohr (literally, whirl pipe).[11] In 1954, Westley [12] published a comprehensive survey entitled ‘‘A bibliography and survey of the vortex tube’’, which included over 100 references. In 1951 Curley and McGree,[13] in 1956 Kalvinskas,[14] in 1964 Dobratz,[15] in 1972 Nash,[16] and in 1979 Hellyar [17] made important contribution to the RHVT literature by their extensive reviews on the vortex tube and its applications. From 1952 to 1963, C. Darby Fulton, Jr. obtained four U.S. patents relating to the development of the vortex tube.[18] In 1961, Fulton began manufacturing the vortex tube under the company name Fulton Cryogenics.[19] Dr. Fulton sold the company to Vortec, Inc.[19] The vortex tube was used to separate gas mixtures, oxygen and nitrogen, carbon dioxide and helium, carbon dioxide and air in 1967 by Linderstrom-Lang.[20][21] Vortex tubes also seem to work with liquids to some extent, as demonstrated by Hsueh and Swenson in a laboratory experiment where free body rotation occurs from the core and a thick boundary layer at the wall. Air is separated causing a cooler air stream coming out the exhaust hoping to chill as a refrigerator.[22] In 1988 R. T. Balmer applied liquid water as the working medium. It was found that when the inlet pressure is high, for instance 20-50 bar, the heat energy separation process exists in incompressible (liquids) vortex flow as well. Note that this separation is only due to heating; there is no longer cooling observed since cooling requires compressibility of the working fluid.

Efficiency edit

Vortex tubes have lower efficiency than traditional air conditioning equipment.[23] They are commonly used for inexpensive spot cooling, when compressed air is available.

Applications edit

Current applications edit

Commercial vortex tubes are designed for industrial applications to produce a temperature drop of up to 71 °C (160 °F). With no moving parts, no electricity, and no refrigerant, a vortex tube can produce refrigeration up to 1,800 W (6,000 BTU/h) using 100 standard cubic feet per minute (2.832 m3/min) of filtered compressed air at 100 psi (6.9 bar). A control valve in the hot air exhaust adjusts temperatures, flows and refrigeration over a wide range.[24][25]

Vortex tubes are used for cooling of cutting tools (lathes and mills, both manually-operated and CNC machines) during machining. The vortex tube is well-matched to this application: machine shops generally already use compressed air, and a fast jet of cold air provides both cooling and removal of the chips produced by the tool. This eliminates or drastically reduces the need for liquid coolant, which is messy, expensive, and environmentally hazardous.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Walker, Jearl (1975). "The madness of stirring tea". The Flying Circus of Physics. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 97. ISBN 0-471-91808-3.
  2. ^ Sarifudin, Alfan; Wijayanto, Danar S.; Widiastuti, Indah (2019). "Parameters Optimization of Tube Type, Pressure, and Mass Fraction on Vortex Tube Performance Using the Taguchi Method". International Journal of Heat and Technology. 37 (2): 597–604. doi:10.18280/ijht.370230.
  3. ^ [1] - Z.S. Spakovszky. Unified: thermodynamics and propulsion (Lecture notes), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. 2007. ch. 12.3.
  4. ^ Polihronov, Jeliazko G.; Straatman, Anthony G. (2012). "Thermodynamics of angular propulsion in fluids". Physical Review Letters. 109 (5): 054504-1–054504-4. Bibcode:2012PhRvL.109e4504P. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.054504. PMID 23006180.
  5. ^ 【Fun科學】惡魔急凍管(只要把空氣灌進去就瞬間變冷!!), retrieved 2021-09-18
  6. ^ Polihronov, Jeliazko G.; Straatman, Anthony G. (2015). "Vortex tube effect without walls". Canadian Journal of Physics. 93 (8): 850–854. Bibcode:2015CaJPh..93..850P. doi:10.1139/cjp-2014-0227.
  7. ^ Xue, Y.; et al. (2010). "A critical review of temperature separation in a vortex tube". Exper. Therm. Fluid Sci. 34 (8): 1367–1374. doi:10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2010.06.010.
  8. ^ Eiamsa-ard, S.; et al. (2008). "Review of Ranque–Hilsch effects in vortex tubes". Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews. 12 (7): 1822–1842. doi:10.1016/j.rser.2007.03.006.
  9. ^ Georges Joseph Ranque, “Method and apparatus for obtaining from a fluid under pressure two currents of fluids at different temperatures,” U.S. Patent no. 1,952,281 (filed: December 6, 1932 ; issued: March 27, 1934).
  10. ^ Farmelo, Graham (2009). The Strangest Man: The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac. New York: Basic Books. pp. 248–9, 307, 311, 313–4, 321, 431. ISBN 978-0-465-02210-6.
  11. ^ Hilsch, Rudolf (1947). "The use of the expansion of gases in a centrifugal field as cooling process". Review of Scientific Instruments. 18 (2): 108–113. Bibcode:1947RScI...18..108H. doi:10.1063/1.1740893. PMID 20288553. Translated from the original German article: Rudolf Hilsch (1946) "Die Expansion von Gasen im Zentrifugalfeld als Kälteprozeß" (The expansion of gases in a centrifugal field as a cooling process), Zeitschrift für Naturforschung, 1 : 208–214. Available on-line at: Zeitschrift für Naturforschung
  12. ^ Westley R (1954) A bibliography and survey of the vortex tube. College of Aeronautics, Cranfield note, UK
  13. ^ Curley W, McGree R Jr (1951) Bibliography of vortex tubes. Refrig Eng 59(2):191–193
  14. ^ Kalvinskas L (1956) Vortex tubes (an extension of Wesley’s bibliography). Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Inst of Technology Literature Search, 56, Part 2
  15. ^ Dobratz BM (1964) Vortex tubes: a bibliography. Lawrence Radiation Laboratory UCRL-7829
  16. ^ Nash JM (1972) The Ranque–Hilsch vortex tube and its application to spacecraft environmental control systems. Dev Theor Appl Mech, Vol 6
  17. ^ Hellyar KG (1979) Gas liquefaction using a Ranque–Hilsch vortex tube: design criteria and bibliography. Report for the degree of Chemical Engineer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  18. ^ "Free Patents Online". Retrieved August 27, 2017.
  19. ^ a b Stone, Greg (October 1976). "Vortex Tubes Blow Hot and Cold". Popular Science. 209 (4): 123–125 – via Google Books.
  20. ^ Chengming Gao, Experimental Study on the Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube, (2005) page 2
  21. ^ Vortex tubes are constructed of stainless steel and use a generator and valve made of brass and sealed with viton o-rings to allow their use in the widest range of environments.
  22. ^ R.T. Balmer. Pressure-driven Ranque-Hilsch temperature separation in liquids. Trans. ASME, J. Fluids Engineering, 110:161–164, June 1988.
  23. ^ Polihronov, J.; et al. (2015). "The maximum coefficient of performance (COP) of vortex tubes". Canadian Journal of Physics. 93 (11): 1279–1282. Bibcode:2015CaJPh..93.1279P. doi:10.1139/cjp-2015-0089.
  24. ^ Newman Tools Inc. http://www.newmantools.com/vortex.htm
  25. ^ "Streamtek Corp". 20 August 2021. Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Further reading edit

  • G. Ranque, (1933) "Expériences sur la détente giratoire avec productions simultanées d'un echappement d'air chaud et d'un echappement d'air froid," Journal de Physique et Le Radium, Supplement, 7th series, 4 : 112 S – 114 S.
  • H. C. Van Ness, Understanding Thermodynamics, New York: Dover, 1969, starting on page 53. A discussion of the vortex tube in terms of conventional thermodynamics.
  • Mark P. Silverman, And Yet it Moves: Strange Systems and Subtle Questions in Physics, Cambridge, 1993, Chapter 6
  • Samuel B. Hsueh and Frank R. Swenson,"Vortex Diode Interior Flows," 1970 Missouri Academy of Science Proceedings, Warrensburg, Mo.
  • C. L. Stong, The Amateur Scientist, London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd, 1962, Chapter IX, Section 4, The "Hilsch" Vortex Tube, p514-519.
  • Van Deemter, J. J. (1952). "On the Theory of the Ranque-Hilsch Cooling Effect". Applied Science Research. 3 (3): 174–196. doi:10.1007/BF03184927.
  • Saidi, M.H.; Valipour, M.S. (2003). "Experimental Modeling of Vortex Tube Refrigerator". Journal of Applied Thermal Engineering. 23 (15): 1971–1980. doi:10.1016/s1359-4311(03)00146-7.
  • Valipour, MS; Niazi, N (2011). "Experimental modeling of a curved Ranque–Hilsch vortex tube refrigerator". International Journal of Refrigeration. 34 (4): 1109–1116. doi:10.1016/j.ijrefrig.2011.02.013.
  • M. Kurosaka, Acoustic Streaming in Swirling Flow and the Ranque-Hilsch (vortex-tube) Effect, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 1982, 124:139-172
  • M. Kurosaka, J.Q. Chu, J.R. Goodman, Ranque-Hilsch Effect Revisited: Temperature Separation Traced to Orderly Spinning Waves or 'Vortex Whistle', Paper AIAA-82-0952 presented at the AIAA/ASME 3rd Joint Thermophysics Conference (June 1982)
  • Gao, Chengming (2005). Experimental Study on the Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube. Eindhoven : Technische Universiteit Eindhoven. ISBN 90-386-2361-5.
  • R. Ricci, A. Secchiaroli, V. D’Alessandro, S. Montelpare. Numerical analysis of compressible turbulent helical flow in a Ranque-Hilsch vortex tube. Computational Methods and Experimental Measurement XIV, pp. 353–364, Ed. C. Brebbia, C.M. Carlomagno, ISBN 978-1-84564-187-0.
  • A. Secchiaroli, R. Ricci, S. Montelpare, V. D’Alessandro. Fluid Dynamics Analysis of a Ranque-Hilsch Vortex-Tube. Il Nuovo Cimento C, vol.32, 2009, ISSN 1124-1896.
  • A. Secchiaroli, R. Ricci, S. Montelpare, V. D’Alessandro. Numerical simulation of turbulent flow in a Ranque-Hilsch vortex-tube. International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol. 52, Issues 23–24, November 2009, pp. 5496–5511, ISSN 0017-9310.
  • N. Pourmahmoud, A. Hassanzadeh, O. Moutaby. Numerical Analysis of The Effect of Helical Nozzles Gap on The Cooling Capacity of Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube. International Journal of Refrigeration, Vol. 35, Issue 5, 2012, pp. 1473–1483, ISSN 0140-7007.
  • M. G. Ranque, 1933, "Experiences sur la detente giratoire avec production simulanees d’un echappement d’air chaud et d’air froid", Journal de Physique et le Radium (in French), Supplement, 7th series, Vol. 4, pp. 112 S–114 S.
  • R. Hilsch, 1947, "The Use of the Expansion of Gases in a Centrifugal Field as Cooling Process", Review of Scientific Instruments, Vol. 18, No. 2, pp. 108–113.
  • J Reynolds, 1962, "A Note on Vortex Tube Flows", Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 14, pp. 18–20.
  • T. T. Cockerill, 1998, "Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics of a Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube", Ph.D. Thesis, University of Cambridge, Department of Engineering.
  • W. Fröhlingsdorf, and H. Unger, 1999, "Numerical Investigations of the Compressible Flow and the Energy Separation in the Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube", Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, Vol. 42, pp. 415–422.
  • J. Lewins, and A. Bejan, 1999, "Vortex Tube Optimization Theory", Energy, Vol. 24, pp. 931–943.
  • J. P. Hartnett, and E. R. G. Eckert, 1957, "Experimental Study of the Velocity and Temperature Distribution in a high-velocity vortex-type flow", Transactions of the ASME, Vol. 79, No. 4, pp. 751–758.
  • M. Kurosaka, 1982, "Acoustic Streaming in Swirling Flows", Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 124, pp. 139–172.
  • K. Stephan, S. Lin, M. Durst, F. Huang, and D. Seher, 1983, "An Investigation of Energy Separation in a Vortex Tube", International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol. 26, No. 3, pp. 341–348.
  • B. K. Ahlborn, and J. M. Gordon, 2000, "The Vortex Tube as a Classical Thermodynamic Refrigeration Cycle", Journal of Applied Physics, Vol. 88, No. 6, pp. 3645–3653.
  • G. W. Sheper, 1951, Refrigeration Engineering, Vol. 59, No. 10, pp. 985–989.
  • J. M. Nash, 1991, "Vortex Expansion Devices for High Temperature Cryogenics", Proc. of the 26th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, Vol. 4, pp. 521–525.
  • D. Li, J. S. Baek, E. A. Groll, and P. B. Lawless, 2000, "Thermodynamic Analysis of Vortex Tube and Work Output Devices for the Transcritical Carbon Dioxide Cycle", Preliminary Proceedings of the 4th IIR-Gustav Lorentzen Conference on Natural Working Fluids at Purdue, E. A. Groll & D. M. Robinson, editors, Ray W. Herrick Laboratories, Purdue University, pp. 433–440.
  • H. Takahama, 1965, "Studies on Vortex Tubes", Bulletin of JSME, Vol. 8, No. 3, pp. 433–440.
  • B. Ahlborn, and S. Groves, 1997, "Secondary Flow in a Vortex Tube", Fluid Dyn. Research, Vol. 21, pp. 73–86.
  • H. Takahama, and H. Yokosawa, 1981, "Energy Separation in Vortex Tubes with a Divergent Chamber", ASME Journal of Heat Transfer, Vol. 103, pp. 196–203.
  • M. Sibulkin, 1962, "Unsteady, Viscous, Circular Flow. Part 3: Application to the Ranque-Hilsch Vortex Tube", Journal of Fluid Mechanics, Vol. 12, pp. 269–293.
  • K. Stephan, S. Lin, M. Durst, F. Huang, and D. Seher, 1984, "A Similarity Relation for Energy Separation in a Vortex Tube", Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, Vol. 27, No. 6, pp. 911–920.
  • H. Takahama, and H. Kawamura, 1979, "Performance Characteristics of Energy Separation in a Steam-Operated Vortex Tube", International Journal of Engineering Science, Vol. 17, pp. 735–744.
  • G. Lorentzen, 1994, "Revival of Carbon Dioxide as a Refrigerant", H&V Engineer, Vol. 66. No. 721, pp. 9–14.
  • D. M. Robinson, and E. A. Groll, 1996, "Using Carbon Dioxide in a Transcritical Vapor Compression Refrigeration Cycle", Proceedings of the 1996 International Refrigeration Conference at Purdue, J. E. Braun and E. A. Groll, editors, Ray W. Herrick Laboratories, Purdue University, pp. 329–336.
  • W. A. Little, 1998, "Recent Developments in Joule-Thomson Cooling: Gases, Coolers, and Compressors", Proc. Of the 5th Int. Cryocooler Conference, pp. 3–11.
  • A. P. Kleemenko, 1959, "One Flow Cascade Cycle (in schemes of Natural Gas Liquefaction and Separation)", Proceedings of the 10th International Congress on Refrigeration, Pergamon Press, London, p. 34.
  • J. Marshall, 1977, "Effect of Operating Conditions, Physical Size, and Fluid Characteristics on the Gas Separation Performance of a Linderstrom-Lang Vortex Tube", Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, Vol. 20, pp. 227–231

External links edit

  • G. J. Ranque's U.S. Patent
  • Detailed explanation of the vortex tube effect with many pictures
  • Oberlin college physics demo
  • Building a Vortex Tube This Old Tony, YouTube
  • Vortex'n 2 This Old Tony, YouTube

vortex, tube, term, vortex, tube, used, fluid, dynamics, vorticity, vortex, tube, also, known, ranque, hilsch, vortex, tube, mechanical, device, that, separates, compressed, into, cold, streams, emerging, from, reach, temperatures, emerging, from, cold, reach,. For the term vortex tube used in fluid dynamics see Vorticity The vortex tube also known as the Ranque Hilsch vortex tube is a mechanical device that separates a compressed gas into hot and cold streams The gas emerging from the hot end can reach temperatures of 200 C 390 F and the gas emerging from the cold end can reach 50 C 60 F 1 It has no moving parts and is considered an environmentally friendly technology because it can work solely on compressed air and does not use Freon 2 Its efficiency is low however counteracting its other environmental advantages Separation of a compressed gas into a hot stream and a cold streamPressurised gas is injected tangentially into a swirl chamber near one end of a tube leading to a rapid rotation the first vortex as it moves along the inner surface of the tube to the far end A conical nozzle allows gas specifically from this outer layer to escape at that end through a valve The remainder of the gas is forced to return in an inner vortex of reduced diameter within the outer vortex Gas from the inner vortex transfers energy to the gas in the outer vortex so the outer layer is hotter at the far end than it was initially The gas in the central vortex is likewise cooler upon its return to the starting point where it is released from the tube Contents 1 Method of operation 1 1 Fundamental approach the physics 1 2 Phenomenological approach 2 History 3 Efficiency 4 Applications 4 1 Current applications 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Further reading 7 External linksMethod of operation editTo explain the temperature separation in a vortex tube there are two main approaches Fundamental approach the physics edit This approach is based on first principles physics alone and is not limited to vortex tubes only but applies to moving gas in general It shows that temperature separation in a moving gas is due only to enthalpy conservation in a moving frame of reference The thermal process in the vortex tube can be estimated in the following way The main physical phenomenon of the vortex tube is the temperature separation between the cold vortex core and the warm vortex periphery The vortex tube effect is fully explained with the work equation of Euler 3 also known as Euler s turbine equation which can be written in its most general vectorial form as 4 T v w r c p const displaystyle T frac vec v cdot vec omega times vec r c p mbox const nbsp where T displaystyle T nbsp is the total or stagnation temperature of the rotating gas at radial position r displaystyle vec r nbsp the absolute gas velocity as observed from the stationary frame of reference is denoted with v displaystyle vec v nbsp the angular velocity of the system is w displaystyle vec omega nbsp and c p displaystyle c p nbsp is the isobaric heat capacity of the gas This equation was published in 2012 it explains the fundamental operating principle of vortex tubes Here s a video with animated demonstration of how this works 5 The search for this explanation began in 1933 when the vortex tube was discovered and continued for more than 80 years The above equation is valid for an adiabatic turbine passage it clearly shows that while gas moving towards the center is getting colder the peripheral gas in the passage is getting faster Therefore vortex cooling is due to angular propulsion The more the gas cools by reaching the center the more rotational energy it delivers to the vortex and thus the vortex rotates even faster This explanation stems directly from the law of energy conservation Compressed gas at room temperature is expanded in order to gain speed through a nozzle it then climbs the centrifugal barrier of rotation during which energy is also lost The lost energy is delivered to the vortex which speeds its rotation In a vortex tube the cylindrical surrounding wall confines the flow at periphery and thus forces conversion of kinetic into internal energy which produces hot air at the hot exit Therefore the vortex tube is a rotorless turboexpander 6 It consists of a rotorless radial inflow turbine cold end center and a rotorless centrifugal compressor hot end periphery The work output of the turbine is converted into heat by the compressor at the hot end Phenomenological approach edit This approach relies on observation and experimental data It is specifically tailored to the geometrical shape of the vortex tube and the details of its flow and is designed to match the particular observables of the complex vortex tube flow namely turbulence acoustic phenomena pressure fields air velocities and many others The earlier published models of the vortex tube are phenomenological They are Radial pressure difference centrifugal compression and air expansion Radial transfer of angular momentum Radial acoustic streaming of energy Radial heat pumpingMore on these models can be found in recent review articles on vortex tubes 7 8 The phenomenological models were developed at an earlier time when the turbine equation of Euler was not thoroughly analyzed in the engineering literature this equation is studied mostly to show the work output of a turbine while temperature analysis is not performed since turbine cooling has more limited application unlike power generation which is the main application of turbines Phenomenological studies of the vortex tube in the past have been useful in presenting empirical data However due to the complexity of the vortex flow this empirical approach was able to show only aspects of the effect but was unable to explain its operating principle Dedicated to empirical details for a long time the empirical studies made the vortex tube effect appear enigmatic and its explanation a matter of debate History editThe vortex tube was invented in 1931 by French physicist Georges J Ranque 9 It was rediscovered by Paul Dirac in 1934 while he was searching for a device to perform isotope separation leading to development of the Helikon vortex separation process 10 German physicist Rudolf Hilsch de improved the design and published a widely read paper in 1947 on the device which he called a Wirbelrohr literally whirl pipe 11 In 1954 Westley 12 published a comprehensive survey entitled A bibliography and survey of the vortex tube which included over 100 references In 1951 Curley and McGree 13 in 1956 Kalvinskas 14 in 1964 Dobratz 15 in 1972 Nash 16 and in 1979 Hellyar 17 made important contribution to the RHVT literature by their extensive reviews on the vortex tube and its applications From 1952 to 1963 C Darby Fulton Jr obtained four U S patents relating to the development of the vortex tube 18 In 1961 Fulton began manufacturing the vortex tube under the company name Fulton Cryogenics 19 Dr Fulton sold the company to Vortec Inc 19 The vortex tube was used to separate gas mixtures oxygen and nitrogen carbon dioxide and helium carbon dioxide and air in 1967 by Linderstrom Lang 20 21 Vortex tubes also seem to work with liquids to some extent as demonstrated by Hsueh and Swenson in a laboratory experiment where free body rotation occurs from the core and a thick boundary layer at the wall Air is separated causing a cooler air stream coming out the exhaust hoping to chill as a refrigerator 22 In 1988 R T Balmer applied liquid water as the working medium It was found that when the inlet pressure is high for instance 20 50 bar the heat energy separation process exists in incompressible liquids vortex flow as well Note that this separation is only due to heating there is no longer cooling observed since cooling requires compressibility of the working fluid Efficiency editSee also Coefficient of performance Vortex tubes have lower efficiency than traditional air conditioning equipment 23 They are commonly used for inexpensive spot cooling when compressed air is available Applications editCurrent applications edit Commercial vortex tubes are designed for industrial applications to produce a temperature drop of up to 71 C 160 F With no moving parts no electricity and no refrigerant a vortex tube can produce refrigeration up to 1 800 W 6 000 BTU h using 100 standard cubic feet per minute 2 832 m3 min of filtered compressed air at 100 psi 6 9 bar A control valve in the hot air exhaust adjusts temperatures flows and refrigeration over a wide range 24 25 Vortex tubes are used for cooling of cutting tools lathes and mills both manually operated and CNC machines during machining The vortex tube is well matched to this application machine shops generally already use compressed air and a fast jet of cold air provides both cooling and removal of the chips produced by the tool This eliminates or drastically reduces the need for liquid coolant which is messy expensive and environmentally hazardous See also editHeat pump Maxwell s demon WindhexeReferences edit Walker Jearl 1975 The madness of stirring tea The Flying Circus of Physics John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 97 ISBN 0 471 91808 3 Sarifudin Alfan Wijayanto Danar S Widiastuti Indah 2019 Parameters Optimization of Tube Type Pressure and Mass Fraction on Vortex Tube Performance Using the Taguchi Method International Journal of Heat and Technology 37 2 597 604 doi 10 18280 ijht 370230 1 Z S Spakovszky Unified thermodynamics and propulsion Lecture notes Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Mass 2007 ch 12 3 Polihronov Jeliazko G Straatman Anthony G 2012 Thermodynamics of angular propulsion in fluids Physical Review Letters 109 5 054504 1 054504 4 Bibcode 2012PhRvL 109e4504P doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 109 054504 PMID 23006180 Fun科學 惡魔急凍管 只要把空氣灌進去就瞬間變冷 retrieved 2021 09 18 Polihronov Jeliazko G Straatman Anthony G 2015 Vortex tube effect without walls Canadian Journal of Physics 93 8 850 854 Bibcode 2015CaJPh 93 850P doi 10 1139 cjp 2014 0227 Xue Y et al 2010 A critical review of temperature separation in a vortex tube Exper Therm Fluid Sci 34 8 1367 1374 doi 10 1016 j expthermflusci 2010 06 010 Eiamsa ard S et al 2008 Review of Ranque Hilsch effects in vortex tubes Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 12 7 1822 1842 doi 10 1016 j rser 2007 03 006 Georges Joseph Ranque Method and apparatus for obtaining from a fluid under pressure two currents of fluids at different temperatures U S Patent no 1 952 281 filed December 6 1932 issued March 27 1934 Farmelo Graham 2009 The Strangest Man The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac New York Basic Books pp 248 9 307 311 313 4 321 431 ISBN 978 0 465 02210 6 Hilsch Rudolf 1947 The use of the expansion of gases in a centrifugal field as cooling process Review of Scientific Instruments 18 2 108 113 Bibcode 1947RScI 18 108H doi 10 1063 1 1740893 PMID 20288553 Translated from the original German article Rudolf Hilsch 1946 Die Expansion von Gasen im Zentrifugalfeld als Kalteprozess The expansion of gases in a centrifugal field as a cooling process Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung 1 208 214 Available on line at Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung Westley R 1954 A bibliography and survey of the vortex tube College of Aeronautics Cranfield note UK Curley W McGree R Jr 1951 Bibliography of vortex tubes Refrig Eng 59 2 191 193 Kalvinskas L 1956 Vortex tubes an extension of Wesley s bibliography Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Inst of Technology Literature Search 56 Part 2 Dobratz BM 1964 Vortex tubes a bibliography Lawrence Radiation Laboratory UCRL 7829 Nash JM 1972 The Ranque Hilsch vortex tube and its application to spacecraft environmental control systems Dev Theor Appl Mech Vol 6 Hellyar KG 1979 Gas liquefaction using a Ranque Hilsch vortex tube design criteria and bibliography Report for the degree of Chemical Engineer Massachusetts Institute of Technology Free Patents Online Retrieved August 27 2017 a b Stone Greg October 1976 Vortex Tubes Blow Hot and Cold Popular Science 209 4 123 125 via Google Books Chengming Gao Experimental Study on the Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube 2005 page 2 Vortex tubes are constructed of stainless steel and use a generator and valve made of brass and sealed with viton o rings to allow their use in the widest range of environments R T Balmer Pressure driven Ranque Hilsch temperature separation in liquids Trans ASME J Fluids Engineering 110 161 164 June 1988 Polihronov J et al 2015 The maximum coefficient of performance COP of vortex tubes Canadian Journal of Physics 93 11 1279 1282 Bibcode 2015CaJPh 93 1279P doi 10 1139 cjp 2015 0089 Newman Tools Inc http www newmantools com vortex htm Streamtek Corp 20 August 2021 Tuesday June 2 2020 Further reading edit G Ranque 1933 Experiences sur la detente giratoire avec productions simultanees d un echappement d air chaud et d un echappement d air froid Journal de Physique et Le Radium Supplement 7th series 4 112 S 114 S H C Van Ness Understanding Thermodynamics New York Dover 1969 starting on page 53 A discussion of the vortex tube in terms of conventional thermodynamics Mark P Silverman And Yet it Moves Strange Systems and Subtle Questions in Physics Cambridge 1993 Chapter 6 Samuel B Hsueh and Frank R Swenson Vortex Diode Interior Flows 1970 Missouri Academy of Science Proceedings Warrensburg Mo C L Stong The Amateur Scientist London Heinemann Educational Books Ltd 1962 Chapter IX Section 4 The Hilsch Vortex Tube p514 519 Van Deemter J J 1952 On the Theory of the Ranque Hilsch Cooling Effect Applied Science Research 3 3 174 196 doi 10 1007 BF03184927 Saidi M H Valipour M S 2003 Experimental Modeling of Vortex Tube Refrigerator Journal of Applied Thermal Engineering 23 15 1971 1980 doi 10 1016 s1359 4311 03 00146 7 Valipour MS Niazi N 2011 Experimental modeling of a curved Ranque Hilsch vortex tube refrigerator International Journal of Refrigeration 34 4 1109 1116 doi 10 1016 j ijrefrig 2011 02 013 M Kurosaka Acoustic Streaming in Swirling Flow and the Ranque Hilsch vortex tube Effect Journal of Fluid Mechanics 1982 124 139 172 M Kurosaka J Q Chu J R Goodman Ranque Hilsch Effect Revisited Temperature Separation Traced to Orderly Spinning Waves or Vortex Whistle Paper AIAA 82 0952 presented at the AIAA ASME 3rd Joint Thermophysics Conference June 1982 Gao Chengming 2005 Experimental Study on the Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube Eindhoven Technische Universiteit Eindhoven ISBN 90 386 2361 5 R Ricci A Secchiaroli V D Alessandro S Montelpare Numerical analysis of compressible turbulent helical flow in a Ranque Hilsch vortex tube Computational Methods and Experimental Measurement XIV pp 353 364 Ed C Brebbia C M Carlomagno ISBN 978 1 84564 187 0 A Secchiaroli R Ricci S Montelpare V D Alessandro Fluid Dynamics Analysis of a Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube Il Nuovo Cimento C vol 32 2009 ISSN 1124 1896 A Secchiaroli R Ricci S Montelpare V D Alessandro Numerical simulation of turbulent flow in a Ranque Hilsch vortex tube International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer Vol 52 Issues 23 24 November 2009 pp 5496 5511 ISSN 0017 9310 N Pourmahmoud A Hassanzadeh O Moutaby Numerical Analysis of The Effect of Helical Nozzles Gap on The Cooling Capacity of Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube International Journal of Refrigeration Vol 35 Issue 5 2012 pp 1473 1483 ISSN 0140 7007 M G Ranque 1933 Experiences sur la detente giratoire avec production simulanees d un echappement d air chaud et d air froid Journal de Physique et le Radium in French Supplement 7th series Vol 4 pp 112 S 114 S R Hilsch 1947 The Use of the Expansion of Gases in a Centrifugal Field as Cooling Process Review of Scientific Instruments Vol 18 No 2 pp 108 113 J Reynolds 1962 A Note on Vortex Tube Flows Journal of Fluid Mechanics Vol 14 pp 18 20 T T Cockerill 1998 Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics of a Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube Ph D Thesis University of Cambridge Department of Engineering W Frohlingsdorf and H Unger 1999 Numerical Investigations of the Compressible Flow and the Energy Separation in the Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube Int J Heat Mass Transfer Vol 42 pp 415 422 J Lewins and A Bejan 1999 Vortex Tube Optimization Theory Energy Vol 24 pp 931 943 J P Hartnett and E R G Eckert 1957 Experimental Study of the Velocity and Temperature Distribution in a high velocity vortex type flow Transactions of the ASME Vol 79 No 4 pp 751 758 M Kurosaka 1982 Acoustic Streaming in Swirling Flows Journal of Fluid Mechanics Vol 124 pp 139 172 K Stephan S Lin M Durst F Huang and D Seher 1983 An Investigation of Energy Separation in a Vortex Tube International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer Vol 26 No 3 pp 341 348 B K Ahlborn and J M Gordon 2000 The Vortex Tube as a Classical Thermodynamic Refrigeration Cycle Journal of Applied Physics Vol 88 No 6 pp 3645 3653 G W Sheper 1951 Refrigeration Engineering Vol 59 No 10 pp 985 989 J M Nash 1991 Vortex Expansion Devices for High Temperature Cryogenics Proc of the 26th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference Vol 4 pp 521 525 D Li J S Baek E A Groll and P B Lawless 2000 Thermodynamic Analysis of Vortex Tube and Work Output Devices for the Transcritical Carbon Dioxide Cycle Preliminary Proceedings of the 4th IIR Gustav Lorentzen Conference on Natural Working Fluids at Purdue E A Groll amp D M Robinson editors Ray W Herrick Laboratories Purdue University pp 433 440 H Takahama 1965 Studies on Vortex Tubes Bulletin of JSME Vol 8 No 3 pp 433 440 B Ahlborn and S Groves 1997 Secondary Flow in a Vortex Tube Fluid Dyn Research Vol 21 pp 73 86 H Takahama and H Yokosawa 1981 Energy Separation in Vortex Tubes with a Divergent Chamber ASME Journal of Heat Transfer Vol 103 pp 196 203 M Sibulkin 1962 Unsteady Viscous Circular Flow Part 3 Application to the Ranque Hilsch Vortex Tube Journal of Fluid Mechanics Vol 12 pp 269 293 K Stephan S Lin M Durst F Huang and D Seher 1984 A Similarity Relation for Energy Separation in a Vortex Tube Int J Heat Mass Transfer Vol 27 No 6 pp 911 920 H Takahama and H Kawamura 1979 Performance Characteristics of Energy Separation in a Steam Operated Vortex Tube International Journal of Engineering Science Vol 17 pp 735 744 G Lorentzen 1994 Revival of Carbon Dioxide as a Refrigerant H amp V Engineer Vol 66 No 721 pp 9 14 D M Robinson and E A Groll 1996 Using Carbon Dioxide in a Transcritical Vapor Compression Refrigeration Cycle Proceedings of the 1996 International Refrigeration Conference at Purdue J E Braun and E A Groll editors Ray W Herrick Laboratories Purdue University pp 329 336 W A Little 1998 Recent Developments in Joule Thomson Cooling Gases Coolers and Compressors Proc Of the 5th Int Cryocooler Conference pp 3 11 A P Kleemenko 1959 One Flow Cascade Cycle in schemes of Natural Gas Liquefaction and Separation Proceedings of the 10th International Congress on Refrigeration Pergamon Press London p 34 J Marshall 1977 Effect of Operating Conditions Physical Size and Fluid Characteristics on the Gas Separation Performance of a Linderstrom Lang Vortex Tube Int J Heat Mass Transfer Vol 20 pp 227 231External links editG J Ranque s U S Patent Detailed explanation of the vortex tube effect with many pictures Oberlin college physics demo Building a Vortex Tube This Old Tony YouTube Vortex n 2 This Old Tony YouTube Retrieved from https en 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