Cooling and Dehumidifying Air
Cooling and Dehumidifying Air
Cooling and Dehumidifying Air
Cooling and dehumidifying processes of moist and humid air - sensible and latent
cooling
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When cooling air - part of the energy is used to separate the water (latent heat), and the rest is used to
lower the air temperature (sensible heat).
The air cools along a constant specific humidity - x - line as indicated in the Mollier diagram below:
The process is very similar (opposite direction) to the sensible heating process and the heating formulas
can be adapted to calculate change in enthalpy and temperature.
Note! The specific humidity is constant but the relative humidity will increase.
This process is indicated in the Mollier diagram as below. The air cools in the direction of point C, which is
the intersection point of the cold surface temperature (the cooling surface dew point temperature or the
apparatus dew-point - tADP) and the saturation line.
With a cold surface of unlimited size and a very small amount of air, it would be possible to reach point C.
In the real world a limited surface is never 100% effective and the final state of the cooled and dehumidified
air will be somewhere on the straight line between point A and C - point B.
The amount of condensated vapor will be the difference in specific humidity xA - xB.
Note! This process decreases the specific humidity and increases the relative humidity.
Contact Factor -
The efficiency of a cooling coil can be expressed with the Contact Factor - - as
where
= Contact Factor
h = enthalpy (kJ/kg)
t = temperature (oC)
where
The relationship between the Contact Factor and the Bypass Factor can be expressed as
BPF = 1 - (3)
where
where
Note! The density of air varies with temperature. At 0oC and atmospheric pressure the density is 1.293
kg/m3. At 80oC the density is 1.0 kg/m3.
The total heat flow rate can be split into sensible and latent heat. The sensible heat flow rate can be
expressed as
where
where
In the Mollier diagram the state of the cooled air (B) is in the intersection between the straight line between
(A) and (C) and the 15 oC temperature line.
From the Mollier diagram it can be stated that the enthalpy in (A) is 70 kJ/kg, in (B) 38.5 kJ/kg and in (C)
8.5 kJ/kg.
= 0.51
= 38 (kJ/s, kW)
= 18.3 (kW)
According the Mollier diagram the specific humidity in (A) is 0.016 kg/kg and in (B) 0.0096 kg/kg and the
latent heat flow can be calculated as
Note! Due to inaccuracies when working with graphical diagrams there is a small difference between the
total heat flow and the sum of the latent and sensible heat. Inaccuracies like this are in general within
acceptable limits.