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Research Articles

Design, Fabrication, and Test of a Prototype of Matrix Heat Exchanger for Cryogenic Distillation of Hydrogen Isotopes

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Pages 443-454 | Received 07 Feb 2023, Accepted 16 Aug 2023, Published online: 24 Oct 2023
 

Abstract

The following properties are needed to increase the efficiency of refrigeration, liquefaction, and cryogenic separation cycles: Heat exchangers must have high effectiveness doubled by high compactness; small temperature differences between incoming and outgoing flows must be ensured to increase efficiency; there must be a large heat transfer surface, relative to the volume of the heat exchanger, to minimize heat loss; there must be a high heat transfer rate to reduce the transfer area; there must be a small pressure drop to reduce compression costs; and there must be high reliability with minimal maintenance. All these properties are entirely fulfilled by the designed matrix heat exchangers (MHEs). This paper presents the results of the research program developed by the team of the Cryogenic Laboratory from INC-DTCI ICSI Ramnicu Valcea, which included procedural stages of the realization and preliminary results of the characterization of the MHE-type heat exchanger in a narrow range of values to achieve a proper solution for a heat exchanger to be used for cryogenic purposes, such as cooling the gas mixture at the entrance of a distillation column of hydrogen isotopes and running at low pressure (typically regimes of 0.5 to 2.0 bars) and flows. Within several experimental campaigns, different assembly and testing techniques of the matrix heat exchanger (MHE) prototype were performed to achieve numerical data for the temperature and pressure drops along the heat exchanger and to verify ANSYS Fluent numerical simulation results. The results showed that for the designed and tested MHE prototype, a temperature drop of up to almost 230 K can be obtained at the established parameters correlated with pressure losses within a few millibars (the maximum recorded pressure drop is 80 mbars), small dimensions (64 mm high), and accessible weight (up to 2000 g).

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was carried out through the “Nucleu” Program [contract number 9N/2019], developed with the support of the Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitalization [project number PN 19 11 01 04]—“Innovative CECE Process Solution for Promoting a New Decontamination Technology of Liquid Waste Poorly Concentrated in Tritium and for Recovery of Deuterium.”

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