Engineering Principles, Modelling and Economics of Evaporative Coolers

Engineering Principles, Modelling and Economics of Evaporative Coolers

Hefft, Daniel Ingo
Adetunji, Charles Oluwaseun
Workneh, TS
Mbuge, Duncan Onyango

135,20 €(IVA inc.)

Engineering Principles, Modelling and Economics of Evaporative Coolers covers the basic engineering and technical principles behind the operation and construction of evaporative coolers, also highlighting challenges. The book presents the reader with selected case studies on modelling in the cooling chamber and explains the economic implications an evaporative structure can bring. Edited by a team of specialists, the book also explains the strong dependence of the technology's performance on environmental conditions, and hence the limits on temperature control in the preservation of post-harvest agriculture products. Evaporative coolers are an ancient technology, invented long before the introduction of chemical refrigerants as used in modern fridges or cooling towers. This two volume set covers the topic, with practical applications, construction techniques, and operation of the technology. Thoroughly explores unit operations and engineering principles of evaporative coolers Includes CFD modelling on evaporative cooling structures Covers the economics of evaporative coolers INDICE: THEME 1: Background knowledge 1. Evaporative coolant structure as a sustainable storage structure for extending the shelf life of food produce 2. Historic use of evaporative coolant structures by continent3. Modern cooling and its disadvantages: a critical review4. Types of constructions (i.e. drip systems) 5. Engineering principles: Psychrometry, heat and mass transfer phenomena 6. Evaporative cooling principles: direct, indirect, indirect air cooling + direct evaporative cooling 7. Evaporative coolant structure as an alternative to cold storage or controlled atmosphere storage THEME 2: Construction of Evaporative Cooling Structures 8. Construction of different types of Evaporative coolant structure 9. Zero-Energy Evaporative Cooling Technology and the Prospective for Fresh Produce Postharvest Handling. 10. Application of natural material such as charcoal in Evaporative coolant structure 11. The challenges and solutions to rust in evaporative cooling structures 12. Brick Evaporative cooling chambers 13. Recent advances on the application of electronic sensors used in determining the shelf life measurements of fruit and vegetable14. Other alternative energy sources that could be utilized towards the operation of Evaporative coolant structure most especially in rural communities where there is no electricity 15. Edible coatings and Evaporative Cooling Best Practices Guidelines THEME 3: Modelling of Evaporative Cooling Structures 16. Brief introduction to Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) 17. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of airflow inside an evaporative cooler for storage of fruits and vegetables18. CFD Modelling of Forced-air Flow inside Low-cost Evaporatively Cooled Technology for Fresh Produce Shelf-life ExtensionTHEME 4: Economic Aspects, Environment, Governance and Impact 19. Socio-economic aspect of Evaporative coolant structure 20. Role of government and policy makers towards supporting the deployment of Evaporative coolant structure 21. Economic assessment of evaporative coolant structures in Sub-Sahara Africa. 22. Extensive farmers' awareness on edible coatings and other dissemination measures; and public awareness and other dissemination measures

  • ISBN: 978-0-323-90039-3
  • Editorial: Academic Press
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 440
  • Fecha Publicación: 01/09/2022
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés