Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles

Phase change materials are passive energy storage materials, which releases significant amount of energy across phase change. This ability to function as energy reservoir can be utilized to maintain temperature. Micro encapsulation is a technique, which increases the versatility of the ways in which...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shantanu Gautam.
Other Authors: Su Haibin
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46139
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-46139
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-461392023-03-04T19:03:23Z Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles Shantanu Gautam. Su Haibin School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Yang Jinglei DRNTU::Engineering Phase change materials are passive energy storage materials, which releases significant amount of energy across phase change. This ability to function as energy reservoir can be utilized to maintain temperature. Micro encapsulation is a technique, which increases the versatility of the ways in which a phase change material can be applied. This technique also allows a greater amount of control over the concentration of the phase change material to be employed. This Project Involves simulating the time taken by a bottle with a starting temperature of 50C to reach 100C, while maintaining the environmental temperature at 300C.The time taken to do so is then compared with a coating of encapsulated PCMs. The PCM for the simulation was chosen to be Pentadecane with a fixed geometry of 30 micron diameter and 1.5 microns thickness. The simulations were run on volumes of 250ml, 330 ml and 500 ml. The choice of material for the bottles was limited to PET. The goal of the simulations was to double the time of temperature increase when compared to a bottle without a PCM coating. The starting point of all simulations was a thickness of coating equal to 100 micron and varying the weight percentage between 3% and 5%. Based on the initial simulations, subsequent sets of simulations were performed by reducing or varying the thickness as the case may be for the required volumes. The simulation results were compared to study the effect the weight percentage and the thickness has on the time taken to increase the transition from 50C to 100C Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2011-06-29T04:46:14Z 2011-06-29T04:46:14Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46139 en Nanyang Technological University 80 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Shantanu Gautam.
Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
description Phase change materials are passive energy storage materials, which releases significant amount of energy across phase change. This ability to function as energy reservoir can be utilized to maintain temperature. Micro encapsulation is a technique, which increases the versatility of the ways in which a phase change material can be applied. This technique also allows a greater amount of control over the concentration of the phase change material to be employed. This Project Involves simulating the time taken by a bottle with a starting temperature of 50C to reach 100C, while maintaining the environmental temperature at 300C.The time taken to do so is then compared with a coating of encapsulated PCMs. The PCM for the simulation was chosen to be Pentadecane with a fixed geometry of 30 micron diameter and 1.5 microns thickness. The simulations were run on volumes of 250ml, 330 ml and 500 ml. The choice of material for the bottles was limited to PET. The goal of the simulations was to double the time of temperature increase when compared to a bottle without a PCM coating. The starting point of all simulations was a thickness of coating equal to 100 micron and varying the weight percentage between 3% and 5%. Based on the initial simulations, subsequent sets of simulations were performed by reducing or varying the thickness as the case may be for the required volumes. The simulation results were compared to study the effect the weight percentage and the thickness has on the time taken to increase the transition from 50C to 100C
author2 Su Haibin
author_facet Su Haibin
Shantanu Gautam.
format Final Year Project
author Shantanu Gautam.
author_sort Shantanu Gautam.
title Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
title_short Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
title_full Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
title_fullStr Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
title_full_unstemmed Thermal simulation of PCM microcapsules coated beverage bottles
title_sort thermal simulation of pcm microcapsules coated beverage bottles
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/46139
_version_ 1759858037571452928