Cooling Tower Performance Analysis

Chemical Engineering Laboratory • UC San Diego • 2025

Contributions: Results and Discussion (Technical Writing); Equal Contribution (Lab Work)

Analyzed counterflow cooling tower performance using Merkel's equation to investigate the relationship between number of transfer units (NTU) and liquid-to-gas mass flow ratio (L/G). Validated exponential decay relationship and identified optimal operating conditions for maximum cooling efficiency.

Technical Skills Demonstrated

Heat & Mass Transfer Modeling

  • Applied Merkel's equation for cooling tower analysis
  • Calculated number of transfer units (NTU)
  • Analyzed evaporative cooling effectiveness
  • Measured wet-bulb and dry-bulb temperatures

Experimental Design & Data Collection

  • Varied liquid flow rates (0.3-1.0 GPM)
  • Controlled air velocity (2-6 m/s)
  • Systematic L/G ratio optimization
  • Temperature and humidity monitoring

Mathematical Analysis

  • Exponential decay curve fitting
  • 95% confidence interval analysis
  • Statistical uncertainty quantification
  • Performance curve development

Process Understanding

  • Counterflow heat exchanger principles
  • Efficiency vs. flow rate relationships
  • Mass transport limitation identification
  • Operational parameter optimization

Key Experimental Results

Exponential
NTU-L/G Relationship
Confirmed theoretical exponential decay relationship with experimental data
13.4°C
Maximum Temperature Drop
Achieved at L/G ratio of 0.51 with fixed gas flow of 0.037 kg/s
2 Systems
Cooling Tower Comparison
Analyzed both larger forced draft and smaller induced draft cooling towers
Engineering Significance: This research validated fundamental heat and mass transfer principles in evaporative cooling systems. The exponential relationship between NTU and L/G ratio provides critical design parameters for optimizing cooling tower performance. Lower L/G ratios demonstrated higher cooling efficiency due to increased residence time and enhanced heat transfer, with practical implications for energy-efficient cooling system design.

Complete Research Report

Detailed methodology, Merkel equation application, and experimental analysis