Cloth drying is a major consumer of energy, and most drying is conducted by evaporative methods. The evaporative drying energy efficiency limit is commonly assumed to be 100%: one unit of latent heat removed per unit of energy expended. However, this ignores the “free drying” available from unsaturated ambient air and the possible role of heat pumping. We demonstrate that efficiency limits for evaporative drying are fundamentally related to both drying rate and ambient psychrometric conditions. A relationship among efficiency, drying rate, and ambient conditions is quantified for several evaporative drying technologies, and a comparison among evaporative technologies is provided. In addition, a comparison is provided between efficiency limits and state of the art device performance. This research will help guide future research in the most promising directions.
CITATION STYLE
Gluesenkamp, K. R., Patel, V. K., & Momen, A. M. (2021). Efficiency limits of evaporative fabric drying methods. Drying Technology, 39(1), 104–124. https://doi.org/10.1080/07373937.2020.1839486
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