Deep dehumidification is crucial for industrial applications requiring ultra-low humidity levels. Traditional cooling-based dehumidification struggles to achieve low dew points efficiently due to excessive energy consumption and frost formation risks. As an alternative, desiccant-based methods, particularly solid desiccant systems, offer improved performance with lower energy demands. This study experimentally investigates a fixed-bed dehumidification system utilizing a plate-fin heat exchanger filled with a silica gel/calcium chloride composite material. The performance evaluation focuses on the influence of ambient conditions and operating parameters, including air velocity and cooling fluid temperature. Among these, the most influential parameter was the velocity of air. For the tested heat exchanger, an optimum value in the range of 0.4–0.6 m/s was identified. Under optimal conditions, the tested HEX was able to reduce the dew point of air down to −2 °C, achieving a reduction in the humidity ratio up to 13 g/kg. The results indicate that air velocity significantly impacts also heat and mass transfer, with coefficients ranging from 80 to 140 W/(m2 K) and 0.015 to 0.060 kg/(m2 s), respectively. The findings highlight the potential of composite desiccant fixed-bed systems for efficient deep dehumidification, outperforming conventional lab-scale components in heat and mass transfer effectiveness. A comparison with other works in the literature indicated that up to 30% increased mass transfer coefficient was achieved and up to seven times higher heat transfer coefficient was measured.

Experimental Testing of a Heat Exchanger with Composite Material for Deep Dehumidification

Valeria Palomba;Antonio Fotia;Fabio Costa;Davide La Rosa;Vincenza Brancato
2025

Abstract

Deep dehumidification is crucial for industrial applications requiring ultra-low humidity levels. Traditional cooling-based dehumidification struggles to achieve low dew points efficiently due to excessive energy consumption and frost formation risks. As an alternative, desiccant-based methods, particularly solid desiccant systems, offer improved performance with lower energy demands. This study experimentally investigates a fixed-bed dehumidification system utilizing a plate-fin heat exchanger filled with a silica gel/calcium chloride composite material. The performance evaluation focuses on the influence of ambient conditions and operating parameters, including air velocity and cooling fluid temperature. Among these, the most influential parameter was the velocity of air. For the tested heat exchanger, an optimum value in the range of 0.4–0.6 m/s was identified. Under optimal conditions, the tested HEX was able to reduce the dew point of air down to −2 °C, achieving a reduction in the humidity ratio up to 13 g/kg. The results indicate that air velocity significantly impacts also heat and mass transfer, with coefficients ranging from 80 to 140 W/(m2 K) and 0.015 to 0.060 kg/(m2 s), respectively. The findings highlight the potential of composite desiccant fixed-bed systems for efficient deep dehumidification, outperforming conventional lab-scale components in heat and mass transfer effectiveness. A comparison with other works in the literature indicated that up to 30% increased mass transfer coefficient was achieved and up to seven times higher heat transfer coefficient was measured.
2025
Istituto di Tecnologie Avanzate per l'Energia - ITAE
adsorption
calcium chloride-based composite
deep dehumidification
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/549063
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