Hi everybody,
I'm currently trying to upgrade a cold water tank at my work.
We use this to cool down hot wax parts quickly.
Currently, its a plastic box with a large household radiator thrown in and copper pipes connecting to a constant flowing cold water source.
It works, however, a household radiator wasn't meant to be submerged and is quickly turning into a pile of rust.
So I'm looking into a variety of things, including making a whole new one. (new one will have insulated sides and top to try and keep the temp)
- one suggestion I had was to build a radiator into the skin of the tank, and then put some insulation on the outside, all of which would be a massive faf to make, and I'm not a radiator designer/engineer so I currently have no idea if that would work ether.
This tank is ~800 x 600 x 300mm and should hold ~140 liters of water, the current radiator is around 2200 BTU.
The room is kept at a constant 21 degrees, and the water comes in at about ~10 degrees iirc.
I've found a heatsink on farnell and wondered if it or something similar could be used (considering its just ally and copper, I could probably get a custom sized one made), but I have no idea if it would be suitable for this application.
I was originally thinking of just having copper pipe run around the inside of the tank, but a colleague mentioned that they tried to do a similar thing for a project at home and found that the copper pipes didn't do too much.
I'm not sure if there is something with the aluminium block along with the copper pipe that might work better, or if I can even get enough copper pipe in there for that kind of volume.
Is there anyone with a better understanding of thermal conductivity or any experience that could give me some advice?
Or maybe someone who has a spare one of these who might be able to do a simple/rough test?
Thanks in advance.