I'm going to start designing my future electric brewery soon, and want to see if anyone out there has any info on what can and can't be done.
HLT
The HLT, which is the part I'll definitely be doing seems pretty trivial to me:
* The bigger the element, the faster it'll heat.
* The better you insulate it, the less heat you'll lose.
The power requirement can be calculated given a heat loss, and the desired heating volumes and times.
Does anyone have any rough figures for how much heat uninsulated SS and Al will typically lose? I can get their thermal conductivity (W/m/K), but don't know how to convert that to a more practical unit given typical conditions (W/m^2 would be perfect). Any of the physicsy people have any pointers?
Anything I'm missing with this?
Kettle
I figure I'm unlikely to ever getting around to building an electric kettle, but I'm interested in going through the motions and designing one anyway. The kettle seems to have much tighter design constraints:
* The bigger the element, the faster it'll heat.
* A minimum power is needed to maintain a rolling boil.
* Too high a power density on the element will scorch the wort.
I figure the power requirement can be calculated once you've factored in heat losses again. Pick a desired evaporation rate corresponding to the vigorousness of the boil (L/hr), then multiply by the latent heat of evaporation to get the power needed to maintain that boil. Does that seem right?
The power density is one that is killing me. In my searches of HBD, someone says to aim below 25W/in^2 (37.5kW/m^2), while someone else says that 50-83 W/in^2 (75-125 kW/M^2) is a safe density. Does anyone have any practical experience with the power density that will start scorching wort?
HLT
The HLT, which is the part I'll definitely be doing seems pretty trivial to me:
* The bigger the element, the faster it'll heat.
* The better you insulate it, the less heat you'll lose.
The power requirement can be calculated given a heat loss, and the desired heating volumes and times.
Does anyone have any rough figures for how much heat uninsulated SS and Al will typically lose? I can get their thermal conductivity (W/m/K), but don't know how to convert that to a more practical unit given typical conditions (W/m^2 would be perfect). Any of the physicsy people have any pointers?
Anything I'm missing with this?
Kettle
I figure I'm unlikely to ever getting around to building an electric kettle, but I'm interested in going through the motions and designing one anyway. The kettle seems to have much tighter design constraints:
* The bigger the element, the faster it'll heat.
* A minimum power is needed to maintain a rolling boil.
* Too high a power density on the element will scorch the wort.
I figure the power requirement can be calculated once you've factored in heat losses again. Pick a desired evaporation rate corresponding to the vigorousness of the boil (L/hr), then multiply by the latent heat of evaporation to get the power needed to maintain that boil. Does that seem right?
The power density is one that is killing me. In my searches of HBD, someone says to aim below 25W/in^2 (37.5kW/m^2), while someone else says that 50-83 W/in^2 (75-125 kW/M^2) is a safe density. Does anyone have any practical experience with the power density that will start scorching wort?