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To size a heat exchanger, I need to know (among other things) the Reynolds number (Re) as an indication of the flow conditions. The Re number depends on the viscosity. In a shear thinning fluid, I can't assume a constant viscosity, instead it will depend on the shear rate that is not constant throughout the pipe. I've asked on Physics SE about the shear rate in turbulent shear thinning fluid flow in a pipe, but received no helpful answer.

Here at Engineering.SE, I am not looking for an in-depth examination of the beauty of the Navier-Stokes equation, but for a practical approach to sizing a heat exchange for such a fluid. How to go about it?

mart
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  • (1) Is there a reason you cannot use experiment? (2) Do you have a preferred style of heat exchanger e.g. shell and tube? Is your shear thinning fluid on the tube side? (3) This abstract suggests it is a hard problem, probably beyond the scope of a Q&A website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-4530.2008.00321.x – dcorking Jan 28 '15 at 10:16
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  • no ressources (plus admittedly I can delegate the problem to a supplier but I'm curious) 2) shell an tube, yes 3) lemme have a look ...
  • – mart Jan 28 '15 at 10:40
  • Did you ever come to a conclusion about this practical approach? – Air Mar 17 '15 at 19:55
  • If you don't mind, asking out of curiosity - what are you using that shear-thinning liquid for? I've read about them a little but I couldn't find anything on applications outside of food industry (stick sauces to food). – SF. Mar 31 '15 at 20:13
  • My company build biogas plants, and the thick slurries we have are shear thinning. We only sometimes use HX, mostly we heat our plants with pipes in the tanks, if we use HX we let the suppliers do the sizing. I just want to see if I land in a similiar ballpark. – mart Apr 01 '15 at 05:09