xpensive wrote:When it all has to end with convection to the passing air, one way or the other, the following numbers might be of use.
With an engine output of 500 kW and 25% efficiency, total power would be 2000 kW, meaning 1500 kW is wasted heat.
How much dissipated through the cooling circuit? Let's say 300 kW (300 kJ/s), for the sake of argument.
At 50 m/s (180 km/h), with 5 kg/s of 25C air passing through at a density of 1.2 kg/m^3 and thermal capacity of 1.0 kJ/kg*K, to exit the same air at 85C, you would need a radiator inlet area of some 0.08 m^2, or say two ducts of each 20x20 cm.
Aerodynamic powerloss, P=Cv*A*Rho*v^3/2, depends on the resistance of duct and radiator, but with a Cv of 0.6, you will lose about 15 kW (20 Hp) through those ducts at 300 km/h.
I need to go back to school...
But this post touches on something relevant. A Formula One engine will generate a fixed amount of heat. No matter what the cooling type or materials, in the end a certain amount of air has to be used in the final act of removing the heat. And this amount of air is determined by the amount of heat the engine generates. So even if you designed and installed a radiator of the highest heat transfer properties, it will require a specific amount of air to carry away the heat. Aluminum or copper, you're still going to require a lot of air.
Well I don't know what the temperature of the F1 radiators are though maybe 80 to 100*C ?
Water boils at 100 degrees C. That's at seas level. If you pressurize it (which they do), then the boiling point of water is raised. Thus, the radiator water temp is well above 100 degrees C.
Racing should be decided on the track, not the court room.