Enhancement of Natural Convection Inside Vertical Tubes Using Internal Obstacles as Rings with Different Arrangements

Author(s):  
Ramesh Chandra Nayak ◽  
Manmatha K. Roul ◽  
Saroj Kumar Sarangi ◽  
Abinash Sahoo ◽  
Abhisek Sarangi ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
LiDong Huang ◽  
Kevin J. Farrell

The complex interaction of forced and natural convections depends on flow regime and flow direction. Aiding flow occurs when both driving forces act in the same direction (heating upflow fluid and cooling downflow fluid), opposing flow occurs when they act in different directions (cooling upflow fluid and heating downflow fluid). To evaluate mixed convection methods, Heat Transfer Research, Inc. (HTRI) recently collected water and propylene glycol data in two vertical tubes of different tube diameters. The data cover wide ranges of Reynolds, Grashof, and Prandtl numbers and differing ratios of heated tube length to diameter in laminar, transition, and turbulent forced flow regimes. In this paper, we focus the buoyancy effect on forced convection of single-phase flows in vertical tubes with Reynolds numbers higher than 2000. Using HTRI data and experimental data in literature, we demonstrate that natural convection can greatly increase or decrease the convective heat transfer coefficient. In addition, we establish that natural convection should not be neglected if the Richardson number is higher than 0.01 or the mixed turbulent parameter Ra1/3/(Re0.8 Pr0.4) is higher than 0.05 even in forced turbulent flow with Reynolds numbers greater than 10,000. High resolution Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes simulations of several experimental conditions confirm the importance of the buoyancy effect on the production of turbulence kinetic energy. We also determine that flow regime maps are required to predict the mixed convection heat transfer coefficient accurately.


Energies ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byeong Dong Kang ◽  
Hyun Jung Kim ◽  
Dong-Kwon Kim

Author(s):  
Reza Baghaei Lakeh ◽  
H. Pirouz Kavehpour ◽  
Richard E. Wirz ◽  
Adrienne S. Lavine

In this study, turbulent natural convection heat transfer during the charge cycle of a Thermal Energy Storage system was studied computationally and analytically. The storage fluids were supercritical CO2 and liquid toluene which are stored in vertical and sealed storage tubes. A computational model was developed and validated to study turbulent natural convection during the charge cycle. The results of this study show that the aspect ratio of the storage tube (L/D) has an important effect on the heat transfer characteristics. A conceptual model was developed that views the thermal storage process as a hot boundary layer that rises along the tube wall and falls in the center to replace the cold fluid in the core. This model shows that dimensionless mean temperature of the storage fluid and average Nusselt number are functions of a Buoyancy-Fourier number.


Author(s):  
LiDong Huang ◽  
Kevin J. Farrell

The complex interaction of forced and natural convection depends on flow regime and flow direction. Aiding flow occurs when both driving forces act in the same direction (heating upflow fluid and cooling downflow fluid); opposing flow occurs when they act in different directions (cooling upflow fluid and heating downflow fluid). This paper discusses the buoyancy effect on forced convection for single-phase flows in vertical tubes. To evaluate mixed convection methods, Heat Transfer Research, Inc. (HTRI) recently collected water and propylene glycol data in two vertical tubes of different tube diameters. The data cover wide ranges of Reynolds, Grashof, and Prandtl numbers and differing ratios of heated tube length to diameter in laminar, transition, and turbulent forced flow regimes. In this paper, we focus on mixed convection with Reynolds numbers higher than 2000. Using HTRI data and experimental data in literature, we demonstrate that natural convection can greatly increase or decrease the convective heat transfer coefficient. In addition, we establish that natural convection should not be neglected if the Richardson number is higher than 0.01 or the mixed turbulent parameter Ra1/3/(Re0.8 Pr0.4) is higher than 0.05 even in forced turbulent flow with Reynolds numbers greater than 10000. High resolution Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulations of several experimental conditions confirm the importance of the buoyancy effect on the production of turbulence kinetic energy. We also determine that flow regime maps are required to predict the mixed convection heat transfer coefficient accurately.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Baghaei Lakeh ◽  
H. Pirouz Kavehpour ◽  
Richard E. Wirz ◽  
Adrienne S. Lavine

In this study, turbulent natural convection heat transfer during the charge cycle of a Thermal Energy Storage system was studied computationally and analytically. The storage fluids were supercritical CO2 and liquid toluene which are stored in vertical and sealed storage tubes. A computational model was developed and validated to study turbulent natural convection during the charge cycle. The results of this study show that the aspect ratio of the storage tube (L/D) has an important effect on the heat transfer characteristics. A conceptual model was developed that views the thermal storage process as a hot boundary layer that rises along the tube wall and falls in the center to replace the cold fluid in the core. This model shows that dimensionless mean temperature of the storage fluid and average Nusselt number are functions of a Buoyancy-Fourier number.


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