scholarly journals Computational study on effects of rib height and thickness on heat transfer enhancement in a rib roughened square channel

Sadhana ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (6) ◽  
pp. 667-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANUJ K SHUKLA ◽  
ANUPAM DEWAN
1999 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 675-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Kiml ◽  
Sadanari Mochizuki ◽  
Akira Murata

Experimentation was conducted to examine the heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics in a rib-roughened rectangular passage with aspect ratio 2:1 for four rib configurations: 90 deg, 75 deg, 60 deg and 45 deg oblique ribs. The ribs were attached to two opposing long side walls instead of short side walls. In this study the oblique ribs were intended to function as secondary flow inducers as well as turbulators to improve the heat transfer of the bottom wall (one of the short side walls). The results revealed that, in order to enhance the heat transfer of the bottom wall, the oblique ribs should be arranged so that the secondary flow along the ribs hits the top wall instead of the bottom wall. Flow visualization test was performed to understand the heat transfer mechanisms. It was confirmed that the heat transfer enhancement at the bottom wall was attributed to the rib-induced secondary flow where the flow along the ribs hit the top wall, turned back and carried cold air from the passage core region towards the bottom wall. The highest average heat transfer was achieved for the 60 deg rib pattern due to the strong rotational momentum of the secondary flow and higher heat transfer enhancement on the rib-roughened walls in comparison to the other three rib patterns.


Author(s):  
Youmin Yu ◽  
Terrence Simon ◽  
Smita Agrawal ◽  
Mark North ◽  
Tianhong Cui

Heat transfer performance of air-cooled heat sinks must be improved to meet thermal management requirements of microelectronic devices. The present paper addresses this need by putting actuated plates into channels of a heat sink so that heat transfer is enhanced by the agitation and unsteadiness they generate. A proof-of-concept exercise was computationally conducted in a single channel consisting of one base surface, two fin wall surfaces, and an adiabatic fourth wall, with an actuated plate within the channel. Air flows through the channel, and the actuated plate generates periodic motion in a transverse direction to the air flow and to the fin surface. Turbulence is generated along the tip of the actuated plate due to its periodical motion, resulting in substantial heat transfer enhancement in the channel. Heat transfer is enhanced by 61% by agitating operation for a representative situation. Translational operation of the plate induces 33% more heat transfer than a corresponding flapping operation. Heat transfer on the base surface increases sharply as the gap distance between it and the plate tip decreases, while heat transfer on the fin wall surface is insensitive to the tip gap. Heat transfer in the channel increases linearly with increases of amplitude or frequency. The primary operational parameter to the problem is the product of amplitude and frequency, with amplitude being slightly more influential than frequency. The analysis shows that the proposed method can be used for modern levels of chip heat flux in an air-cooled model forestalling transition to liquid or phase-change cooling.


Author(s):  
Sivasankara Reddy Ramireddy ◽  
Siddappa Pallavagere Gurusiddappa ◽  
V. Kesavan ◽  
S. Kishore Kumar

A Numerical study of fluid flow, heat transfer and pressure drop in a stationary matrix cooling channel having an angle of 45 degrees for the three Reynolds numbers (24000<Re<60000) and four sub-channel aspect ratios (0.5<W/H<1.2) have been performed. This includes different shaped sub-channels such as Rectangular, U, and then two, three layered matrix combined with open and closed matrix channels. The simulation shows the development of vortices along the channel. The flow turning and impingement after hitting the side wall have significant contribution to the heat transfer enhancement. The Nusselt number and friction factor have been evaluated and compared with limited experimental results. The highest heat transfer enhancement is found at impingement region as the flow takes turn and impinges on to the wall. But slight enhancement in heat transfer is observed at turning region. The sub-channel aspect ratio has less impact on heat transfer enhancement, but more effect on pressure drop. The performance of closed matrix is relatively better than the open matrix one. The overall thermal performance (η) of the matrix having U sub-channel is nearly 10% higher than the rectangular sub-channel.


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