Buoyancy-aided/opposed convection heat transfer for unsteady turbulent flow across a square cylinder in a vertical channel

2007 ◽  
Vol 50 (19-20) ◽  
pp. 3701-3717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiang-Wuu Perng ◽  
Horng-Wen Wu
1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. C. Chow ◽  
S. R. Husain ◽  
A. Campo

A numerical investigation was conducted to study the simultaneous effects of free convection and axial conduction on forced-convection heat transfer inside a vertical channel at low Peclet numbers. Insulated entry and exit lengths were provided in order to assess the effect of upstream and downstream energy penetration due to axial conduction. The fluid enters the channel with a parabolic velocity and uniform temperature profiles. A constant-property (except for the buoyancy term), steady-state case was assumed for the analysis. Results were categorized into two main groups, the first being the case where the channel walls were hotter than the entering fluid (heating), and the second being the reverse of the first (cooling). For each group, heat transfer between the fluid and the walls were given as functions of the Grashof, Peclet, and Reynolds numbers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (01) ◽  
pp. 2050014
Author(s):  
Nasrin Sheikhi ◽  
Mohammad Najafi ◽  
Vali Enjilela

The conventional meshless local Petrov–Galerkin method is modified to enable the method to solve turbulent convection heat transfer problems. The modifications include developing a new computer code which empowers the method to adopt nonlinear equations. A source term expressed in terms of turbulent viscosity gradients is appended to the code to optimize the accuracy for turbulent flow domains. The standard [Formula: see text] transport equations, one of the most applicable two equation turbulent viscosity models, is incorporated, appropriately, into the developed code to bring about both versibility and stability for turbulent natural heat transfer applications. The amenability of the new developed technique is tested by applying the modified method to two conventional turbulent fluid flow test cases. Upon the obtained acceptable results, the modified technique is, next, applied to two conventional natural heat transfer test cases for their turbulent domain. Based on comparing the results of the new technique with those of the available experimental or conventional numerical methods, the proposed method shows good adaptability and accuracy for both the fluid flow and convection heat transfer applications in turbulent domains. The new technique, now, furthers the applicability of the mesh-free local Petrov-Galerkin (MLPG) method to turbulent flow and heat transfer problems and provides much closer results to those of the available experimental or conventional numerical methods.


Author(s):  
Tapish Agarwal ◽  
Iman Rahbari ◽  
Jorge Saavedra ◽  
Guillermo Paniagua ◽  
Beni Cukurel

Abstract The behavioral characteristics of thermal boundary layer dictate the relative efficiency of forced convection heat transfer. This research effort is related to the detailed analysis of the temporal evolution of thermal boundary layer under periodic excitations. In presence of oscillations, a distinct thin Stokes layer is formed inside the attached boundary layer, which interacts nonlinearly with the mean flow in the near wall region. This interaction leads to modification of temporally averaged flow fields, commonly known as acoustic streaming. As a result, the aero-thermal wall gradients are modified leading to significant changes in wall shear stress and heat flux. However, the small spatial scales and the inherent unsteady nature of streaming has presented challenges for prior numerical investigations, preventing the identification of optimal parameters. In order to address this void in numerical framework, the development of a three-tier numerical approach is presented. As a first layer of fidelity, a laminar model is developed for fluctuations and streaming flow calculations in laminar flows subjected to travelling wave disturbances. This technique is an extension of the Lin’s method to traveling wave disturbances of various speeds (absent of previously employed assumptions), along with inclusion of energy equation. With low computational cost, this level of abstraction is intended to identify the broad parameter space that yield desirable heat transfer alterations. At the next level of fidelity, 2D U-RANS simulations are conducted across both laminar and turbulent flow regimes. This is geared towards extending the parameter space obtained from laminar model to turbulent flow conditions. As the third level of fidelity, temporally and spatially resolved DNS simulations are conducted to simulate the application relevant compressible flow environment. The exemplary findings indicate that in certain parameter space, both enhancement and reduction in heat transfer can be obtained through acoustic streaming. Moreover, the extent of heat transfer modulations is greater than alterations in wall shear, thereby surpassing Reynolds analogy.


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