scholarly journals Fluid flow and conjugated heat transfer in arbitrarily shaped channels via single domain formulation and integral transforms

Author(s):  
Diego C. Knupp ◽  
Renato M. Cotta ◽  
Carolina P. Naveira-Cotta
Author(s):  
Diego Knupp ◽  
Diego Knupp ◽  
Fabricio Mascouto ◽  
Luiz A. S. Abreu ◽  
Carolina Palma Naveira Cotta ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 248-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego C. Knupp ◽  
Renato M. Cotta ◽  
Carolina P. Naveira-Cotta ◽  
Sadik Kakaç

Author(s):  
Diego C. Knupp ◽  
Carolina Palma Naveira-Cotta ◽  
Adrian Renfer ◽  
Manish K. Tiwari ◽  
Renato M Cotta ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaohu Yang ◽  
Yang Li ◽  
Lianying Zhang ◽  
Liwen Jin ◽  
Wenju Hu ◽  
...  

Open-cell metal foams exhibit distinctive advantages in fluid control and heat transfer enhancement in thermal and chemical engineering. The thermofluidic transport characteristics at pore scale such as topological microstructure and morphological appearance significantly affect fluid flow and conjugated heat transfer in open-cell metal foams, important for practically designed applications. The present study employed an idealized tetrakaidecahedron unit cell (UC) model to numerically investigate the transport properties and conjugated heat transfer in highly porous open-cell metal foams (porosity—0.95). The effects of foam ligaments and nodes (size and cross-sectional shape) on thermal conduction, fluid flow, and conjugated heat transfer were particularly studied. Good agreement was found between the present predictions and the results in open literature. The effective thermal conductivity was found to decrease with increasing node-size-to-ligament ratio, while the permeability and volume-averaged Nusselt number were increased. This indicated that the effects of node size and shape upon thermofluidic transport need to be considered for open-cell metal foams having high porosities.


Author(s):  
Diego C. Knupp ◽  
Carolina P. Naveira Cotta ◽  
Renato M. Cotta

The present work is an extension of a novel methodology recently proposed by the authors for the analytical solution of conjugated heat transfer problems in channel flow, here taking into account the axial diffusion effects which are often of relevance in micro-channels. This methodology is based on a single domain formulation, which is proposed for modeling the heat transfer phenomena at both the fluid stream and the channel walls regions. By making use of coefficients represented as space variable functions, with abrupt transitions occurring at the fluid-wall interface, the mathematical model is fed with the information concerning the transition of the two domains, unifying the model into a single domain formulation with space variable coefficients. The Generalized Integral Transform Technique (GITT) is then employed in the hybrid numerical-analytical solution of the resulting convection-diffusion problem with variable coefficients. When the axial conduction term is included into the formulation, a non-classical eigenvalue problem must be employed in the solution procedure, which is itself handled with the GITT. In order to covalidate the results obtained by means of this solution path, we have also proposed an alternative solution, including a pseudo-transient term, with the aid of a classical Sturm-Liouville eigenvalue problem. The remarkable results demonstrate the feasibility of this single domain approach in handling conjugated heat transfer problems in micro-channels, as well as when fluid axial conduction cannot be neglected.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document