A computational study about the types of entropy generation in three different R134a ejector mixing chambers

2016 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 199-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Sierra-Pallares ◽  
J. García del Valle ◽  
P. García Carrascal ◽  
F. Castro Ruiz
Author(s):  
Jie Li ◽  
Clement Kleinstreuer ◽  
Yu Feng

High heat loads of mechanical, chemical, and biomedical microsystems require heat exchangers which are very small, robust, and efficient. Nanofluids are dilute suspensions of nanoparticles in liquids, which may exhibit remarkable heat transfer characteristics, especially for heat removal in micro-devices. Minimization of entropy generation is potentially a design tool to determine best heat exchanger device geometry and operation. Focusing on microchannel heat sink applications, the thermal performance of pure fluid flow as well as different nanofluids (i.e., Al2O3+water and ZnO+EG) with different volume fractions are discussed. The local and volumetric entropy rates caused by frictional and thermal effects are illustrated for different coolants, geometries and operational parameters. The Feng-Kleinstreuer (F-K) thermal conductivity model, which consists of a base-fluid static part, kbf, and a new “micro-mixing” part, kmm, i.e., knf = kbf + kmm, was adopted in the thermal performance study of nanofluid flow in microchannels. In addition, two effective nanofluid viscosity models have been analyzed and are compared in the current study. In summary, the friction factor, pressure gradient, pumping power, local heat transfer coefficient, thermal resistance and entropy generation are evaluated for different nanofluids. The experimentally validated computational study provides new physical insight and criteria for design applications towards effective micro-system cooling.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (3 Part B) ◽  
pp. 2089-2100
Author(s):  
Abdulwahab Alnaqi ◽  
Ahmed Hussein ◽  
Lioua Kolsi ◽  
Abdullah Al-Rashed ◽  
Dong Li ◽  
...  

Numerical simulation of the natural convection and entropy generation in an air-filled cubical cavity with active lateral walls is performed in this work. Both the lateral front and right sidewalls are maintained at an isothermal cold temperature. While an isothermal hot temperature is applied for both the lateral back and left sidewalls. The upper and lower walls are kept adiabatic. Entropy generation rates due to the fluid friction and the heat transfer are simulated by using the Second law of thermodynamics. Results are illustrated for Rayleigh numbers varied from (103 ? Ra ? 106). It was shown that the increase in the Rayleigh number leads to increase the average Nusselt number and to decrease the Bejan number. Also, it was found that both, Sth, and Stot, increase slightly with the increase in Rayleigh number until they reach (Ra = 105) and then begin to jump after this value. After (Ra = 105), the increase in both, Stot, and Sfr, is greater than Sth. Moreover, it was observed that iso-surfaces of Stot are similar to Sth at (103 ? Ra ? 105), while they are similar to Sfr at high Rayleigh number.


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