scholarly journals Thermal convection with mixed thermal boundary conditions: effects of insulating lids at the top

2017 ◽  
Vol 817 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fei Wang ◽  
Shi-Di Huang ◽  
Ke-Qing Xia

The effects of insulating lids on the convection beneath were investigated experimentally using rectangular convection cells in the flux Rayleigh number range $2.3\times 10^{9}\leqslant Ra_{F}\leqslant 1.8\times 10^{11}$ and cylindrical cells in the range $1.4\times 10^{10}\leqslant Ra_{F}\leqslant 1.2\times 10^{12}$ with the Prandtl number $Pr$ fixed at 4.3. It is found that the presence of the insulating lids leads to reduction of the global heat transfer efficiency as expected, which primarily depends on the insulating area but is insensitive to the detailed insulating patterns. At the leading-order level, the magnitude of temperature fluctuations in the bulk fluid is, again, found to be insensitive to the insulating pattern and mainly depends on the insulating area; while the temperature probability density function in the bulk is essentially invariant with respect to both the insulating area and the spatial pattern of the lids. The flow dynamics, on the other hand, is sensitive to both the covering area and the spatial distribution of the lids. At fixed $Ra_{F}$, the flow strength is found to increase with increasing insulating area so as to transfer the same amount of heat through a smaller cooling area. Moreover, for a constant insulating area, a symmetric insulating pattern results in a symmetric flow pattern, i.e. double-roll structure; whereas an asymmetric insulating pattern leads to asymmetric flow, i.e. single-roll structure. It is further found that the symmetry breaking of the insulating pattern leads to a stronger flow that enhances the horizontal velocity more than the vertical velocity.

Author(s):  
Majid Nabavi ◽  
Luc Mongeau

In this study, two-dimensional laminar incompressible and turbulent compressible flow through the planar diffuser (gradual expansion) for different divergence half angles of the diffuser (θ), and different Reynolds numbers (Re) was numerically studied. The effects of θ on the critical Reynolds number at which the onset of asymmetric flow is observed, were investigated. In the laminar flow regime, it was observed that for every values of θ, there is a critical Re beyond which the flow is asymmetric. However, in the turbulent flow regime, for θ ≥ 20°, even at low Reynolds number the flow is asymmetric. Only for θ ≤ 10°, symmetric flow was observed below a critical Re.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Moore ◽  
K. G. T. Hollands

In the subject geometry, a long thin plate at uniform temperature is contained coaxially and symmetrically in a long semicircular trough closed at the top and having a uniform but different temperature. Heat flows across the air-filled region between the two by both natural convection and gaseous conduction. The problem of characterizing the free convective component of this heat transfer—that is, the component caused by bulk fluid motion—is treated experimentally by using a heat balance technique, with the measurements being repeated at different pressures, in order to cover a wide Rayleigh number range, from Ra ≈ 10 to Ra ≈ 108. Nusselt number versus Rayleigh number plots are presented for each of several combinations of plate-to-trough spacing and tilt angle, and the plots are correlated by equations. The problem of characterizing the conductive component is treated by numerically solving the steady diffusion equation in the air-filled region, and the results are correlated as a function of the spacing and the plate thickness.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 291-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanjeev Jain ◽  
Aniruddha Joshi ◽  
P. K. Bansal

A numerical and experimental study of heat transfer and fluid flow in a single pass counter flow plate heat exchanger with chevron plates has been presented in this paper. CFD analysis of small sized plate heat exchanger was carried out by taking the complete geometry of the heat transfer surface and more realistic hydrodynamic and thermal boundary conditions. A cold channel with two chevron plates and two halves of hot channels on either side having flat periodic boundaries was selected as the computational domain. The numerical model was validated with data from experiments and empirical correlations from literature. Heat transfer and pressure drop data were obtained experimentally with water as the working fluid, in the Reynolds number range 400–1300 and the Prandtl number range 4.4–6.3.


2015 ◽  
Vol 784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael A. Calkins ◽  
Kevin Hale ◽  
Keith Julien ◽  
David Nieves ◽  
Derek Driggs ◽  
...  

The influence of fixed temperature and fixed heat flux thermal boundary conditions on rapidly rotating convection in the plane layer geometry is investigated for the case of stress-free mechanical boundary conditions. It is shown that whereas the leading-order system satisfies fixed temperature boundary conditions implicitly, a double boundary layer structure is necessary to satisfy the fixed heat flux thermal boundary conditions. The boundary layers consist of a classical Ekman layer adjacent to the solid boundaries that adjust viscous stresses to zero, and a layer in thermal wind balance just outside the Ekman layers that adjusts the normal derivative of the temperature fluctuation to zero. The influence of these boundary layers on the interior geostrophically balanced convection is shown to be asymptotically weak, however. Upon defining a simple rescaling of the thermal variables, the leading-order reduced system of governing equations is therefore equivalent for both boundary conditions. These results imply that any horizontal thermal variation along the boundaries that varies on the scale of the convection has no leading-order influence on the interior convection, thus providing insight into geophysical and astrophysical flows where stress-free mechanical boundary conditions are often assumed.


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