scholarly journals Modelling and optimization of transient processes in line focusing power plants with single-phase heat transfer medium

Author(s):  
K. Noureldin ◽  
L. M. González-Escalada ◽  
T. Hirsch ◽  
B. Nouri ◽  
R. Pitz-Paal
Symmetry ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Muhammad Amer Qureshi

In this paper, heat transfer and entropy of steady Williamson nanofluid flow based on the fundamental symmetry is studied. The fluid is positioned over a stretched flat surface moving non-uniformly. Nanofluid is analyzed for its flow and thermal transport properties by consigning it to a convectively heated slippery surface. Thermal conductivity is assumed to be varied with temperature impacted by thermal radiation along with axisymmetric magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). Boundary layer approximations lead to partial differential equations, which are transformed into ordinary differential equations in light of a single phase model accounting for Cu-water and TiO2-water nanofluids. The resulting ODEs are solved via a finite difference based Keller box scheme. Various formidable physical parameters affecting fluid movement, difference in temperature, system entropy, skin friction and Nusselt number around the boundary are presented graphically and numerically discussed. It has also been observed that the nanofluid based on Cu-water is identified as a superior thermal conductor rather than TiO2-water based nanofluid.


2019 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 01003
Author(s):  
Jan Taler ◽  
Piotr Dzierwa ◽  
Magdalena Jaremkiewicz ◽  
Dawid Taler ◽  
Karol Kaczmarski ◽  
...  

Thick-wall components of the thermal power unit limit maximum heating and cooling rates during start-up or shut-down of the unit. A method of monitoring the thermal stresses in thick-walled components of thermal power plants is presented. The time variations of the local heat transfer coefficient on the inner surface of the pressure component are determined based on the measurement of the wall temperature at one or six points respectively for one- and three-dimensional unsteady temperature fields in the component. The temperature sensors are located close to the internal surface of the component. A technique for measuring the fastchanging fluid temperature was developed. Thermal stresses in pressure components with complicated shapes can be computed using FEM (Finite Element Method) based on experimentally estimated fluid temperature and heat transfer coefficient


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