NUMERICAL INVESTIGATION OF IMPINGEMENT HEAT TRANSFER USING LINEAR AND NONLINEAR TWO-EQUATION TURBULENCE MODELS

2001 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 563-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Abdon, Bengt Sundén
Author(s):  
Chaoyi Wan ◽  
Yu Rao ◽  
Xiang Zhang

A numerical investigation of the heat transfer characteristics within an array of impingement jets on a flat and square pin-fin roughened plate with spent air in one direction has been conducted. Four types of optimized pin-fin configurations and the flat plate have been investigated in the Reynolds number range of 15000–35000. All the computation results have been validated well with the data of published literature. The effects of variation of jet Reynolds number and different configurations on the distribution of the average and local Nusselt number and the related pressure loss have been obtained. The highest total heat transfer rate increased up to 162% with barely any extra pressure loss compared with that of the flat plate. Pressure distributions and streamlines have also been captured to explain the heat transfer characteristic.


Author(s):  
Husam Zawati ◽  
Gaurav Gupta ◽  
Yakym Khlyapov ◽  
Erik Fernandez ◽  
Jayanta Kapat ◽  
...  

Abstract The objective of the present study is the evaluation of the heat transfer difference between a novel jet plate configuration and a conventional flat jet orifice plate. Physical mechanisms that lead to a change in Nusselt number when comparing both configurations are discussed in two regions: impingement and crossflow. In the presented work, both plates with identical inline arrays of (20 × 26) circular air jets impinging orthogonally on a flat target comprised of 20 segments parallel to the jet orifice plates, are studied. The first is a staggered configuration of a pimple-dimple (convex-concave) plate. This plate features two jet diameters: (a) 4.63 mm emanating from negative sphere of 14.63 mm in radius inward imprint; (b) 2.19 mm emanating from a positive sphere of 17.07 mm in radius, protruding from the base of the plate. The second jet plate is flat, which serves as a baseline for the heat transfer study. This plate has a constant jet orifice diameters of 3.49 mm, found based on the definition of total average open area of the first plate (NPR configuration). Heat transfer characteristics and turbulent flow structures are investigated over jet-averaged Reynolds numbers (Reav,j) of 5,000, 7,000, and 9,000. Jet-to-plate distance (Z/Dj) is varied between (2.4 – 6.0) jet diameters. A numerical study is carried out to compare various turbulence models (κε-EB, κε-Lag EB, κε-v2f, κω-SST, RST). Numerical simulations are analyzed in detail to explain the underlying mechanism of heat transfer enhancement, related to such geometries. The convex-concaved plate yields lower globally-averaged heat transfer coefficients when compared to a flat jet plate in the impingement region. However, enhancement up to 23% is seen in the crossflow region, where the crossflow effects are dominant in a maximum-crossflow configuration.


Author(s):  
Y. Q. Zu ◽  
Y. Y. Yan ◽  
J. D. Maltson

In this paper, the flow and heat transfer characteristics of two lines of staggered or inline round jets impinging on a flat plate are numerically analyzed using the CFD commercial code FLUENT. Firstly, the relative performance of seven versions of turbulence models, including the standard k-ε model, the renormalization group k-ε model, the realizable k-ε model, the standard k-ω model, the Shear-Stress Transport k-ω model, the Reynolds stress model and the Large Eddy Simulation model, for numerically predicting single jet impingement heat transfer is investigated by comparing the numerical results with available benchmark experimental data. As a result, the Shear-Stress Transport k-ω model is recommended as the best compromise between the computational cost and accuracy. Using the Shear-Stress Transport k-ω model, the impingement flow and heat transfer under multi-jets with different jet distributions and attack angles are simulated and studied. The effect of hole distribution and angle of attack, etc. on the heat transfer coefficient of the target plate are examined.


Author(s):  
Thangam Natarajan ◽  
James Jewkes ◽  
Ramesh Narayanaswamy ◽  
Yongmann M. Chung ◽  
Anthony D. Lucey

The fluid dynamics and heat transfer characteristics of a turbulent round jet are modelled numerically using Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and Large Eddy Simulation (LES). Meshes with varying degrees of coarseness, with both radial and axial refinements are investigated. Discretization is carried out using the finite volume method. The jet configurations are chosen to enable validation against well-established experimental jet-impingement heat-transfer studies, particularly that of Cooper et al. [1]. The Reynolds number studied is 23000. The height of discharge from the impingement wall is fixed at twice the jet diameter. The work critically examines the effect of Reynolds number, standoff distance and helps to ascertain the relative merits of various turbulence models, by comparing turbulent statistics and the Nusselt number distributions. The present work is carried out as a preliminary validation, in a wider study intended to determine the thermofluidic behaviour of jets impinging upon an oscillating surface.


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