NUMERICAL EVALUATION OF WEAKLY TURBULENT FLOW PATTERNS OF NATURAL CONVECTION IN A SQUARE ENCLOSURE WITH DIFFERENTIALLY HEATED SIDE WALLS

2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 551-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianlei Niu ◽  
Zuojin Zhu
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 1245-1259
Author(s):  
Mohammad Saeid Aghighi ◽  
Christel Metivier ◽  
Hamed Masoumi

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to analyze the natural convection of a yield stress fluid in a square enclosure with differentially heated side walls. In particular, the Casson model is considered which is a commonly used model.Design/methodology/approachThe coupled conservation equations of mass, momentum and energy related to the two-dimensional steady-state natural convection within square enclosures are solved numerically by using the Galerkin's weighted residual finite element method with quadrilateral, eight nodes elements.FindingsResults highlight a small degree of the shear-thinning in the Casson fluids. It is shown that the yield stress has a stabilizing effect since the convection can stop for yield stress fluids while this is not the case for Newtonian fluids. The heat transfer rate, velocity and Yc obtained with the Casson model have the smallest values compared to other viscoplastic models. Results highlight a weak dependence of Yc with the Rayleigh number: Yc∼Ra0.07. A supercritical bifurcation at the transition between the convective and the conductive regimes is found.Originality/valueThe originality of the present study concerns the comprehensive and detailed solutions of the natural convection of Casson fluids in square enclosures with differentially heated side walls. It is shown that there exists a major difference between the cases of Casson and Bingham models, and hence using the Bingham model for analyzing the viscoplastic behavior of the fluids which follow the Casson model (such as blood) may not be accurate. Finally, a correlation is proposed for the mean Nusselt number Nu¯.


1980 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 207-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Fraser ◽  
M. H. Siddig

A DISA two-colour back-scatter laser Doppler anemometer was used to take measurements of mean and fluctuating velocities of an air flow of 4.6 × 104 Reynolds number in a short duct with a normal wall fixed to one side. Walls of 30 and 20 mm height were investigated and the resulting flow patterns were compared.


Author(s):  
Mohd. Ashique Hassan ◽  
Manabendra Pathak ◽  
Mohd. Kaleem Khan

In this study a computational investigation of two-dimensional, steady-state, natural convection of viscoplastic fluid in a square enclosure has been presented. The enclosure has been locally heated from the bottom wall using a constant heat flux source and symmetrically cooled from both the side walls. The other walls are maintained as insulated surfaces. Finite volume based code has been used in the simulation and Bingham model has been used to model the rheology of the enclosed viscoplastic fluids. Simulations have been made for three different heating lengths of the bottom wall. The flow phenomenon and heat transfer inside the enclosure have been investigated for different properties of viscoplastic fluid, heating conditions and heated length. It has been observed that for a particular thermal condition the heat transfer coefficient or the Nusselt number decrease with the increase in yield stress value of the fluid due to weakening of convective circulation.


1979 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 481-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Robillard ◽  
P. Vasseur

One of the most important factors affecting the rate of heat transfer by natural convection is the temperature–density relationship of the convecting fluid. The importance of this factor is greatly amplified when the heat is being transferred to a medium that has a maximum density at a given temperature. Water at low temperatures offers such a behavior, its density attaining a maximum value near 3.98 °C. thereafter decreasing with decreasing temperature. This phenomenon is responsible for unusual flow patterns in areas of water exposed to near freezing temperatures.This investigation is a theoretical analysis of the transient natural convection of water contained in a square enclosure with constant wall temperature. Initially the water is assumed to be at a uniform temperature above 0 °C, the wall temperature being suddenly applied.An alternating direction implicit finite-difference schema was used to solve the coupled system of partial differential equations. The transient flow and temperature fields, and local and overall heat transfer are greatly affected by the inversion of flow patterns caused by the maximum density. Their respective values for different flow situations are presented in this study.


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