Effect of geometrical and temperature-dependence parameters on forced convection of a nanofluid in a micro-channel heat sink

2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 399-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rabah Nebbati ◽  
Mahfoud Kadja

Purpose The purpose of this study is the numerical prediction of the thermal and hydraulic characteristics (Nusselt number and shear stress) of a forced convection laminar flow through a rectangular micro-channel heat sink, using constant and temperature-dependent thermo-physical properties. The effects of the solids volume fraction and the size of the micro-channel on heat transfer enhancement have also been investigated. Design/methodology/approach The authors use the flow of a water-Al2O3 nanofluid and a single-phase approach. The equations are solved using the commercial code Fluent Version 6.3. This code uses the finite volume approach to solve the equations subject to the boundary conditions, which govern three-dimensional conjugate convection-conduction heat transfer model. The physical domain was meshed using the code GAMBIT. The mesh used is non-uniform and was obtained by sweeping in the Z direction an X-Y surface meshed with QUAD/pave type cells. Findings The results clearly show that the inclusion of nanoparticles produces a considerable increase in the heat transfer. Also, the temperature-dependent models present higher values of local and average Nusselt number than in the case of constant thermo-physical properties, and an increase in the channel dimensions leads to an important increase in heat transfer. Consequently, we ensure a better cooling of the base of the micro-channel heat sink. Research limitations/implications Because of the settling of nanoparticles, the research results may not be generalized to high values of solids volume fraction. Therefore, researchers are encouraged to find other techniques of cooling when the heat loads exceed values that cannot be dissipated using nanonofluids. Practical implications The paper includes implications for the miniaturization of electronic devices such as in microprocessors or those used in robotics and automotive industries, where continually increasing power densities are requiring more innovative techniques of heat dissipation from a small area and small coolant requirements. Originality/value This paper shows the implementation of variable property nanofluid models in CFD commercial codes.

Author(s):  
Amin Hadizade ◽  
Amin Haghighi Poshtiri

The mixed convective heat transfer of a micropolar nanofluid in a square lid-driven cavity has been numerically studied. The lid is thermally insulated, the side walls are kept cold, and the bottom wall is kept hot with sinusoidally thermal boundary condition. The governing equations were solved by finite volume method using the SIMPLE algorithm. The effect of Grashof number (102–105), the volume fraction of nanoparticles (0.0–0.1), and micropolarity (0.0–2.0) has been investigated on the heat transfer of Al2O3–water nanofluid. Also, the variable model was used to calculate fluid viscosity and thermal conductivity coefficient of the nanofluid. The results showed that an increase in Grashof amplifies the buoyancy force and enhances the Nusselt number. Also, an increase in vortex viscosity at low Grashof numbers strengthens the forced convection and increases the Nusselt number over the bottom wall. However, at Gr = 105, the increase in vortex viscosity up to K = 1.0 leads to a decrease in the amount of heat transfer, but its further increase entails the increase in heat transfer. Although the addition of nanoparticles to the fluid improves heat transfer rate, the extent of improvement at nonzero K values is lower than that in the Newtonian fluid. The comparison of the average Nusselt number computed on the hot wall under two different states of temperature-depended thermo-physical properties and constant thermo-physical properties reveals that their difference is more significant for the Newtonian fluid especially at higher volume fraction.


2015 ◽  
Vol 813-814 ◽  
pp. 685-689
Author(s):  
M. Vijay Anand Marimuthu ◽  
B. Venkatraman ◽  
S. Kandhasamy

This paper investigates the performance and characteristics of saw tooth shape micro channel in the theoretical level. If the conduct area of the nano fluid increases the heat transfer also increases. The performance curve has drawn Reynolds number against nusselt number, heat transfer co efficient. Pressure drop plays an important role in this device. If pressure drop is high the heat transfer increases. The result in this experiment shows clearly that the heat transfer is optimized.


2015 ◽  
Vol 651-653 ◽  
pp. 1507-1512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jalal Faraj ◽  
Baptiste Pignon ◽  
Jean Luc Bailleul ◽  
Nicolas Boyard ◽  
Didier Delaunay ◽  
...  

We present in this paper, the coupling of heat transfer to the crystallization of composite in a closed mold. The composite is based on thermoplastic resin (low viscosity PA 66) with glass fiber (50% volume fraction). In order to realize this coupling, an accurate characterizationof thermo physical properties in process conditions, especially in the molten and solid state is needed. In addition, theidentification of the parameters of crystallization kinetics is required. Therefore, we present the methods that were used to study the thermo physical properties as the thermal conductivity, heat capacity and the specific volume. Moreover, the kinetic of crystallization was estimated over a large temperature range by using Flash DSC and classical DSC. In order to validate the measurements, the whole process was modeled by finite elements. The model includes the resolution of the strong coupling between the heat transfer and crystallization. Finally, the experimental and numerical results were compared.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (12) ◽  
pp. 5143-5167
Author(s):  
Moataz Alosaimi ◽  
Daniel Lesnic ◽  
Jitse Niesen

Purpose This study aims to at numerically retrieve five constant dimensional thermo-physical properties of a biological tissue from dimensionless boundary temperature measurements. Design/methodology/approach The thermal-wave model of bio-heat transfer is used as an appropriate model because of its realism in situations in which the heat flux is extremely high or low and imposed over a short duration of time. For the numerical discretization, an unconditionally stable finite difference scheme used as a direct solver is developed. The sensitivity coefficients of the dimensionless boundary temperature measurements with respect to five constant dimensionless parameters appearing in a non-dimensionalised version of the governing hyperbolic model are computed. The retrieval of those dimensionless parameters, from both exact and noisy measurements, is successfully achieved by using a minimization procedure based on the MATLAB optimization toolbox routine lsqnonlin. The values of the five-dimensional parameters are recovered by inverting a nonlinear system of algebraic equations connecting those parameters to the dimensionless parameters whose values have already been recovered. Findings Accurate and stable numerical solutions for the unknown thermo-physical properties of a biological tissue from dimensionless boundary temperature measurements are obtained using the proposed numerical procedure. Research limitations/implications The current investigation is limited to the retrieval of constant physical properties, but future work will investigate the reconstruction of the space-dependent blood perfusion coefficient. Practical implications As noise inherently present in practical measurements is inverted, the paper is of practical significance and models a real-world situation. Social implications The findings of the present paper are of considerable significance and interest to practitioners in the biomedical engineering and medical physics sectors. Originality/value In comparison to Alkhwaji et al. (2012), the novelty and contribution of this work are as follows: considering the more general and realistic thermal-wave model of bio-heat transfer, accounting for a relaxation time; allowing for the tissue to have a finite size; and reconstructing five thermally significant dimensional parameters.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 2583-2605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Mohsen Peiravi ◽  
Javad Alinejad ◽  
D.D. Ganji ◽  
Soroush Maddah

Purpose The purpose of this study is investigating the effect of using multi-phase nanofluids, Rayleigh number and baffle arrangement simultaneously on the heat transfer rate and Predict the optimal arrangement type of baffles in the differentiation of Rayleigh number in a 3D enclosure. Design/methodology/approach Simulations were performed on the base of the L25 Taguchi orthogonal array, and each test was conducted under different height and baffle arrangement. The multi-phase thermal lattice Boltzmann based on the D3Q19 method was used for modeling fluid flow and temperature fields. Findings Streamlines, isotherms, nanofluid volume fraction distribution and Nusselt number along the wall surface for 104 < Ra < 108 have been demonstrated. Signal-to-noise ratios have been analyzed to predict optimal conditions of maximize and minimize the heat transfer rate. The results show that by choosing the appropriate height and arrangement of the baffles, the average Nusselt number can be changed by more than 57 per cent. Originality/value The value of this paper is surveying three-dimensional and two-phase simulation for nanofluid. Also using the Taguchi method for Predicting the optimal arrangement type of baffles in a multi-part enclosure. Finally statistical analysis of the results by using of two maximum and minimum target Function heat transfer rates.


Author(s):  
Mohsen Modirshanechi ◽  
Kamel Hooman ◽  
Iman Ashtiani Abdi ◽  
Pourya Forooghi

Convection heat transfer in upward flows of supercritical water in triangular tight fuel rod bundles is numerically investigated by using the commercial CFD code, ANSYS Fluent© 14.5. The fuel rod with an inner diameter of 7.6 mm and the pitch-to-diameter ratio (P/D) of 1.14 is studied for mass flux ranging between 550 and 1050 kg/m2s and heat flux of 560 kW/m2 at pressures of 25 MPa. V2F eddy viscosity turbulence model is used and, to isolate the effect of buoyancy, constant values are used for thermo-physical properties with Boussinesq approximation for the density variation with temperature in the momentum equations. The computed Nusselt number normalized by that of the same Reynolds number with no buoyancy against the buoyancy parameter proposed by Jackson and Hall’s criterion. Mentioned results are compared with V2F turbulence model whereas strong nonmonotonic variation of the thermo-physical properties as function of temperature have been applied to the commercial CFD code using user defined function (UDF) technique. A significant decrease in Nusselt number was observed in the range of 10-6<Grq/Reb3.425Prb0.8<5×10-6 before entering a serious heat transfer deterioration regime. Based on an analysis of the shear-stress distribution in the turbulent boundary layer and the significant variation of the specific heat across the turbulent boundary layer, it is found that the same mechanism that leads to impairment of turbulence production in concentric annular pipes is present in triangular lattice fuel rod bundles at supercritical pressure.


2020 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Usman ◽  
Muhammad Hamid ◽  
Zafar Hayat Khan ◽  
Rizwan Ul Haq ◽  
Waqar Ahmed Khan

Purpose This study aims to deal with the numerical investigation of ferrofluid flow and heat transfer inside a right-angle triangular cavity in the presence of a magnetic field. The vertical wall is partially heated, whereas other walls are kept cold. The effects of thermal radiation are included in the analysis. The governing equations including continuity, momentum and energy equations are converted to nondimensional form using viable variables. Design/methodology/approach Finite element method (FEM)-based simulations are performed using finite element approach to investigate the effects of the volume fraction of ferroparticles (Fe3O4), the length of the heating element and the dimensionless numbers including Rayleigh and Hartmann numbers on the streamlines, isotherms and Nusselt number. Findings It is demonstrated that both horizontal and vertical velocity components increase with the length of the heating element, whereas the dimensionless temperature decreases the heating domain. It is observed that an increase of 10% in the volume fraction of ferroparticles increases Nusselt number more than 12%, and 20% increase in the volume fraction of ferroparticles increases more than 30%, depending upon the length of the heating element. Originality/value This is a new study showing the significance of the magnetic nanoparticles for the enhancement of heat transfer rate in a triangular cavity.


Author(s):  
M Ghazvini ◽  
M A Akhavan-Behabadi ◽  
M Esmaeili

The present article focuses on analytical and numerical study on the effect of viscous dissipation when nanofluid is used as the coolant in a microchannel heat sink (MCHS). The nanofluid is made from CuO nanoparticles and water. To analyse the MCHS, a modified Darcy equation for the fluid and two-equation model for heat transfer between fluid and solid sections are employed in porous media approach. In addition, to deal with nanofluid heat transfer, a model based on the Brownian motion of nanoparticles is used. The model evaluates the thermal conductivity of nanofluid considering the thermal boundary resistance, nanoparticle diameter, volume fraction, and the fluid temperature. At first, the effects of particle volume fraction on temperature distribution and overall heat transfer coefficient are investigated with and without considering viscous dissipation. After that, the influence of different channel aspect ratios and porosities is studied. The results show that for nanofluid flow in microchannels, the viscous dissipation can be neglected for low volume fractions and aspect ratios only. Finally, the effect of porosity and Brinkman number on the overall Nusselt number is studied, where asymptotic behaviour of the Nusselt number is observed and discussed from the energy balance point of view.


Author(s):  
Majid Molki

Turbulent heat transfer for flow of water-air mixture driven by moving walls in a cubical heat sink is investigated. One wall is maintained at an elevated temperature, while the vertical walls are at a low temperature. The cubical enclosure functions as a heat sink using water-air mixture with no phase change. Different arrangements for wall motion are considered, which include 1 to 4 moving walls. As the number of moving walls increases, the flow and heat transfer become more complex. In general, the flow reveals complex and multi-scale structures with an unsteady and evolving nature. The larger structure of the flow is resolved using Large Eddy Simulation, while the sub-grid scales are captured by the dynamic k-equation eddy-viscosity model. The focus of this work is on thermal field and heat transfer as affected by the complex flow field generated by multiple moving walls. The results indicate that the Nusselt number for the heat sink varies from 5202.8 to 7356.1, depending on the number of moving walls. Contours of fluid temperature, liquid volume fraction, local and average values of Nusselt number are among the results presented in this paper.


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