Air Flow Through Compressed and Uncompressed Aluminum Foam: Measurements and Correlations

2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (5) ◽  
pp. 1004-1012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nihad Dukhan ◽  
Rubén Picón-Feliciano ◽  
Ángel R. Álvarez-Hernández

Wind-tunnel steady-state unidirectional pressure-drop measurements for airflow through nine compressed and uncompressed isotropic open-cell aluminum foam samples, having different porosities and pore densities, were undertaken. The compressed foam produced significantly higher pressure drop, which increased with increasing Darcian velocity following the quadratic Forchheimer equation. The permeability and the inertia coefficient data for the compressed foam showed less scatter compared to those for the uncompressed foam. Both were correlated using an Ergun-like equation, with the correlation being better for the permeability. The permeability correlation predicted the results of some previous studies very well. The friction factor correlated well with the Reynolds number.

Author(s):  
Nihad Dukhan ◽  
Angel Alvarez

Wind-tunnel pressure drop measurements for airflow through two samples of forty-pore-per-inch commercially available open-cell aluminum foam were undertaken. Each sample’s cross-sectional area perpendicular to the flow direction measured 10.16 cm by 24.13 cm. The thickness in the flow direction was 10.16 cm for one sample and 5.08 cm for the other. The flow rate ranged from 0.016 to 0.101 m3/s for the thick sample and from 0.025 to 0.134 m3/s for the other. The data were all in the fully turbulent regime. The pressure drop for both samples increased with increasing flow rate and followed a quadratic behavior. The permeability and the inertia coefficient showed some scatter with average values of 4.6 × 10−8 m2 and 2.9 × 10−8 m2, and 0.086 and 0.066 for the thick and the thin samples, respectively. The friction factor decayed with the Reynolds number and was weakly dependent on the Reynolds number for Reynolds number greater than 35.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Amir Hasani ◽  
Mahmood Norouzi ◽  
Morsal Momeni Larimi ◽  
Reza Rooki

Cuttings transport from wellbore annulus to the surface via drilling fluids is one of the most important problems in gas and oil industries. In the present paper, the effects of viscoelastic property of drilling fluids on flow through wellbore annulus are studied numerically by use of computational fluid dynamics simulation in OpenFOAM software. This problem is simulated as the flow between two coaxial annulus cylinders and the inner cylinder is rotating through its axes. Here, the Giesekus model is used as the nonlinear constitutive equation. This model brings the nonlinear viscosity, normal stress differences, extensional viscosity and elastic property. The numerical solution is obtained using the second order finite volume method by considering PISO algorithm for pressure correction. The effect of elasticity, Reynolds number, Taylor number and mobility factor on the velocity and stress fields, pressure drop, and important coefficient of drilling mud flow is studied in detail. The results predicted that increasing elastic property of drilling mud lead to an initial sharp drop in the axial pressure gradient as well as Darcy-Weisbach friction coefficient. Increasing the Reynolds number at constant Taylor number, resulted an enhancing in the axial pressure drop of the fluid but Darcy-Weisbach [Formula: see text] friction coefficient mainly reduced.


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenn-Jiang Hwang ◽  
Chau-Ching Lu

The effects of lateral-flow ejection 0<ε<1.0, pin shapes (square, diamond, and circular), and flow Reynolds number (6000<Re<40,000) on the endwall heat transfer and pressure drop for turbulent flow through a pin-fin trapezoidal duct are studied experimentally. A staggered pin array of five rows and five columns is inserted in the trapezoidal duct, with the same spacings between the pins in the streamwise and spanwise directions: Sx/d=Sy/d=2.5. Three different-shaped pins of length from 2.5<l/d<4.6 span the distance between two endwalls of the trapezoidal duct. Results reveal that the pin-fin trapezoidal duct with lateral-flow rate of ε=0.3-0.4 has a local minimum endwall-averaged Nusselt number and Euler number for all pin shapes investigated. The trapezoidal duct of lateral outlet flow only (ε=1.0) has the highest endwall heat transfer and pressure drop. Moreover, the square pin results in a better heat transfer enhancement than the diamond pin, and subsequently than the circular pin. Finally, taking account of the lateral-flow rate and the flow Reynolds number, the work develops correlations of the endwall-averaged heat transfer with three different pin shapes.


1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Brundrett

A new pressure loss correlation predicts flow through screens for the wire Reynolds number range of 10−4 to 104 using the conventional orthogonal porosity and a function of wire Reynolds number. The correlation is extended by the conventional cosine law to include flow that is not perpendicular to the screen. The importance of careful specification of wire diameter for accurate predictions of porosity is examined. The effective porosity is influenced by the shape of the woven wires, by any local damage, and by screen tension.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Firouzi ◽  
S. H. Hashemabadi

In this paper, the motion equation for steady state, laminar, fully developed flow of Newtonian fluid through the concave and convex ducts has been solved both numerically and analytically. These cross sections can be formed due to the sedimentation of heavy components such as sand, wax, debris, and corrosion products in pipe flows. The influence of duct cross section on dimensionless velocity profile, dimensionless pressure drop, and friction factor has been reported. Finally based on the analytical solutions three new correlations have been proposed for the product of Reynolds number and Fanning friction factor (Cf Re) for these geometries.


Author(s):  
C-C Wang ◽  
Y-P Chang ◽  
K-Y Chi ◽  
Y-J Chang

Extensive experiments on the heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics of louvre finand-tube heat exchangers were carried out. In the present study, 14 samples of non-redirection louvre fin-and-tube heat exchangers with different geometrical parameters, including the number of tube row, fin pitch and tube size, were tested in a wind tunnel. Results are presented as plots of the Fanning friction factor f and the Colburn j factor against Reynolds number based on the tube collar diameter in the range of 300–8000.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Ortega Vivas ◽  
S. Barraga´n Gonza´lez ◽  
J. M. Garibay Cisneros

This study analyses the macroscopic flow through a two dimensional porous medium model by numerical and experimental methods. The objective of this research is to develop an empirical model by which the pressure drop can be obtained. In order to construct the model, a series of blocks are used as an idealized pressure drop device, so that the pressure drop can be calculated. The range of porosities studied is between 28 and 75 per cent. It is found that the pressure drop is a combination of viscosity and inertial effects, the later being more important as the Reynolds number is increased. The empirical equation obtained in this investigation is compared with the Ergun equation.


Author(s):  
Jenn-Jiang Hwang ◽  
Chau-Ching Lu

Effects of the lateral-flow ejection (0 ≦ ε ≦ 1.0), pin shapes (square, diamond and circular) and flow Reynolds number (6,000 ≦ Re ≦ 40,000) on the endwall heat transfer and pressure drop for turbulent flow through a pin-fin trapezoidal duct are studied experimentally. The trapezoidal duct are inserted with a staggered pin array of five rows and five columns, with the same spacings between the pins in streamwise and spanwise directions of Sx/d = Sy/d = 2.5. Three different-shaped pins of length from 2.5 < l/d < 4.6 span the distance between two endwalls of the trapezoidal duct. Results reveal that the pin-fin trapezoidal duct with a lateral-flow rate of ε = 0.3–0.4 has a local minimum endwall-averaged Nusselt number and Euler number for all pin shapes investigated. The trapezoidal duct of lateral outlet flow only (ε = 1.0) has the highest endwall heat transfer and pressure drop. Moreover, the square pin performs a better heat transfer enhancement than the diamond pin, and subsequently than the circular pin. Finally, taking account of the lateral-flow rate and the flow Reynolds number develops correlations of the endwall-averaged heat transfer for three different pin shapes.


Fluids ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 22
Author(s):  
Yury Shvetsov ◽  
Yury Khomyakov ◽  
Mikhail Bayaskhalanov ◽  
Regina Dichina

This paper presents the results of a numerical simulation to determine the hydraulic resistance for a transverse flow through the bundle of hexagonal rods. The calculations were carried out using the precision CFD code CONV-3D, intended for direct numerical simulation of the flow of an incompressible fluid (DNS-approximation) in the parts of fast reactors cooled by liquid metal. The obtained dependencies of the pressure drop and the coefficient of anisotropy of friction on the Reynolds number can be used in the thermal-hydraulic codes that require modeling of the flow in similar structures and, in particular, in the inter-wrapper space of the reactor core.


Author(s):  
Yasuo Koizumi ◽  
Hiroyasu Ohtake ◽  
Hiroki Takahashi ◽  
Yoshiaki Ohno

The friction characteristics of water in a sub-millimeter scale channel were investigated experimentally. The friction factors and the critical Reynolds number were measured using water flow through circular tubes with diameters of 0.5, 0.25 and 0.17 mm. The experimental results show that the measured friction factor for water agreed well with the conventional Poiseuille (λ = 64/Re) and Blasius (λ = 0.316 Re−0.25) equations in laminar and turbulent flow regime; the laminar-turbulent transition Reynolds number was approximately 2300 for diameter 0.5 mm. For diameter 0.25 mm, the friction factor evaluated by the form pressure drop also agreed well with the Poiseuille equation. For diameter 0.17 mm, the measured total friction factor was close to the Poiseuille prediction.


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