Rewetting Analysis of Hot Vertical Surfaces With Precursory Cooling by the Heat Balance Integral Method

2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. K. Sahu ◽  
P. K. Das ◽  
S. Bhattacharyya

The effect of precursory cooling on conduction-controlled rewetting of both slab and solid cylinder is analyzed by the heat balance integral method. A constant heat transfer coefficient is assumed in the wet region behind the wet front, while an exponentially decaying heat flux is assumed in the dry region ahead of the wet front. The physical problem is characterized by two dimensionless constants describing the extent of precursory cooling and three dimensionless numbers, namely, Peclet number, Biot number, and the nondimensional temperature. Results of the present solution are found to be in good agreement with other analytical solutions obtained through the Weiner–Hopf technique and the separation of variables as well as with the published experimental data for different coolants over a varied range of coolant flow rate. It is seen that precursory cooling increases the rewetting velocity particularly at higher flow rates. If it is neglected, the model grossly underpredicts the quench velocities.

2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan Hristov

The fractional (half-time) sub-model of the heat diffusion equation, known as Dirac-like evolution diffusion equation has been solved by the heat-balance integral method and a parabolic profile with unspecified exponent. The fractional heat-balance integral method has been tested with two classic examples: fixed temperature and fixed flux at the boundary. The heat-balance technique allows easily the convolution integral of the fractional half-time derivative to be solved as a convolution of the time-independent approximating function. The fractional sub-model provides an artificial boundary condition at the boundary that closes the set of the equations required to express all parameters of the approximating profile as function of the thermal layer depth. This allows the exponent of the parabolic profile to be defined by a straightforward manner. The elegant solution performed by the fractional heat-balance integral method has been analyzed and the main efforts have been oriented towards the evaluation of fractional (half-time) derivatives by use of approximate profile across the penetration layer.


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