An Experimental and Computational Heat Transfer Study of Pulsating Jets

2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yogen Utturkar ◽  
Mehmet Arik ◽  
Charles E. Seeley ◽  
Mustafa Gursoy

Synthetic jets are meso or microscale fluidic devices, which operate on the “zero-net-mass-flux” principle. However, they impart a positive net momentum flux to the external environment and are able to produce the cooling effect of a fan sans its ducting, reliability issues, and oversized dimensions. The rate of heat removal from the thermal source is expected to depend on the location, orientation, strength, and shape of the jet. In the current study, we investigate the impact of jet location and orientation on the cooling performance via time-dependent numerical simulations and verify the same with experimental results. We firstly present the experimental study along with the findings. Secondly, we present the numerical models/results, which are compared with the experiments to gain the confidence in the computational methodology. Finally, a sensitivity evaluation has been performed by altering the position and alignment of the jet with respect to the heated surface. Two prime orientations of the jet have been considered, namely, perpendicular and cross jet impingement on the heater. It is found that if jet is placed at an optimum location in either impingement or cross flow position, it can provide similar enhancements.

Author(s):  
Yogen Utturkar ◽  
Mehmet Arik ◽  
Mustafa Gursoy

Synthetic jets are meso or micro scale fluidic devices, which operate on the "zero-net-mass-flux" principle. However, they impart a positive net momentum flux to the external environment, and are able to produce the cooling effect of a fan sans its ducting, reliability issues, and oversized dimensions. The rate of heat removal from the thermal source is expected to depend on the location, orientation, strength, and shape of the jet. In the current study, we investigate the impact of jet location and orientation on the cooling performance via time-dependent numerical simulations, and verify the same with experimental results. We firstly present the experimental study along with the findings. Secondly, we present the numerical models/results, which are compared with the experiments to gain the confidence in the computational methodology. Finally, a sensitivity evaluation has been performed by altering the position and alignment of the jet with respect to the heated surface. Two prime orientations of the jet have been considered, namely, perpendicular and cross jet impingement on the heater. It is found that if jet is placed at an optimum location in either impingement or cross flow position, it can provide similar enhancement.


Author(s):  
Anna A. Pavlova ◽  
Michael Amitay

Efficiency of synthetic jet impingement cooling and the mechanisms of heat removal from a constant heat flux surface were investigated experimentally. The effects of jet’s formation frequency and Reynolds number at different nozzle-to-surface distances were investigated and compared to steady jet cooling. It was found that synthetic jets are up to three times more effective than steady jets at the same Reynolds number. For smaller distances, high formation frequency (f = 1200 Hz) synthetic jets remove heat better than low frequency (f = 420 Hz) jets, whereas low frequency jets are more effective at larger distances, with an overlapping region. Using PIV, it was shown that at small distances between the synthetic jet and the heated surface, the higher formation frequency jet is associated with accumulation of vortices before they impinge on the surface. For the lower frequency jet, the wavelength between coherent structures is so large that vortex rings impinge on the surface separately.


Author(s):  
Yogen Utturkar ◽  
Mehmet Arik ◽  
Mustafa Gursoy

Synthetic jets are meso or micro fluidic devices, which operate on the “zero-net-mass-flux” principle. They impart a positive net momentum flux to the external environment, and are able to produce the cooling effect of a fan sans its ducting, reliability issues, and oversized dimensions. As a result, recently their application as electronics cooling devices is gaining momentum. Traditionally, synthetic jets have been sought as a replacement to the fan in many electronic devices. However, in certain large applications, complete replacement of the fan is not feasible, because it is necessary to provide the basic level of cooling over a large area of a printed assembly board. Such applications often pose a question whether synthetic jet would be able to locally provide reasonable enhancement over the forced convection of the fan flow. In the present study, we present the cooling performance of synthetic jets complementing forced convection from a fan. Both experiments and CFD computations are performed to investigate the interaction of the jet flowfield with a cross flow from fan. The inlet velocity, jet disk amplitude, and channel height are varied in the computational simulations to evaluate the impact of these changes on the cooling properties. Overall, both studies show that a synthetic jet is able to pulse and disrupt the boundary layer caused from fan flow, and improve heat transfer up to 4× over forced convection.


Author(s):  
Andrea Osorio ◽  
Justin Hodges ◽  
Husam Zawati ◽  
Erik J. Fernandez ◽  
Jayanta S. Kapat ◽  
...  

Abstract A series of sweeping jet-impingement experiments are conducted over a circular heated surface, with a main objective of understanding the impact of the unique flow field on the resulting heat transfer. The sweeping motion of the fluidic oscillator is influenced by the sweeping frequency and sweeping angle where each is directly dependent on the geometric design (i.e. internal feedback loops, mixing chamber, etc.). The target surface consists of a heated copper disk, where heater power is supplied to the bottom surface of the disk and adjusted until a differential of 30°C is obtained between the jet and target surface temperatures. An energy balance over the target surface temperatures provides a means for calculating area-averaged heat transfer rate, hence Nusselt number. An increase in the sweeping jet’s thermal inertia initiates an augmentation in heat transfer due to sweeping motion of the jet across the target surface. PIV data was acquired for two jet configurations, confined and unconfined, so that the recirculation behavior can be determined. The fluidic oscillator is found to improve only at a low z/d. At large z/d (greater than 4 in this study), the fluidic oscillator adversely affects the heat transfer.


Author(s):  
Domenico Borello ◽  
Giovanni Delibra ◽  
Cosimo Bianchini ◽  
Antonio Andreini

Internal cooling of gas turbine blade represents a challenging task involving several different phenomena as, among others, highly three-dimensional unsteady fluid flow, efficient heat transfer and structural design. This paper focuses on the analysis of the turbulent flow and heat transfer inside a typical wedge–shaped trailing edge cooling duct of a gas turbine blade. In the configuration under scrutiny the coolant flows inside the duct in radial direction and it leaves the blade through the trailing edge after a 90 deg turning. At first an analysis of the flow and thermal fields in stationary conditions was carried out. Then the effects of rotational motion were investigated for a rotation number of 0.275. The rotation axis here considered is normal to the inflow and outflow bulk velocity, representing schematically a highly loaded blade configuration. The work aimed to i) analyse the dynamic of the vortical structures under the influence of strong body forces and the constraints induced by the internal geometry and ii) to study the impact of such motions on the mechanisms of heat removal. The final aim was to verify the design of the equipment and to detect the possible presence of regions subjected to high thermal loads. The analysis is carried out using the well assessed open source code OpenFOAM written in C++ and widely validated by several scientists and researchers around the world. The unsteadiness of the flow inside the trailing edge required to adopt models that accurately reconstructed the flow field. As the computational costs associated to LES (especially in the near wall regions) largely exceed the available resources, we chose for the simulation the SAS model of Menter, that was validated in a series of benchmark and industrially relevant test cases and allowed to reconstruct a part of the turbulence spectra through a scale-adaptive mechanism. Assessment of the obtained results with steady-state k-ω SST computations and available experimental results was carried out. The present analysis demonstrated that a strong unsteadiness develops inside the trailing edge and that the rotation generated strong secondary motions that enhanced the dynamic of heat removal, leading to a less severe temperature distribution on the heated surface w.r.t the non rotating case.


Synthetic jet is a new technique for electronic chip cooling, which combines stagnant air to form a jet resulting from periodic diaphragm oscillations in a cavity. In this work, the heat transfer characteristics of a synthetic jet are investigated experimentally and numerically. A Piston-cylinder arrangement powers the synthetic jet through a circular orifice for the impingement of jet on the heated surface. Air is considered as the cooling medium. The major parameters identified to describe the impinging jet heat transfer are Reynolds number, frequency, ratio of jet spacing to diameter(Z/D) and nozzle geometry. Numerical studies have been carried out using the finite volume based commercial software ANSYS Fluent. The turbulent model used is k-ω model. The dimensionless distance between the nozzle and plate surface is in the range 2 to 16. Numerical results are in fair agreement with experimental results. As the frequency increases the average Nusselt number increases. High frequency synthetic jets were found to remove more heat than low frequency jets for small Z/D ratio, while low frequency jets are more effective at larger Z/D ratio. Nusselt number is maximum at the stagnation point and there occurs a secondary peak at lower Z/D ratios. Synthetic jet with rectangular orifice is more effective as compared to circular and square geometries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-141
Author(s):  
P. Patro ◽  
S. Garnayak

AbstractIn the present study, heat transfer from a small three dimensional rectangular channel due to turbulent jet impinging from a nozzle normal to the main flow at the inlet has been investigated. Hemispherical convex dimples are attached to the bottom plate from where heat transfer calculations are to be performed. Numerical simulations were performed using the finite volume method with SST k– ω turbulence model. The duct and nozzle Reynolds number are varied in the range of 10000 ≤ ReD ≤ 50000 and 6000 ≤ Red ≤ 12000, respectively. Different nozzle positions (X/D = 10.57, 12.88, 15.19) along the axial direction of the rectangular duct have been considered. It has been found that higher heat transfer is observed at X/D = 10.57 as compared to the other positions. The heat transfer enhancements with and without cross-flow effects have also been compared. It has been shown that the heat transfer rate with cross-flow is found to be much higher than that without cross-flow. Also, the effect of dimples on the heated surface on heat transfer was investigated. The heat transfer is found to be greater in the presence of a dimpled surface than a plane surface.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2116 (1) ◽  
pp. 012028
Author(s):  
Georges Saliba ◽  
Vincent Raimbault ◽  
Stéphane Colin ◽  
Ahmad Batikh ◽  
Stéphane Orieux ◽  
...  

Abstract A growing portion of the thermal load on board airplanes is due to densely packed electronic systems. This increased thermal load along with constraints on weight and volume have made simple and reliable cooling solutions an urgent need in the aerospace industry. There is a wealth of cooling solutions available in order to meet these demands, the simplest and most adaptable of which is probably jet impingement cooling. In this study, fluidic oscillators capable of producing pulsating jets were used to cool a heated surface and were then compared to equivalent steady jets. Although pulsating jets can be produced using a number of devices, fluidic oscillators offer the advantage of not having any moving parts. These oscillators are sustained by a self-induced internal flow instability and can function at different scales. Although the major part of this work is based on prototypes that produce jets with sub-millimetric widths, designs at one tenth that scale, i.e. with an exit slot width of 50 µm, are also presented. Reynolds numbers ranging from ReD = 3500 to 5250 and jet-to-plate spacing from 1D to 10D were studied (where D is the initial width of the jet). The Nusselt number distribution is found for each case and a comparison is made between the performance of equivalent steady and pulsating jets based on the average Nusselt number.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehmet Arik ◽  
Rajdeep Sharma ◽  
Jason Lustbader ◽  
Xin He

This paper focuses on two forced convection methods—steady jet flow and pulsating flow by synthetic jets—that can be used in applications requiring significant amounts of heat removal from electronics components. Given the dearth of available data, we have experimentally investigated steady jets and piezoelectrically driven synthetic jets that provide pulsating flow of air at a high coefficient of performance. To mimic a typical electronics component, a 25.4-mm × 25.4-mm vertical heated surface was used for heat removal. The impingement heat transfer, in the form of Nusselt number, is reported for both steady and unsteady jets over Reynolds numbers from 100 to 3000. The effect of jet-to-plate surface distance on the impingement heat transfer is also investigated. Our results show that synthetic jets can provide significantly higher cooling than steady jets in the Reynolds number range of 100 to 3000. We attribute the superior performance of synthetic jets to vortex shedding associated with the unsteady flow.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (17th International Conference) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Abd Elnaby Kabeel ◽  
Medhat Elkelawy ◽  
Hagar Bastawissi ◽  
Ahmed El-Banna

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