An Experimental Investigation on Forced Convection Heat Transfer From a Cylinder Embedded in a Packed Bed

1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Nasr ◽  
S. Ramadhyani ◽  
R. Viskanta

Forced convection heat transfer from a cylinder embedded in a packed bed of spherical particles was studied experimentally. With air as the working fluid, the effects of particle diameter and particle thermal conductivity were examined for a wide range of thermal conductivities (from 200 W/m K for aluminum to 0.23 W/m K for nylon) and three nominal particle sizes (3 mm, 6 mm, and 13 mm). In the presence of particles, the measured convective heat transfer coefficient was up to seven times higher than that for a bare tube in crossflow. It was found that higher heat transfer coefficients were obtained with smaller particles and higher thermal conductivity packing materials. The experimental data were compared against the predictions of a theory based on Darcy’s law and the boundary layer approximations. While the theoretical equation was moderately successful at predicting the data, improved correlating equations were developed by modifying the form of the theoretical equation to account better for particle diameter and conductivity variations.

Author(s):  
S. M. H. Jayhooni ◽  
M. H. Nowzari ◽  
K. Jafarpur ◽  
A. Abbasi Baharanchi

Forced convection heat transfer for steady free stream flow past two isothermal prisms inside different nanofluids has been studied numerically. Nanofluids have been consisted of Al2O3 and CuO nanoparticles with different particle diameters (dnp = 30nm and 100nm) and different particle volumetric concentrations (0% < φ < 4%). Besides, water is used as base fluid for all nanofluids. In this research the recent correlations are used for viscosity and thermal conductivity of nanofluids. The correlations are function of temperature and particle volumetric concentration. The present numerical simulations have been performed for Pe < 200 in which the flow is steady and laminar. The results show that the heat transfer coefficients for all nanofluids are higher than the base fluid (water). These enhancements are more considerable in high Peclet numbers and high particle volumetric concentrations. In addition, among the tested nanofluids, the CuO/water with 4% particle volumetric concentration and 100nm particle diameter finds to be the best nanofluid to increase the heat transfer. The effect of nanofluids on increasing heat transfer is lower for second prism as compared with the first one.


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