Heat Transfer of Coupled Fluid Flow Within a Channel With a Permeable Base

2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosemarie Mohais ◽  
Balswaroop Bhatt

We examine the heat transfer in a Newtonian fluid confined within a channel with a lower permeable wall. The upper wall of the channel is impermeable and driven by an accelerating surface velocity. Through a similarity solution, the Navier–Stokes equations are reduced to a fourth-order differential equation; the analytical solutions of which determined for small Reynolds numbers show dependence of the temperature and heat transfer profiles on the slip parameter based on the properties of the porous channel base. For larger Reynolds numbers, numerical solutions for three main groups of solutions show that the Reynolds number strongly influences the heat transfer profile. However, the slip conditions associated with the porous base of the channel can be used to alter these heat transfer profiles for large Reynolds numbers. The presence of a porous base in a channel can thus serve as an effective means of reducing or enhancing heat transfer performance in model systems.

2010 ◽  
Vol 656 ◽  
pp. 189-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
ILIA V. ROISMAN

This theoretical study is devoted to description of fluid flow and heat transfer in a spreading viscous drop with phase transition. A similarity solution for the combined full Navier–Stokes equations and energy equation for the expanding lamella generated by drop impact is obtained for a general case of oblique drop impact with high Weber and Reynolds numbers. The theory is applicable to the analysis of the phenomena of drop solidification, target melting and film boiling. The theoretical predictions for the contact temperature at the substrate surface agree well with the existing experimental data.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 565-571 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. E. Launder ◽  
T. H. Massey

A scheme for handling the numerical analysis of viscous flow and heat transfer in tube banks is presented. It involves the use of a cylindrical network of nodes in the vicinity of the tubes with a Cartesian mesh covering the remainder of the flow domain. The approach has been incorporated into the numerical solving algorithm for the Navier Stokes equations of Gasman, et al. [8]. A number of demonstration calculations is presented including a numerical simulation of the staggered square bank for which Bergelin and co-workers [4, 9] have reported experimental results for pressure drop and heat transfer rate. Agreement between predicted and measured characteristics is satisfactory when account is taken of end and entry effects that are present in the experiments but necessarily omitted from the calculations. Indeed the close agreement of the laminar predictions with measurements extends to Reynolds numbers in excess of 1000, a level at which it has hitherto been supposed that turbulent motion in the fluid made a substantial contribution to friction and heat transfer.


2002 ◽  
Vol 465 ◽  
pp. 99-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. OBABKO ◽  
K. W. CASSEL

Numerical solutions of the unsteady Navier–Stokes equations are considered for the flow induced by a thick-core vortex convecting along a surface in a two-dimensional incompressible flow. The presence of the vortex induces an adverse streamwise pressure gradient along the surface that leads to the formation of a secondary recirculation region followed by a narrow eruption of near-wall fluid in solutions of the unsteady boundary-layer equations. The locally thickening boundary layer in the vicinity of the eruption provokes an interaction between the viscous boundary layer and the outer inviscid flow. Numerical solutions of the Navier–Stokes equations show that the interaction occurs on two distinct streamwise length scales depending upon which of three Reynolds-number regimes is being considered. At high Reynolds numbers, the spike leads to a small-scale interaction; at moderate Reynolds numbers, the flow experiences a large-scale interaction followed by the small-scale interaction due to the spike; at low Reynolds numbers, large-scale interaction occurs, but there is no spike or subsequent small-scale interaction. The large-scale interaction is found to play an essential role in determining the overall evolution of unsteady separation in the moderate-Reynolds-number regime; it accelerates the spike formation process and leads to formation of secondary recirculation regions, splitting of the primary recirculation region into multiple corotating eddies and ejections of near-wall vorticity. These eddies later merge prior to being lifted away from the surface and causing detachment of the thick-core vortex.


Author(s):  
Bashar S. AbdulNour

Abstract An over-relaxation procedure, that includes weighing factors, is applied to the steady, two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations in order to reduce the computational time. The benefits obtained from this strategy are illustrated by the problem of viscous flow in the entrance region of an unconstricted and a constricted channel. The describing equations are expressed in terms of the stream function and vorticity. The convergence domain for the Successive Over-Relaxation method and the optimum values of the accelerating parameters, which consist of the over-relaxation and weighting factors for both the stream function and vorticity, are discussed. Numerical solutions are obtained for Reynolds numbers ranging from 20 to 2000. The computer time is reduced by as much as a factor of six using the optimum values of the accelerating parameters.


2004 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 459-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bhattacharyya ◽  
S. Mahapatra ◽  
F. T. Smith

The local planar flow of incompressible fluid past an obstacle of semi-circular cross section is considered, the obstacle being mounted on a long flat surface. The far-field motion is one of uniform shear. Direct numerical solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations are described over a range of Reynolds numbers. The downstream eddy length and upstream position of maximum pressure gradient are found to agree with increased Reynolds number theory; in particular the agreement for the former quantity is close for Reynolds numbers above about 50.


This paper concerns the two-dimensional motion of a viscous liquid down a perturbed inclined plane under the influence of gravity, and the main goal is the prediction of the surface height as the fluid flows over the perturbations. The specific perturbations chosen for the present study were two humps stretching laterally across an otherwise uniform plane, with the flow being confined in the lateral direction by the walls of a channel. Theoretical predictions of the flow have been obtained by finite-element approximations to the Navier-Stokes equations and also by a variety of lubrication approximations. The predictions from the various models are compared with experimental measurements of the free-surface profiles. The principal aim of this study is the establishment and assessment of certain numerical and asymptotic models for the description of a class of free-surface flows, exemplified by the particular case of flow over a perturbed inclined plane. The laboratory experiments were made over a range of flow rates such that the Reynolds number, based on the volume flux per unit width and the kinematical viscosity of the fluid, ranged between 0.369 and 36.6. It was found that, at the smaller Reynolds numbers, a standard lubrication approximation provided a very good representation of the experimental measurements but, as the flow rate was increased, the standard model did not capture several important features of the flow. On the other hand, a lubrication approximation allowing for surface tension and inertial effects expanded the range of applicability of the basic theory by almost an order of magnitude, up to Reynolds numbers approaching 10. At larger flow rates, numerical solutions to the full equations of motion provided a description of the experimental results to within about 4% , up to a Reynolds number of 25, beyond which we were unable to obtain numerical solutions. It is not known why numerical solutions were not possible at larger flow rates, but it is possible that there is a bifurcation of the Navier-Stokes equations to a branch of unsteady motions near a Reynolds number of 25.


2017 ◽  
Vol 818 ◽  
pp. 241-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. A. T. Boshier ◽  
A. J. Mestel

Steady incompressible flow down a slowly curving circular pipe is considered, analytically and numerically. Both real and complex solutions are investigated. Using high-order Hermite–Padé approximants, the Dean series solution is analytically continued outside its circle of convergence, where it predicts a complex solution branch for real positive Dean number, $K$. This is confirmed by numerical solution. It is shown that other previously unknown solution branches exist for all $K>0$, which are related to an unforced complex eigensolution. This non-uniqueness is believed to be generic to the Navier–Stokes equations in most geometries. By means of path continuation, numerical solutions are followed around the complex $K$-plane. The standard Dean two-vortex solution is shown to lie on the same hypersurface as the eigensolution and the four-vortex solutions found in the literature. Elliptic pipes are considered and shown to exhibit similar behaviour to the circular case. There is an imaginary singularity limiting convergence of the Dean series, an unforced solution at $K=0$ and non-uniqueness for $K>0$, culminating in a real bifurcation.


1990 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. L. Lapworth ◽  
J. W. Chew

Numerical solutions of the Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes equations have been used to model the influence of cobs and a bolt cover on the flow and heat transfer in a rotating cavity with an imposed radial outflow of air. Axisymmetric turbulent flow is assumed using a mixing length turbulence model. Calculations for the non-plane discs are compared with plane disc calculations and also with the available experimental data. The calculated flow structures show good agreement with the experimentally observed trends. For the cobbed and plane discs, Nusselt numbers are calculated for a combination of flow rates and rotational speeds; these show some discrepancies with the experiments, although the calculations exhibit the more consistent trend. Further calculations indicate that differences in thermal boundary conditions have a greater influence on Nusselt number than differences in disc geometry. The influence of the bolt cover on the heat transfer has also been modelled, although comparative measurements are not available.


1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. O. Homan ◽  
S. L. Soo

This paper treats the steady flow of a wall jet into a large-width cavity for which the primary axis is normal to the direction of the jet inflow. Numerical solutions of the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations are computed for inlet Reynolds numbers of 10 to 50 and tank width to inlet height ratios of 16 to 128. The length and velocity scales of the wall jet boundary layer exhibit close agreement with the classic wall jet similarity solution and published experimental data but the width of the region for which the comparison proves to be favorable has a limited extent. This departure from a self-similar evolution of the wall jet is shown to result from the finite domain width and its influence on the large recirculation cell located immediately above the wall jet boundary layer.


1999 ◽  
Vol 389 ◽  
pp. 101-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. STEVENS ◽  
J. M. LOPEZ ◽  
B. J. CANTWELL

A combined experimental and numerical investigation is presented of the multiple oscillatory states that exist in the flows produced in a completely filled, enclosed, circular cylinder driven by the constant rotation of one of its endwalls. The flow in a cylinder of height to radius ratio 2.5 is interrogated experimentally using flow visualization and digitized images to extract quantitative temporal information. Numerical solutions of the axisymmetric Navier–Stokes equations are used to study the same flow over a range of Reynolds numbers where the flow is observed to remain axisymmetric. Three oscillatory states have been identified, two of them are periodic and the third is quasi-periodic with a modulation frequency much smaller than the base frequency. The range of Reynolds numbers for which the quasi-periodic flow exists brackets the switch between the two periodic states. The results from the combined experimental and numerical study agree both qualitatively and quantitatively, providing unambiguous evidence of the existence and robustness of these multiple time-dependent states.


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