Erratum: “Heat Transfer in Two-Component Dispersed Flow” (Journal of Heat Transfer, 1981, 103, pp. 300–306)

1982 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-219
Author(s):  
K. Mastanaiah ◽  
E. N. Ganic
2015 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Gruais ◽  
D. Poliševski

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Frepoli ◽  
A. J. Ireland ◽  
L. E. Hochreiter ◽  
F. B. Cheung

Abstract The droplet injection experiments to be performed in a 7 × 7 rod bundle heat transfer test facility are being simulated using an advanced thermal hydraulics computer code called COBRA-TF. A current version of the code, which provides a three-dimensional, two-fluid, three-field representation of the two-phase flow, is modified to facilitate the simulation of the droplet field produced by the injection system in the test facility. The liquid phase is split into a continuous liquid field and droplet field where a separate momentum and mass equation is solved for each field, with the effects of spacer grids being properly accounted for. Pre-test analyses using the modified COBRA-TF code have been conducted for different injection conditions. Results indicate that there are specific ranges of conditions that can be simulated within the facility constraints to provide for validation of the dispersed flow film boiling models. The numerical results also show important effects of the spacer grids on the local heat transfer in the dispersed flow film boiling regime.


1971 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 400-405
Author(s):  
Ichiro IKEMOTO ◽  
Masaharu TAKAYASU ◽  
Nobuyuki UENO ◽  
Itaru MICHIYOSHI

Author(s):  
Feihong Guo ◽  
Zhaoping Zhong

AbstractBased on the improved computational fluid dynamics and discrete element method (CFD-DEM), heat transfer and two-component flow of biomass and quartz sand have been studied from experiments and numerical simulation in this paper. During experiments, the particle temperature and moving images are respectively recorded by infrared thermal imager and high speed camera. With the increase of the velocity, the mixing index (MI) and the cooling rate of the particles are rising. Due to larger heat capacity and mass, the temperature of biomass drops slower than that of quartz sand. Fictitious element method is employed to solve the incompatibility of the traditional CFD-DEM where the cylindrical biomass are considered as an aggregation of numerous fictitious sphere particles arranged in certain sequence. By the comparison of data collected by infrared thermal imager and the simulated results, it can be concluded that experimental data is basically agreement with numerical simulation results. Directly affected by inflow air (25℃), the average temperature of particles in the bed height area (h>30 mm) is about 3 degrees lower than that of the other heights. When the superficial gas velocity is larger, the fluidization is good, and the gas temperature distribution is more uniform in the whole area. On the contrary, bubbles are not easy to produce and the fluidization is restricted at lower superficial gas velocity. Gas-solid heat transfer mainly exists under the bed height of 10 mm, and decreases rapidly on fluidized bed height. The mixing index (MI) is employed to quantitatively discuss the mixing effectiveness, which first rises accelerate, then rising speed decreases, finally tends to a upper limit.


1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 508-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Wong ◽  
L. E. Hochreiter

Analysis is carried out for dispersed flow heat transfer under reactor emergency cooling conditions. The present formulation explicitly reveals an extra dependence of the heat transfer coefficient and Nusselt number on the mean vapor temperature for droplet dispersed flow which is not found in single phase flow heat transfer. The heat transfer results obtained from three different geometries—an infinite square array of cylindrical rods, an annulus and a circular pipe—are compared; all have the same hydraulic diameter. It is found that, within the framework of the present analysis, results for the annulus and the rod bundles agree well when the pitch-to-diameter ratio is 1.5 or greater. The circular pipe is in general a poor approximation for rod bundle geometries except at a pitch-to-diameter ratio of about 1.3 which is typical of present day light water reactor fuel assemblies.


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