Numerical Investigation of Local Entropy Generation for Laminar Flow in Rotating-Disk Systems

2010 ◽  
Vol 132 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Shanbghazani ◽  
Vahid Heidarpoor ◽  
Marc A. Rosen ◽  
Iraj Mirzaee

The entropy generation is investigated numerically in axisymmetric, steady-state, and incompressible laminar flow in a rotating single free disk. The finite-volume method is used for solving the momentum and energy equations needed for the determination of the entropy generation due to heat transfer and fluid friction. The numerical model is validated by comparing it to previously reported analytical and experimental data for momentum and energy. Results are presented in terms of velocity distribution, temperature, local entropy generation rate, Bejan number, and irreversibility ratio distribution for various rotational Reynolds number and physical cases, using dimensionless parameters. It is demonstrated that increasing rotational Reynolds number increases the local entropy generation rate and irreversibility rate, and that the irreversibility is mainly due to heat transfer while the irreversibility associated with fluid friction is minor.

2020 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
pp. 01032
Author(s):  
Shien Sun ◽  
Haihua Luo ◽  
Basher Hassan Al-Kbodi ◽  
Qiang Shen ◽  
Houlei Zhang

Molten salt tanks are used to store and release thermal energy. Large heat leakage through the molten salt tank foundation to the ground and high temperature of the foundation are detrimental to long-term operation safety. Here we evaluate the heat transfer and entropy generation characteristics of molten salt tank foundations with internal water cooling. Both laminar and turbulent flows reduce the heat leakage efficiently, while the power consumption for the laminar flow is negligible. The effects of the geometrical parameters are presented. Internal fins in the cooling channels decrease the heat leakage significantly. The total entropy generation rate with foundation cooling is higher than that without foundation cooling. The entropy generation rate in the solid domain is much larger than that in the fluid domain and the flow friction irreversibility is tiny. Larger insulation layer thickness decreases the heat leakage and the total entropy generation rate simultaneously. The local entropy generation rate map helps us identify where the most irreversibility is produced. The largest local entropy generation rate for the design with foundation cooling occurs near the solid-fluid interfaces and is much higher than that without foundation cooling.


2005 ◽  
Vol 128 (5) ◽  
pp. 504-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. H. Liu ◽  
S. X. Chu

Because thermal radiation is a long-range phenomenon, the local radiative heat flux is dependent on the temperature distribution of the entire enclosure under consideration and is not determined by the local temperature gradient. In the community of heat transfer, traditionally, the conduction-type formula of entropy generation rate is used to calculate the entropy generation rate of radiation heat transfer. In the present study, three counterexamples are considered. The discrete ordinates method is employed to solve the radiative transfer equation and then solve the radiative entropy generation rate. The results show that the traditional formulas of entropy generation rate for heat transfer generally cannot be used to calculate the local entropy generation rate of radiation heat transfer. Only in optically extremely thick situations, the traditional formula of entropy generation rate for heat transfer can be approximately used to calculate the local entropy generation rate of radiation heat transfer.


Author(s):  
Harshad Sanjay Gaikwad ◽  
Pranab Kumar Mondal ◽  
Dipankar Narayan Basu ◽  
Nares Chimres ◽  
Somchai Wongwises

In this article, we perform an entropy generation analysis for the micro channel heat sink applications where the flow of fluid is actuated by combined influences of applied pressure gradient and electric field under electrical double layer phenomenon. The upper and lower walls of the channels are kept at different constant temperatures. The temperature-dependent viscosity of the fluid is considered and hence the momentum equation and energy equations are coupled in this study. Also, a hydrodynamic slip condition is employed on the viscous dissipation. For complete analysis of the entropy generation, we use a perturbation approach with lubrication approximation. In this study, we discuss the results depicting variations in the velocity and temperature distributions and their effect on local entropy generation rate and Bejan number in the system. It can be summarized from this analysis that the enhanced velocity gradients in the flow field due to combined effect of temperature-dependent viscosity and Joule heating and viscous dissipative effects, leads to an enhancement in the local entropy generation rate in the system.


Author(s):  
Enrico Sciubba

The calculation of the entropy generation rate ds/dt in turbomachinery passages is a straightforward task once the velocity and temperature fields are known. The global entropy generation rate in the passage, dS/dt = ∫V(x,y,z)(ds/dt)dxdydz, is of course directly related to the cascade efficiency, but its functional dependence on the local characteristics of the flowfield is not immediately detectable: the left-hand side is a single-valued quantity that cannot, as such, be used as the objective function of an inverse design procedure (because a local modification of a single detail of the blade geometry invariably produces non-negligible effects on the entire flow domain). On the contrary, knowledge of the local entropy generation rate in each point of a channel provides immediate useful insight into the relative importance of the different sources of irreversibility in the process. There are numerous examples of the application of entropy generation maps as a diagnostic design tool, i.e., to locate problematic areas that demand for design “improvements”: these are, though, basically heuristic and intrinsically non-systematic approaches. On the other hand, the adoption of a functional based on the local entropy generation rates is difficult both from a theoretical and from a practical point of view, and there is no example yet of a blade profile optimization in which the objective function is ∫V(x,y,z)(ds/dt)dxdydz, to be minimized over the design domain V. This paper presents a rational derivation of the relationships between the local and global entropy generation and the local features of the flow, and illustrates them by means of two examples derived from applications developed in the last years by the Turbomachinery Group led by the author at the University of Roma 1. The merits and limits of the use of such a “local” approach are critically discussed, and in the Conclusions a procedure is proposed for the development of an inverse design approach based on a properly constrained objective function based on ds/dt: though quite intensive from a computational point of view, there are indications that such an approach may become feasible on realistic geometries in the near future.


Author(s):  
F. K. O’Donnell ◽  
M. R. D. Davies

Using detailed boundary layer velocity measurements the profile loss, expressed in terms of local entropy generation rate, is evaluated at discrete locations along the suction surface of a turbine blade in a subsonic linear cascade at a chord Reynolds number of 1.8 × 103 under adiabatic test conditions. The distribution of loss through the entire boundary layer is thus established with particular attention given to the comparison of the relative contributions from the laminar, transitional and turbulent regions. It is found that 75% of the entropy generation occurs in the laminar region of the blade, with transition being one of the key features of the overall loss distribution. Traditional correlation methods are considered and shown to give accurate results when compared to the experimental measurements within both the laminar and turbulent regions, the application of such correlations is however dependant upon knowledge of the onset and extent of transition. Finally it is demonstrated that an existing method for the evaluation of local entropy generation rate from measurements of wall shear stress in laminar flow, may be adapted for use in turbulent flow and hence the possibility is presented for the measurement of loss from surface mounted sensors.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Ijaz Khan ◽  
Sohail Ahmad Khan ◽  
Tasawar Hayat ◽  
Muhammad Faisal Javed ◽  
Ahmed Alsaedi

Purpose This study aims to examine the flow characteristics of Ree–Eyring fluid between two rotating disks. The characteristics of heat transfer are discussed in presence of viscous dissipation, heat source/sink and nonlinear radiative heat flux. Design/methodology/approach Nonlinear flow expressions lead to ordinary ones through adequate similarity transformations. The ordinary differential system has been tackled through optimal homotopic method. The impact of different flow variables on the velocity field, entropy generation rate and temperature fields is graphically discussed. The surface drag force and heat transfer rate are numerically examined via various pertinent parameters. Findings By minimization of values of stretching parameter and Brinkman number, the entropy generation rate can be controlled. The entropy generation rate enhances for higher values of magnetic parameter, while the Bejan number is decreased via magnetic parameter. Originality/value No such work is yet published in the literature.


2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 841-848 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar Melhem ◽  
Ahmet Sahin ◽  
Bekir Yilbas

In the present study, second law analysis is introduced for circular cylinder confined between parallel planes. An analytical approach is adopted to study the effects of block age, Reynolds and Prandtl numbers on the entropy generation due to the laminar flow and heat transfer. Four different fluids are considered in the present analysis for comparison purposes. Heat transfer for the cylinder at an isothermal boundary condition is incorporated. In general, the entropy generation rate decreases as the blockage ratio decreases. In addition, the entropy generation rate increases with increasing Reynolds and Prandtl numbers. At a fixed Reynolds number, the effect of block age becomes more notice able for higher Prandtl number fluid. Similarly, for the same fluid, the effect of block age becomes more no tice able as the Reynolds number increases.


Author(s):  
Anupam Bhandari

Present model analyze the flow and heat transfer of water-based carbon nanotubes (CNTs) [Formula: see text] ferrofluid flow between two radially stretchable rotating disks in the presence of a uniform magnetic field. A study for entropy generation analysis is carried out to measure the irreversibility of the system. Using similarity transformation, the governing equations in the model are transformed into a set of nonlinear coupled differential equations in non-dimensional form. The nonlinear coupled differential equations are solved numerically through the finite element method. Variable viscosity, variable thermal conductivity, thermal radiation, and volume concentration have a crucial role in heat transfer enhancement. The results for the entropy generation rate, velocity distributions, and temperature distribution are graphically presented in the presence of physical and geometrical parameters of the flow. Increasing the values of ferromagnetic interaction number, Reynolds number, and temperature-dependent viscosity enhances the skin friction coefficients on the surface and wall of the lower disk. The local heat transfer rate near the lower disk is reduced in the presence of Harman number, Reynolds number, and Prandtl number. The ferrohydrodynamic flow between two rotating disks might be useful to optimize the use of hybrid nanofluid for liquid seals in rotating machinery.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahbuba Tasmin ◽  
Preetom Nag ◽  
Zarin T. Hoque ◽  
Md. Mamun Molla

AbstractA numerical study on heat transfer and entropy generation in natural convection of non-Newtonian nanofluid flow has been explored within a differentially heated two-dimensional wavy porous cavity. In the present study, copper (Cu)–water nanofluid is considered for the investigation where the specific behavior of Cu nanoparticles in water is considered to behave as non-Newtonian based on previously established experimental results. The power-law model and the Brinkman-extended Darcy model has been used to characterize the non-Newtonian porous medium. The governing equations of the flow are solved using the finite volume method with the collocated grid arrangement. Numerical results are presented through streamlines, isotherms, local Nusselt number and entropy generation rate to study the effects of a range of Darcy number (Da), volume fractions (ϕ) of nanofluids, Rayleigh numbers (Ra), and the power-law index (n). Results show that the rate of heat transfer from the wavy wall to the medium becomes enhanced by decreasing the power-law index but increasing the volume fraction of nanoparticles. Increase of porosity level and buoyancy forces of the medium augments flow strength and results in a thinner boundary layer within the cavity. At negligible porosity level of the enclosure, effect of volume fraction of nanoparticles over thermal conductivity of the nanofluids is imperceptible. Interestingly, when the Darcy–Rayleigh number $$Ra^*\gg 10$$ R a ∗ ≫ 10 , the power-law effect becomes more significant than the volume fraction effect in the augmentation of the convective heat transfer process. The local entropy generation is highly dominated by heat transfer irreversibility within the porous enclosure for all conditions of the flow medium. The particular wavy shape of the cavity strongly influences the heat transfer flow pattern and local entropy generation. Interestingly, contour graphs of local entropy generation and local Bejan number show a rotationally symmetric pattern of order two about the center of the wavy cavity.


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