Heat Transfer Between Colliding Surfaces and Particles

2011 ◽  
Vol 134 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Like Li ◽  
Renwei Mei ◽  
James F. Klausner ◽  
David W. Hahn

Collisional heat transfer between two contacting curved surfaces is investigated computationally using a finite difference method and analytically using various asymptotic methods. Transformed coordinates that scale with the contact radius and the diffusion length are used for the computations. Hertzian contact theory of elasticity is used to characterize the contact area as a function of time. For an axisymmetric contact area, a two-dimensional self-similar solution for the thermal field during the initial period of contact is obtained, and it serves as an initial condition for the heat transfer simulation throughout the entire duration of collision. A two-dimensional asymptotic heat transfer result is obtained for small Fourier number. For finite Fourier numbers, local analytical solutions are presented to elucidate the nature of the singularity of the thermal field and heat flux near the contact point. From the computationally determined heat transfer during the collision, a closed-form formula is developed to predict the heat transfer as a function of the Fourier number, the thermal diffusivity ratio, and the thermal conductivity ratio of the impacting particles.

Author(s):  
Like Li ◽  
Renwei Mei ◽  
James F. Klausner ◽  
David W. Hahn

Collisional heat transfer between two contacting curved surfaces is investigated computationally using the finite difference method and analytically using various asymptotic methods. Transformed coordinates that scale with the contact radius and the diffusion length are used for the computations. Hertzian contact theory of elasticity is used to characterize the contact area as a function of time. For an axisymmetric contact area, a two-dimensional self-similar solution for the thermal field during the initial period of contact is obtained and it serves as an initial condition for the heat transfer simulation throughout the entire duration of collision. A modified 2-D asymptotic result of heat transfer at small Fourier number is obtained. For finite Fourier numbers the heat transfer during the collision has been determined computationally. A closed-form formula is developed to predict the heat transfer as a function of the Fourier number, the thermal diffusivity ratio and conductivity ratio of the impacting particles.


Author(s):  
Hiroshi Suzuki ◽  
Shinpei Maeda ◽  
Yoshiyuki Komoda

Two-dimensional numerical computations have been performed in order to investigate the development characteristics of flow and thermal field in a flow between parallel plates swept by a visco-elastic fluid. In the present study, the effect of the cavity number in the domain and of Reynolds number was focused on when the geometric parameters were set constant. From the results, it is found that the flow penetration into the cavities effectively causes the heat transfer augmentation in the cavities in any cavity region compared with that of water case. It is also found that the development of thermal field in cases of the present visco-elastic fluid is quicker compared with that of water cases. The present heat transfer augmentation technique using Barus effect of a visco-elastic fluid is effective in the range of low Reynolds number.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (01) ◽  
pp. 1841002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladislav A. Yastrebov

In this paper, we use a deterministic multi-asperity model to investigate the elastic contact of rough spheres. Synthetic rough surfaces with controllable spectra were used to identify individual asperities, their locations and curvatures. The deterministic analysis enables to capture both particular deformation modes of individual rough surfaces and also statistical deformation regimes, which involve averaging over a big number of roughness realizations. Two regimes of contact area growth were identified: the Hertzian regime at light loads at the scale of a single asperity, and the linear regime at higher loads involving multiple contacting asperities. The transition between the regimes occurs at the load which depends on the second and the fourth spectral moments. It is shown that at light indentation the radius of circumference delimiting the contact area is always considerably larger than Hertzian contact radius. Therefore, it suggests that there is no scale separation in contact problems at light loads. In particular, the geometrical shape cannot be considered separately from the surface roughness at least for approaching greater than one standard roughness deviation.


2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Puzhen Gao ◽  
Stéphane Le Person ◽  
Michel Favre-Marinet

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