Heat Transfer and Drag Reduction in Flows Over Riblet Mounted Surfaces

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan aus der Wiesche

The heat transfer in a channel with its lower wall mounted with streamwise V-shaped riblets is investigated numerically using a LES approach. Both laminar and turbulent flows are considered. At the riblet wall the turbulent drag is reduced by 6% in comparison to the smooth wall, whereas for laminar flow the riblets lead to a significant drag increase. The effect of riblets on heat transfer is investigated explicitly for small Prandtl numbers Pr and an appropriate correlation is derived. This correlation indicates that the Reynolds analogy is not violated in case of Pr = 1 despite the extraordinary turbulent drag reducing mechanism. The numerical results for drag reduction are in good agreement with available experimental and numerical data, and the results are faced with corresponding heat transfer results found in the literature.

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.35) ◽  
pp. 728
Author(s):  
Fatin Fatihah Abdul Majid ◽  
Nur Irmawati Om ◽  
Hasril Hasini

This paper describes CFD investigation of flow and heat transfer in liquid cool plate of a lithium-ion battery. The work aims to compare the cooling performance of an LCP at different fin arrangement for both laminar and turbulence conditions. Prior to the extensive simulation works, the prediction of surface and liquid temperature is first compared made by conducting an experiment using one of the fin arrangement. Good agreement was obtained indicating the ability of the current model to simulate the flow and heat transfer of similar domain at different fin arrangement. The results indicated that the behaviour of the flow and heat transfer is different at laminar and turbulence conditions. The louvered find arrangement showed superior performance in terms of the enhancement of heat transfer. A combination of optimum configurations for fin arrangement and flow condition has enabled excellence overall heat transfer performance of the system.


Author(s):  
Jeffrey P. Bons ◽  
Stephen T. McClain

Experimental measurements of heat transfer (St) are reported for low speed flow over scaled turbine roughness models at three different freestream pressure gradients: adverse, zero (nominally), and favorable. The roughness models were scaled from surface measurements taken on actual, in-service land-based turbine hardware and include samples of fuel deposits, TBC spallation, erosion, and pitting as well as a smooth control surface. All St measurements were made in a developing turbulent boundary layer at the same value of Reynolds number (Rex≅900,000). An integral boundary layer method used to estimate cf for the smooth wall cases allowed the calculation of the Reynolds analogy (2St/cf). Results indicate that for a smooth wall, Reynolds analogy varies appreciably with pressure gradient. Smooth surface heat transfer is considerably less sensitive to pressure gradients than skin friction. For the rough surfaces with adverse pressure gradient, St is less sensitive to roughness than with zero or favorable pressure gradient. Roughness-induced Stanton number increases at zero pressure gradient range from 16–44% (depending on roughness type), while increases with adverse pressure gradient are 7% less on average for the same roughness type. Hot-wire measurements show a corresponding drop in roughness-induced momentum deficit and streamwise turbulent kinetic energy generation in the adverse pressure gradient boundary layer compared with the other pressure gradient conditions. The combined effects of roughness and pressure gradient are different than their individual effects added together. Specifically, for adverse pressure gradient the combined effect on heat transfer is 9% less than that estimated by adding their separate effects. For favorable pressure gradient, the additive estimate is 6% lower than the result with combined effects. Identical measurements on a “simulated” roughness surface composed of cones in an ordered array show a behavior unlike that of the scaled “real” roughness models. St calculations made using a discrete-element roughness model show promising agreement with the experimental data. Predictions and data combine to underline the importance of accounting for pressure gradient and surface roughness effects simultaneously rather than independently for accurate performance calculations in turbines.


2019 ◽  
Vol 142 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mandana S. Saravani ◽  
Nicholas J. DiPasquale ◽  
Ahmad I. Abbas ◽  
Ryoichi S. Amano

Abstract This study presents findings on combined effects of Reynolds number and rotational effect for a two-pass channel with a 180-deg turn, numerically and experimentally. To have a better understanding of the flow behavior and to create a baseline for future studies, a smooth wall channel with the square cross section is used in this study. The Reynolds number varies between 6000 and 35,000. Furthermore, by changing the rotational speed, the maximum rotation number of 1.5 is achieved. For the numerical investigation, large eddy simulation (LES) is utilized. Results from the numerical study show a good agreement with the experimental data. From the results, it can be concluded that increasing both Reynolds number and rotational speed is in favor of the heat transfer coefficient enhancement, especially in the turn region.


Author(s):  
Jonathan K. Lai ◽  
Elia Merzari ◽  
Yassin A. Hassan ◽  
Aleksandr Obabko

Abstract Difficulty in capturing heat transfer characteristics for liquid metals is commonplace because of their low molecular Prandtl number (Pr). Since these fluids have very high thermal diffusivity, the Reynolds analogy is not valid and creates modeling difficulties when assuming a turbulent Prandtl number (Prt) of near unity. Baseline problems have used direct numerical simulations (DNS) for the channel flow and backward facing step to aid in developing a correlation for Prt. More complex physics need to be considered, however, since correlation accuracy is limited. A tight lattice square rod bundle has been chosen for DNS benchmarking because of its presence of flow oscillations and coherent structures even with a relatively simple geometry. Calculations of the Kolmogorov length and time scales have been made to ensure that the spatial-temporal discretization is sufficient for DNS. In order to validate the results, Hooper and Wood’s 1984 experiment has been modeled with a pitch-to-diameter (P/D) ratio of 1.107. The present work aims at validating first- and second-order statistics for the velocity field, and then analyzing the heat transfer behavior at different molecular Pr. The effects of low Pr flow are presented to demonstrate how the normalized mean and fluctuating heat transfer characteristics vary with different thermal diffusivity. Progress and future work toward creating a full DNS database for liquid metals are discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-386 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. Isaev ◽  
A. I. Leontiev ◽  
N. V. Kornev ◽  
E. Hassel ◽  
Ya. P. Chudnovskii

2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 250-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Brinkworth

In a PV cooling duct, heat transfer from the heated side to the cooling air flow takes place partly by convection at the walls and partly by radiation exchange between them. A method is developed for representing these effects in combination, avoiding the uncertainties and iterations involved in treating the two mechanisms as independent and parallel. Though the radiative element introduces two further parameters, the procedure has a straightforward closed form, convenient for routine engineering calculations. An approximation, that treats the radiation exchange as determined by the local wall temperatures, is validated by comparison with published results in which the diffusion due to the axial temperature distribution is fully represented. The method is applicable to both laminar and turbulent flows, employing coefficients already available in the literature. The incorporation of duct heat transfer within thermal models of the PV installation is discussed briefly, highlighting further areas which are being refined by on-going work.


Author(s):  
Sartaj S. Ghai ◽  
Myung S. Jhon ◽  
Cristina H. Amon ◽  
Yiao-Tee Hsia

Lattice Boltzmann method (LBM), is used to examine multi-length scale, confined heat conduction phenomena in solids for which sub-continuum regime is important. This paper describes the implementation of the method and its application to cases pertinent to data storage and electronic devices. Thin solid films with internal heat generation and with temperature difference across the boundaries are used as case studies to illustrate the benefits of the LBM. We compare our results with various hierarchical equations of heat transfer such as Fourier, Cattaneo, and Boltzmann transport equations, as well as with experimental and numerical data from the literature. Our results exhibit a good agreement with other methodologies in one and two dimensions, at a much lower computational effort.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document