Effect of Acoustic Excitation on the Heat Transfer to an Impinging Air Jet

Author(s):  
Tadhg S. O’Donovan ◽  
Darina B. Murray

Impinging air jets are known as a method of achieving particularly high heat transfer coefficients and are employed in many applications including the cooling of electronics, manufacturing processes such as grinding, etc. The current investigation is concerned with acoustically exciting an impinging air jet to enhance its overall cooling capacity. Distributions of the heat transfer to an axially impinging air jet for a range of Reynolds numbers (Re) from 10000 to 30000, non-dimensional nozzle to impingement surface heights (H/D) from 0.5 to 2 and excitation frequencies (f) that range from 0.5 to 1 times the natural frequency of the jet are presented. For this low range of nozzle to impingement surface spacings it has been shown that the heat transfer distribution exhibits a peak at the stagnation point and secondary peaks at a radial location that is both excitation frequency and Reynolds number dependent. Distributions of the fluctuating component of the heat transfer coefficient are also presented for the range of parameters tested. These have been used, along with spectral analysis of the heat flux signal, to discern whether local variations in heat transfer are due to changes in the local vortex flow or to changes in the mean flow structure of the impinging jet.

Author(s):  
H Hardisty ◽  
M Can

High velocity, impinging, air jets are commonly used for heating, cooling, drying etc., because of the high heat transfer coefficients which occur in the impingement region. To provide data for design, a variety of slot nozzles has been tested to determine the effect on heat transfer of both nozzle shape and slot width. A small heat flux meter was used to measure local values of the heat transfer coefficient in the impingement zone, and these local values were integrated to yield space average values. As a necessary preliminary to the heat transfer investigation, the discharge coefficients of the nozzles were measured. From the first test series it was found that heat transfer results from differently shaped nozzles could be satisfactorily correlated provided that the effective slot width was used to characterize nozzle shape. From the second test series it was found that for geometrically similar arrangements, narrower slots gave higher heat transfer coefficients.


Author(s):  
Thomas L. Lupton ◽  
Darina B. Murray ◽  
Anthony J. Robinson

The decreasing physical size of microchips accompanied by the increasing heat flux to be dissipated has led to the study of possible new innovative electronic cooling methods. Jet cooling has been successfully implemented in a variety of industrial applications and its capacity to maintain high heat transfer rates demonstrates its vast potential for incorporation into future cooling applications. The reduction in size of electronic components leads to the inevitability of jets used in this area being subjected to a degree of jet confinement. In this study the effects of confinement on the local heat transfer characteristics were experimentally investigated for a turbulent, fully developed, axisymmetric, compressible and submerged miniature air jet impinging normally onto an ohmically heated flat plate. The resulting surface temperature distribution was recorded via infrared thermography. Two 1mm diameter nozzles were examined, one confined and one unconfined. Tests were conducted for nozzle exit to impingement surface spacings of 1, 2, 4 and 6 jet diameters and for Reynolds numbers of 7,000 and 12,000 which corresponded to Mach numbers of 0.3 and 0.5. The heat transfer analysis accounts for compressibility effects by using the adiabatic wall temperature as the reference temperature in calculation of the heat transfer coefficients. Local heat transfer distributions are presented as a function of radial distance from the stagnation point. The results obtained indicate that confinement contributes to a flatter distribution of heat transfer over the impingement surface.


2004 ◽  
Vol 126 (4) ◽  
pp. 528-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. B. Sathe ◽  
B. G. Sammakia

The results of a study of a new and unique high-performance air-cooled impingement heat sink are presented. An extensive numerical investigation of the heat sink performance is conducted and is verified by experimental data. The study is relevant to cooling of high-power chips and modules in air-cooled environments and applies to workstations or mainframes. In the study, a rectangular jet impinges on a set of parallel fins and then turns into cross flow. The effects of the fin thickness, gap nozzle width and fin shape on the heat transfer and pressure drop are investigated. It is found that pressure drop is reduced by cutting the fins in the central impingement zone without sacrificing the heat transfer due to a reduction in the extent of the stagnant zone. A combination of fin thicknesses of the order of 0.5 mm and channel gaps of 0.8 mm with appropriate central cutout yielded heat transfer coefficients over 1500 W/m2 K at a pressure drop of less than 100 N/m2, as is typically available in high-end workstations. A detailed study of flow-through heat sinks subject to the same constraints as the impingement heat sink showed that the flow-through heat sink could not achieve the high heat transfer coefficients at a low pressure drop.


Author(s):  
Jessica Sheehan ◽  
Avram Bar-Cohen

Heat transfer to an evaporating refrigerant and/or dielectric liquid in a microgap channel can provide very high heat transfer coefficients and volumetric cooling rates. Recent studies at Maryland have established the dominance of the annular flow regime in such microgap channels and related the observed high-quality peak of an M-shaped heat transfer coefficient curve to the onset of local dryout. The present study utilizes infrared thermography to locate such nascent dryout regions and operating conditions. Data obtained with a 210 micron microgap channel, operated with a mass flux of 195.2 kg/m2-s and heat fluxes of 10.3 to 26 W/cm2 are presented and discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (9) ◽  
pp. 934-944 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Li ◽  
D. Keith Hollingsworth ◽  
Larry C. Witte

A laser-based method has been developed to measure the thickness of the liquid microlayer between a cap-shaped sliding bubble and an inclined heated wall. Sliding vapor bubbles are known to create high heat transfer coefficients along the surfaces against which they slide. The details of this process remain unclear and depend on the evolution of the microlayer that forms between the bubble and the surface. Past experiments have used heat transfer measurements on uniform-heat-generation surfaces to infer the microlayer thickness through an energy balance. These studies have produced measurements of 20–100 μm for refrigerants and for water, but they have yet to be confirmed by a direct measurement that does not depend on a first-law closure. The results presented here are direct measurements of the microlayer thickness made from a reflectance-based fiber-optic laser probe. Details of the construction and calibration of the probe are presented. Data for saturated FC-87 and a uniform-temperature surface inclined at 2 deg to 15 deg from the horizontal are reported. Millimeter-sized spherical bubbles of FC-87 vapor were injected near the lower end of a uniformly heated aluminum plate. The laser probe yielded microlayer thicknesses of 22–55 μm for cap-shaped bubbles. Bubble Reynolds numbers range from 600 to 4800, Froude numbers from 0.9 to 1.7, and Weber numbers from 2.6 to 47. The microlayer thickness above cap-shaped bubbles was correlated to a function of inclination angle and a bubble shape factor. The successful correlation suggests that this data set can be used to validate the results of detailed models of the microlayer dynamics.


Author(s):  
Huitao Yang ◽  
Hamn-Ching Chen ◽  
Je-Chin Han

The blade tip is one area that experiences high heat transfer due to the strong tip leakage flow. One of the common methods is to apply film cooling on tip to reduce the heat load. To get a better film cooling, different arrangements of film holes on the plane and squealer tips have been numerically studied with the Reynolds stress turbulence model and non-equilibrium wall function. The present study investigated three types of film-hole arrangements: 1) the camber arrangement: the film cooling holes are located on the mid-camber line of tips, 2) the upstream arrangement: the film holes are located upstream of the tip leakage flow and high heat transfer region, and 3) two rows arrangement: the camber and upstream arrangements are combined under the same amount of coolant. In addition, three different blowing ratios (M = 0.5, 1 and 1.5), are evaluated for film cooling effectiveness and heat transfer coefficient. The predicted heat transfer coefficients are in good agreement with the experimental data, but the film cooling effectiveness is over predicted on the blade tips.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Corrente ◽  
O. Manca ◽  
S. Nardini ◽  
D. Ricci ◽  
G. Masullo

Heat transfer in fluids is very important in many industrial heating and cooling equipments. Convective heat transfer can be enhanced passively by changing flow geometry, boundary conditions or by increasing thermal conductivity of the fluid. Another possibility to increase heat transfer with gas is to employ extended surfaces. When gas flows in a tube, septa with one or more openings can be used as fins. Furthermore, if the openings are arranged to give a spiral motion around the cylinder axis wall-fluid contact area increases. As a consequence the presence of the septa can significantly augment pressure drops. In this paper a numerical investigation is carried out on forced convection in circular isothermal tubes. The fluid is air and ideal gas model is employed. Septa are introduced and several shapes and arrangements are analyzed. The investigation is accomplished by means of the commercial code Fluent. A turbulence model is used. Results are presented in terms of temperature and velocity fields, local and average heat transfer coefficients and pressure drops. The aim of this study is to find the shape and arrangement of septa such to give high heat transfer coefficients and low pressure drops.


Author(s):  
Neal R. Herring ◽  
Stephen D. Heister

This study provides a review of the current state-of-the-art in compact heat exchangers and their application to gas turbine thermal management. Specifically, the challenges and potential solutions for a cooled cooling air system using the aircraft fuel as a heat sink were analyzed. As the sensible heat absorbed by the fuel in future engines is increased, the fuel will be exposed to increasingly hotter temperatures. This poses a number of design challenges for fuel-air heat exchangers. The most well known challenge is fuel deposition or coking. Another problem encountered at high fuel temperatures is thermo-acoustic oscillations. Thermo-acoustic oscillations have been shown to occur in many fluids when heated near the critical point, yet the mechanism of these oscillations is poorly understood. In some cases these instabilities have been strong enough cause failure in the thin walled tubes used in heat exchangers. For the specific application of a fuel-air heat exchanger, the advantages of a laminar flow device are discussed. These devices make use of the thermal entry region to achieve high heat transfer coefficients. To increase performance further, heat transfer enhancement techniques were reviewed and the feasibility for aerospace heat exchangers was analyzed. Two of the most basic techniques for laminar flow enhancement include tube inserts and swirl flow devices. Additionally, the effects of these devices on both coking and instabilities have been assessed.


Author(s):  
Oksana Lytvynenko ◽  
Irina Myhaylova

Due to the importance of the problems of implementing energy-saving technologies in modern conditions, one of the promising areas is the use of gas turbines for combined heat and power generation. One of the areas of effective development and technical re-equipment is the widespread use of highly economical combined steam and gas plants and gas turbines. The operation of the gas turbine unit “Aquarius” SE NPCG “Zorya-Mashproekt” with the injection of steam into the combustion chamber, which operates on the advanced cycle A-STIG and has in its circuit equipment for water regeneration, condensed from a vapor-gas mixture is considered. For condensation of steam from the vapor-gas mixture, a contact condenser-gas cooler is used, which is a mixing heat exchanger of complex design. The efficiency of heat transfer is determined by the design of the nozzle, namely, the developed heat transfer surface, small hydraulic supports, high heat transfer coefficients. An important aspect is the overall dimensions, which must be within certain limits. In the work it is offered to execute a design of the condenser in the form of a packed column. Different types of nozzles are considered to choose the best option. As a result of thermal design calculation of the contact capacitor, it is proposed to use Rashiga rings (15152) as a nozzle, which provide the lowest height of the nozzle at the required diameter of the device.


Large heat transfer rates are always desired for rocket propulsion applications as high heat loads are associated at the nozzle exit. Different strategies have been employed in order to have high heat transfer coefficients including use of liquid nitrogen, spray cooling etc. ISRO has planned to use aluminium based nano-particles with kerosene in order to cool launching vehicles including GSLV Mk III as it is the heaviest rocket that can carry large payloads. Recently, ISRO has announced to install its own International Space Station (ISS) in future and in such applications larger payloads are to be carried by the rocket. In this work, an analytical study on the thermodynamic properties of the aluminium nano-particles based kerosene nanofluid has been done and an attempt has also been made to develop a temperature and pressure dependent correlation that can be used in computational analysis of thrust chambers while film/regenerative cooling.


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