A channel flow controlled by a synthetic jet array

Author(s):  
P. Dancova ◽  
H. C. de Lange ◽  
Tomas Vít ◽  
D. Sponiar ◽  
Zdenek Travnicek
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Min Zhang ◽  
Taiho Yeom ◽  
Youmin Yu ◽  
Longzhong Huang ◽  
Terrence W. Simon ◽  
...  

Synthetic jet arrays driven by a piston-diaphragm structure with a translational motion were fabricated. A piezo-bow actuator generating large translational displacements at a high working frequency was used to drive the jets. Vibration analysis with a laser vibrometer shows the peak-to-peak displacement of the piston inside the jet cavity of about 0.5 mm at the second resonant vibrational frequency of 1,240 Hz. In this driving condition, the peak velocity of a 20-orifice jet array reaches 45 m/s for each orifice with a total power consumption of 1.6 W. Heat transfer performance of the jet array was tested on a 100-mm-long single channel of a 26-channel heat sink. The synthetic jet flow impinges on the tips of the fins. A cross flow through the channel enters from the two ends of the channel, and exits from the middle. Results show that the activation of jets generates a unit-average heat transfer enhancement of 9.3% when operating with a channel flow velocity of 14.7 m/s, and 23.1% when operating with a channel flow velocity of 8 m/s. The effects of various choices for orifice configuration and different dimensionless distances from the fin tips, z/d, on jet performance were evaluated. By decreasing the length of the fin channel from 100 mm to 89 mm and reducing the orifice number of the jet array from 20 to 18, jet peak velocities of about 54 m/s can be obtained with the same power consumption, and a heat transfer enhancement of 31.0% from the jets can be achieved on the 89-mm-long heat sink channel with a flow velocity of 8 m/s.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 893-898
Author(s):  
Zhixian Ye ◽  
Yiyang Jiang ◽  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Jianfeng Zou ◽  
Yao Zheng

2016 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 02014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra Dančová ◽  
Jan Novosád ◽  
Tomáš Vít ◽  
Zdeněk Trávníček

Author(s):  
Longzhong Huang ◽  
Terrence Simon ◽  
Min Zhang ◽  
Youmin Yu ◽  
Mark North ◽  
...  

A synthetic jet is an intermittent jet which issues through an orifice from a closed cavity over half of an oscillation cycle. Over the other half, the flow is drawn back through the same orifice into the cavity as a sink flow. The flow is driven by an oscillating diaphragm, which is one wall of the cavity. Synthetic jets are widely used for heat transfer enhancement since they are effective in disturbing and thinning thermal boundary layers on surfaces being cooled. They do so by creating an intermittently-impinging flow and by carrying to the hot surface turbulence generated by breakdown of the shear layer at the jet edge. The present study documents experimentally and computationally heat transfer performance of an array of synthetic jets used in a heat sink designed for cooling of electronics. This heat sink is comprised of a series of longitudinal fins which constitute walls of parallel channels. In the present design, the synthetic jet flow impinges on the tips of the fins. In the experiment, one channel of a 20-channel heat sink is tested. A second flow, perpendicular to the jet flow, passes through the channel, drawn by a vacuum system. Surface- and time-averaged heat transfer coefficients for the channel are measured, first with just the channel flow active then with the synthetic jets added. The purpose is to assess heat transfer enhancement realized by the synthetic jets. The multiple synthetic jets are driven by a single diaphragm which, in turn, is activated by a piezoelectrically-driven mechanism. The operating frequency of the jets is 1250 Hz with a cycle-maximum jet velocity of 50 m/s, as measured with a miniature hot-film anemometer probe. In the computational portion of the present paper, diaphragm movement is driven by a piston, simulating the experimental conditions. The flow is computed with a dynamic mesh using the commercial software package ANSYS FLUENT. Computed heat transfer coefficients show a good match with experimental values giving a maximum difference of less than 10%. The effects of amplitude and frequency of the diaphragm motion are documented. Changes in heat transfer due to interactions between the synthetic jet flow and the channel flow are documented in cases of differing channel flow velocities as well as differing jet operating conditions. Heat transfer enhancement obtained by activating the synthetic jets can be as large as 300% when the channel flow is of a low velocity compared to the synthetic jet peak velocity (as low as 4 m/s in the present study).


2015 ◽  
Vol 137 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adnan Qayoum ◽  
P. K. Panigrahi

This investigation reports the combined effect of synthetic jet and a surface-mounted rib on heat transfer in a square cross-section channel flow. The rib height to hydraulic diameter ratio is equal to 0.1625. The Reynolds number of the channel has been set equal to 5500. The synthetic jet actuator has been operated at different actuation voltages with different amplitude modulation frequencies. At actuation voltage of 55 V, the maximum overall heat transfer is enhanced by 132.6% compared with smooth duct flow.


Author(s):  
Hoonil Park ◽  
Jun-Ho Cho ◽  
Joonho Lee ◽  
Dong-Ho Lee ◽  
Kyu-Hong Kim

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