Effects of anisotropy and solid/liquid thermal conductivity ratio during inverted Bridgman growth

2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julaporn Kaenton ◽  
Victoria Timchenko ◽  
Mohammed El Ganaoui ◽  
Graham de Vahl Davis ◽  
Eddie Leonardi ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Peixin Ye ◽  
Dinggen Li ◽  
Zihao Yu ◽  
Haifeng Zhang

In this paper, a modified lattice Boltzmann model that incorporates the effect of heat capacity is adopted to study the effects of a centered conducting body on natural convection of non-Newtonian fluid in a square cavity with time-periodic temperature distribution. The effects of power-law index, Rayleigh number, heat capacity ratio, thermal conductivity ratio, body size, temperature pulsating period and the temperature pulsating amplitude on fluid flow and heat transfer are analyzed in detail. The results showed that the increase of Rayleigh number and thermal conductivity ratio as well as the decrease of power-law index can strengthen both transient and global heat transfer, while the increase of heat capacitance of fluid to the solid wall can only enhance the transient heat transfer, and has little effect on the overall heat transfer. Further, the increase of body size will reduce both the transient heat transfer ratio and the overall heat transfer ratio. In addition, the decrease of temperature pulsating period can enhance the transient heat transfer, but it will slightly weaken the overall heat transfer. Finally, the results show that both the transient and the overall heat transfer ratio are increased with the increase of temperature pulsating amplitude.


Author(s):  
Abderrahim Bourouis ◽  
Abdeslam Omara ◽  
Said Abboudi

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide a numerical study of conjugate heat transfer by mixed convection and conduction in a lid-driven enclosure with thick vertical porous layer. The effect of the relevant parameters: Richardson number (Ri=0.1, 1, 10) and thermal conductivity ratio (Rk=0.1, 1, 10, 100) are investigated. Design/methodology/approach – The studied system is a two dimensional lid-driven enclosure with thick vertical porous layer. The left vertical wall of the enclosure is allowed to move in its own plane at a constant velocity. The enclosure is heated from the right vertical wall isothermally. The left and the right vertical walls are isothermal but temperature of the outside of the right vertical wall is higher than that of the left vertical wall. Horizontal walls are insulated. The governing equations are solved by finite volume method and the SIMPLE algorithm. Findings – From the finding results, it is observed that: for the two studied cases, heat transfer rate along the hot wall is a decreasing function of thermal conductivity ratio irrespective of Richardson numbers contrary to the heat transfer rate along the fluid-porous layer interface which is an increasing function of thermal conductivity ratio. At forced convection dominant regime, the difference between heat transfer rate for upward and downward moving wall is insensitive to the thermal conductivity ratio. For downward moving wall, average Nusselt number is higher than that of upward moving wall. Practical implications – Some applications: building applications, furnace design, nuclear reactors, air solar collectors. Originality/value – From the bibliographic work and the authors’ knowledge, the conjugate mixed convection in lid-driven partially porous enclosures has not yet been investigated which motivates the present work that represent a continuation of the preceding investigations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 2845-2859 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Dadsetani ◽  
Ghanbar Ali Sheikhzadeh ◽  
Mohammad Reza Hajmohammadi ◽  
Mohammad Reza Safaei

Purpose Electronic components’ efficiency is the cornerstone of technology progress. The cooling process used for electronic components plays a main role in their performance. Embedded high-conductivity material and provided microchannel heat sink are two common cooling methods. The former is expensive to implement while the latter needs micro-pump, which consumes energy to circulate the flow. The aim of this study is providing a new configuration and method for improving the performance of electronic components. Design/methodology/approach To manage these challenges and improve the cooling efficiency, a novel method named Hybrid is presented here. Each method's performance has been investigated, and the results are widely compared with others. Considering the micro-pump power, the supply of the microchannel flow and the thermal conductivity ratio (thermal conductivity ratio is defined as the ratio of thermal conductivity of high thermal conductivity material to the thermal conductivity of base solid), the maximum disk temperature of each method was evaluated and compared to others. Findings The results indicated that the Hybrid method can reduce the maximum disk temperature up to 90 per cent compared to the embedded high thermal conductivity at the same thermal conductivity ratio. Moreover, the Hybrid method further reduces the maximum disk temperature up to 75 per cent compared to the microchannel, at equivalent power consumption. Originality/value The information in this research is presented in such a way that designers can choose the desired composition, the limited amount of consumed energy and the high temperature of the component. According to the study of radial-hybrid configuration, the different ratio of microchannel and materials with a high thermal conductivity coefficient in the constant cooling volume was investigated. The goal of the investigation was to decrease the maximum temperature of a plate on constant energy consumption. This aim has been obtained in the radial-hybrid configuration.


Author(s):  
Yasin Varol ◽  
Hakan F. Oztop ◽  
Ioan Pop

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to study the conjugate heat transfer via natural convection and conduction in a triangular enclosure filled with a porous medium.Design/methodology/approachDarcy flow model was used to write governing equations with Boussinesq approximation. The transformed governing equations are solved numerically using a finite difference technique. It is assumed that the enclosure consists of a conducting bottom wall of finite thickness, an adiabatic (insulated) vertical wall and a cooled inclined wall.FindingsFlow patterns, temperature and heat transfer were presented at different dimensionless thickness of the bottom wall, h, from 0.05 to 0.3, different thermal conductivity ratio between solid material and fluid, k, from 0.44 to 283 and Rayleigh numbers, Ra, from 100 to 1000. It is found that both thermal conductivity ratio and thickness of the bottom wall can be used as control parameters for heat transport and flow field.Originality/valueIt is believed that this is the first paper on conduction‐natural convection in porous media filled triangular enclosures with thick wall. In the last years, most of the researchers focused on regular geometries such as rectangular or square cavity bounded by thick wall.


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 790-795 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kiwan ◽  
M. A. Al-Nimr

This work introduces a novel method that enhances the heat transfer from a given surface by using porous fins. The thermal performance of porous fins is estimated and compared with that of the conventional solid fins. It is found that using porous fin of porosity ε may enhance the performance of an equal size conventional solid fin and, as a result, save 100 ε percent of the fin material. The effect of different design and operating parameters on the porous fin thermal performance is investigated. Examples of these parameters are Ra number, Da number, and thermal conductivity ratio. It is found that more enhancement in the porous fin performance may be achieved as Ra increases especially at large Da numbers. Also, it is found that there is an optimum limit for the thermal conductivity ratio beyond which there is no further improvement in the fin performance.


2014 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 1813-1830 ◽  
Author(s):  
Majid Ashouri ◽  
Mohammad Behshad Shafii ◽  
Hossein Rajabi Kokande

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to study the influence of magnetic field on natural convection inside the enclosures partially filled with conducting square solid obstacles. Also, the effect of thermal conductivity ratio between the solid and fluid materials is investigated for different number of solid blocks. Design/methodology/approach – The dimensionless governing equations are transformed into sets of algebraic equations using finite volume method and momentum equations are solved by the SIMPLE algorithm with the hybrid scheme. The validation of the numerical code was conducted by comparing the results of average Nusselt number with previously published works. Findings – The results indicate that both the magnetic field and solid blocks can significantly affect the flow and temperature fields. It is shown that for a given Rayleigh number, variation of Nusselt number might be increasing or decreasing with change in solid-to-fluid thermal conductivity ratio depending on magnetic field strength and number of solid blocks. Originality/value – No work has been reported previously on the effect of magnetic field on natural convection flow in a cavity partially filled with square solid blocks. The numerical analysis of conductivity ratio between the solid and fluid materials under the effect of magnetic field have been carried out for the first time.


Author(s):  
Ich-Long Ngo ◽  
Chan Byon

Augmenting the thermal conductivity of polymer materials is actively being attempted by adding one or more fillers with higher thermal conductivity into matrix materials. In this study, the effective thermal conductivity of composite materials was investigated numerically under the effects of the thermal conductivity ratio between two particle fillers and the matrix material, and the particle volume fractions. The results indicate that the effective thermal conductivity of composites containing hybrid filler is higher than that of single filler. The effective thermal conductivity increases with the increase of thermal conductivity ratio between two fillers in general when this ratio is less than unity, and the maximum effective thermal conductivity approaches when this ratio is less than and close to unity. However, this trend is changed when this ratio is greater than unity. Based on the results, a generalized correlation is proposed as a function of four non-dimensional parameters. The results obtained in this study can be widely utilized for predicting the thermal conductivity of hybrid-filler-nanoparticle composite materials.


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