scholarly journals A NUMERICAL STUDY OF THE EFFECT OF SPACED TRIANGULAR SURFACE WAVES ON NATURAL CONVECTIVE HEAT TRANSFER FROM AN UPWARD FACING HEATED HORIZONTAL ISOTHERMAL SURFACE

Author(s):  
Patrick H. Oosthuizen ◽  
Abdulrahim Kalendar
Author(s):  
Patrick H. Oosthuizen

A numerical study of natural convective heat transfer from an upward facing, heated horizontal isothermal surface imbedded in a large flat adiabatic surface has been undertaken. On the heated surface is a series of triangular shaped waves. Laminar, transitional, and turbulent flow conditions have been considered. The flow has been assumed to be two-dimensional and steady. The fluid properties have been assumed constant except for the density change with temperature giving rise to the buoyancy forces. This was with treated using the Boussinesq approach. The numerical solution has been obtained using the commercial CFD solver ANSYS FLUENT©. The k-epsilon turbulence model with full account being taken of buoyancy force effects has been employed. The heat transfer rate from the heated surface expressed in terms of a Nusselt number is dependent on the Rayleigh number, the number of waves, the height of the waves relative to the width of the heated surface, and the Prandtl number. This study obtained results for a Prandtl number of 0.74 which is effectively the value for air. An investigation of the effect of the Rayleigh number, the dimensionless height of the surface waves, and the number of surface waves on the Nusselt number has been undertaken.


Author(s):  
Patrick H. Oosthuizen

A numerical study of natural convective heat transfer from a heated isothermal vertical plane surface has been considered. There are relatively short horizontal adiabatic surfaces normal to the isothermal surface at the top and bottom of this isothermal surface these horizontal adiabatic wall surfaces then being joined to vertical adiabatic surfaces. There is a thin surface that offers no resistance to heat transfer that is parallel to the vertical isothermal surface and which partly covers this surface. The situation considered is a simplified model of a window, which is represented by the vertical isothermal wall section, that is recessed in a frame, which is represented by the horizontal adiabatic surfaces, which is mounted in a vertical wall, which is represented by the vertical adiabatic surfaces, and which is exposed to a large surrounding room. The window is covered by a partially open plane blind which is represented by the vertical thin surface that offers no resistance to heat transfer. The flow has been assumed to be laminar and two-dimensional. Fluid properties have been assumed constant except for the density change with temperature that gives rise to the buoyancy forces. The governing equations, written in dimensionless form, have been solved using a commercial finite-element based code. Results have only been obtained for a Prandtl number of 0.7.


Author(s):  
Patrick H. Oosthuizen ◽  
Jane T. Paul

Natural convective heat transfer from a wide isothermal plate which has a “wavy” surface, i.e., has a surface which periodically rises and falls, has been numerically studied. The surface waves run in the horizontal direction, i.e., are normal to the direction of flow over the surface, and have relatively small amplitude. Attention has been restricted to the case where the waves have a rectangular cross-sectional shape. The plate is, in general, inclined to the vertical, consideration only being given to inclination angles at which the heated plate is facing upwards. The range of Rayleigh numbers considered extends from values that for a non-wavy vertical plate would be associated with laminar flow to values that would be associated with fully turbulent flow. The flow has been assumed to be steady and fluid properties have been assumed constant except for the density change with temperature that gives rise to the buoyancy forces, this being treated by means of the Boussinesq approximation. The Reynolds averaged governing equations in conjunction with a standard k-epsilon turbulence model with buoyancy force effects fully accounted for have been used in obtaining the solution. The governing equations have been solved using the commercial cfd code FLUENT. The solution has the following parameters: (i) the Rayleigh number based on the height of the heated plate, (ii) the Prandtl number, (iii) the ratios of the amplitude of the surface waviness and of the pitch of the surface waves to the height of the plate, and (iv) the angle of inclination of the plate to the vertical. Results have only been obtained for a Prandtl number of 0.74. The effects of the other dimensionless variables on the mean surface Nusselt number have been numerically studied.


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