Classical Plane Couette Flow with Viscous Dissipation and Variable Fluid Properties

2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 437-442
Author(s):  
Asterios Pantokratoras
Author(s):  
Abiodun O. Ajibade ◽  
Yusuf A. Bichi

The present article investigates natural convection Couette flow through a vertical porous channel due to combined effects of thermal radiation and variable fluid properties. The fluid considered in the model is of an optically dense with all its physical properties assumed constant except for its viscosity and thermal conductivity which are temperature dependent. The flow equations are simplified using non-linear Rosseland heat diffusion and as a consequence it resulted to high non-linearity of the flow equations. Adomian decomposition method (ADM) is used to solve the emanating equations and the influences of the essential controlling physical parameters involved are presented on graphs, tables and were discussed. In the course of investigation; it was found that both the fluid velocity and its temperature within the channel were seen to increase with growing thermal radiation parameter while the fluid’s velocity and temperature were observed to descend with increase in thermal conduction of the fluid. Similarly; the fluid velocity was found to increase with decrease in the fluid viscosity.  To validate the accuracy of the present investigation; the results obtained here in have been compared with a published work where good agreement was found.


2010 ◽  
Vol 88 (8) ◽  
pp. 607-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Abd El-Aziz

An analysis is performed to study the effect of variable viscosity and variable thermal conductivity on the flow and heat transfer of a thin viscoelastic liquid (obeying Walters' liquid B model) film on a horizontal unsteady stretching sheet taking into account the effect of viscous dissipation. The fluid viscosity is assumed to decrease exponentially with temperature but the thermal conductivity is assumed to vary as a linear function of temperature. Numerical solutions are obtained for some representative values of the viscosity and thermal conductivity variation parameters, unsteadiness parameter, and Eckert number. Typical temperature and velocity profiles, dimensionless film thickness, free-surface velocity and temperature, local skin-friction coefficient, and the local surface heat flux are obtained for a wide range of governing parameters. In general, it is found that a viscoelastic fluid is more sensitive to the variable fluid properties effect than a Newtonian fluid. Also, for constant and (or) variable fluid properties, the film thickness and the local surface heat flux of a viscoelastic fluid is small compared to that of a Newtonian fluid. For all values of the variable viscosity parameter and for both viscoelastic and Newtonian fluid films, the viscous dissipation effect increases the free-surface temperature significantly whereas it reduces the heat transfer rate markedly. However, viscous dissipation does not influence the velocity profiles of both Newtonian and viscoelastic liquid films impressively although the film thickness changes noticeably.


1976 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. S. El-Ariny ◽  
A. Aziz

A numerical procedure has been developed to solve the problem of entrance region heat transfer in steady, plane Couette flow of an incompressible viscous fluid. The formulation includes the effects of additional pressure gradient and viscous dissipation. The analysis leads to an eigenvalue problem which is solved numerically by an adaptation of Rutishauser technique. Numerical results are presented for two sets of boundary conditions: (i) fixed but different temperatures at the lower and upper plates and (ii) fixed temperature at the lower plate and zero flux at the upper plate. The effects of additional pressure gradient and viscous dissipation on the spatial development of temperature profile and Nusselt number are shown. For (i), Bruin neglected viscous dissipation and obtained an analytical solution of the energy equation. However, due to the difficulty in computing higher eigenvalues, the solution was truncated to a few terms. Besides avoiding this difficulty, the present approach offers computational simplicity and yields highly accurate results. A comparison of present results with those of Bruin shows that the latter are significantly in error. To confirm the accuracy of the numerical procedure, the method is tested for slug flow model which admits simple analytical solution. Excellent agreement is exhibited between numerical and analytical results throughout the entrance region.


Equipment ◽  
2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Hane ◽  
T. Tsukahara ◽  
K. Iwamoto ◽  
H. Kawamura

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