Effect of Surface Radiation on Multiple Natural Convection Solutions in a Square Cavity Partially Heated from Below

2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (10) ◽  
pp. 1012-1021 ◽  
Author(s):  
El Hassan Ridouane ◽  
Mohammed Hasnaoui

A numerical study of natural convection with surface radiation in an air filled square enclosure with a centrally heated bottom wall and cooled upper wall is presented. The vertical walls and the rest of the bottom wall are assumed to be insulated. The problem is studied for Rayleigh numbers Ra, ranging from 103 to 4×106 and surfaces emissivity ε, varying from 0 to 1. The governing equations, written in terms of stream function-vorticity formulation, are solved using a finite difference approach. It is found that, under these heating/cooling conditions, three different steady-state solutions are possible in the ranges of the parameters considered. Results are presented detailing the occurrence of each steady-state solution and the effect of Ra and ε on its range of existence. It is found that the surface radiation alters significantly the existence ranges of the solutions. For each solution, convective and radiative contributions to the global heat transfer are also quantified for various Ra and ε. The influence of the heated surface dimension on the fluid flow and thermal patterns is also presented by comparing the present results against those obtained by the authors in an earlier study within a square cavity totally heated from below.

2017 ◽  
Vol 07 (03) ◽  
pp. 263-275
Author(s):  
Alhadj Hisseine Issaka Ali ◽  
Samba Dia ◽  
Mahamoud Y. Khayal ◽  
Cheikh Mbow ◽  
Aboubaker Chedikh Beye

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-53
Author(s):  
Abbas Jassem Jubear ◽  
Ali Hameed Abd

The heat sink with vertically rectangular interrupted fins was investigated numerically in a natural convection field, with steady-state heat transfer. A numerical study has been conducted using ANSYS Fluent software (R16.1) in order to develop a 3-D numerical model.  The dimensions of the fins are (305 mm length, 100 mm width, 17 mm height, and 9.5 mm space between fins. The number of fins used on the surface is eight. In this study, the heat input was used as follows: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 watts. This study focused on interrupted rectangular fins with a different arrangement and angle of the fins. Results show that the addition of interruption in fins in various arrangements will improve the thermal performance of the heat sink, and through the results, a better interruption rate as an equation can be obtained.


Author(s):  
Ajay Vallabh ◽  
P.S. Ghoshdastidar

Abstract This paper presents a steady-state heat transfer model for the natural convection of mixed Newtonian-Non-Newtonian (Alumina-Water) and pure Non-Newtonian (Alumina-0.5 wt% Carboxymethyl Cellulose (CMC)/Water) nanofluids in a square enclosure with adiabatic horizontal walls and isothermal vertical walls, the left wall being hot and the right wall cold. In the first case the nanofluid changes its Newtonian character to Non-Newtonian past 2.78% volume fraction of the nanoparticles. In the second case the base fluid itself is Non-Newtonian and the nanofluid behaves as a pure Non-Newtonian fluid. The power-law viscosity model has been adopted for the non-Newtonian nanofluids. A finite-difference based numerical study with the Stream function-Vorticity-Temperature formulation has been carried out. The homogeneous flow model has been used for modelling the nanofluids. The present results have been extensively validated with earlier works. In Case I the results indicate that Alumina-Water nanofluid shows 4% enhancement in heat transfer at 2.78% nanoparticle concentration. Following that there is a sharp decline in heat transfer with respect to that in base fluid for nanoparticle volume fractions equal to and greater than 3%. In Case II Alumina-CMC/Water nanofluid shows 17% deterioration in heat transfer with respect to that in base fluid at 1.5% nanoparticle concentration. An enhancement in heat transfer is observed for increase in hot wall temperature at a fixed volume fraction of nanoparticles, for both types of nanofluid.


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