Eddie Leonardi Memorial Lecture: “Natural Convection From Earth to Space”

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria Timchenko

This lecture is dedicated to the memory of Professor Eddie Leonardi, formerly International Heat Transfer Conference (IHTC-13) Secretary, who tragically died at an early age on December 14, 2008. Eddie Leonardi had a large range of research interests: he worked in both computational fluid dynamics/heat transfer and refrigeration and air-conditioning for over 25 years. However starting from his Ph.D. ‘A numerical study of the effects of fluid properties on natural convection’ awarded in 1984, one of his main passions has been natural convection and therefore the focus of this lecture will be on what Eddie Leonardi has achieved in numerical and experimental investigations of laminar natural convective flows. A number of examples will be presented which illustrate important difficulties of numerical calculations and experimental comparisons. Eddie Leonardi demonstrated that variable properties have important effects and significant differences occur when different fluids are used, so that dimensionless formulation is not appropriate when dealing with flows of fluids with significant changes in transport properties. Difficulties in comparing numerical solutions with either numerically generated data or experimental results will be discussed with reference to two-dimensional natural convection and three-dimensional Rayleigh–Bénard convection. For a number of years Eddie Leonardi was involved in a joint US-French-Australian research program—the MEPHISTO experiment on crystal growth—and studied the effects of convection on solidification and melting under microgravity conditions. Some results of this research will be described. Finally, some results of experimental and numerical studies of natural convection for building integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) applications in which Eddie Leonardi had been working in the last few years will be also presented.

Author(s):  
Victoria Timchenko

This lecture is dedicated to the memory of Professor Eddie Leonardi, formerly International Heat Transfer Conference (IHTC-13) Secretary, who tragically died at an early age on December 14, 2008. Eddie Leonardi had a large range of research interests: he worked in both computational fluid dynamics/heat transfer and refrigeration and air-conditioning for over 25 years. However starting from his PhD ‘A numerical Study of the effects of fluid properties on Natural Convection’ awarded in 1984, one of his main passions has been natural convection and therefore the focus of this lecture will be on what Eddie Leonardi has achieved in numerical and experimental investigations of laminar natural convective flows. A number of examples will be presented which illustrate important difficulties of numerical calculations and experimental comparisons. Eddie Leonardi demonstrated that variable properties have important effects and significant differences occur when different fluids are used, so that non-dimensionalisation is not an appropriate tool when dealing with fluids in thermally driven flows in which there are significant changes in transport properties. Difficulties in comparing numerical solutions with either numerically generated data or experimental results will be discussed with reference to two-dimensional natural convection and three-dimensional Rayleigh-Be´nard convection in bounded domains with conducting boundaries. For a number of years Eddie Leonardi was involved in a joint US-French-Australian research program — the MEPHISTO experiment on crystal growth — and studied the effects of convection on solidification and melting under microgravity conditions. The results of this research will be described. Finally, results of experimental and numerical studies of natural convection for Building Integrated Photovoltaic (BIPV) applications in which Eddie Leonardi had been working in the last few years will also be presented.


2016 ◽  
Vol 831 ◽  
pp. 83-91
Author(s):  
Lahoucine Belarche ◽  
Btissam Abourida

The three-dimensional numerical study of natural convection in a cubical enclosure, discretely heated, was carried out in this study. Two heating square sections, similar to the integrated electronic components, are placed on the vertical wall of the enclosure. The imposed heating fluxes vary sinusoidally with time, in phase and in opposition of phase. The temperature of the opposite vertical wall is maintained at a cold uniform temperature and the other walls are adiabatic. The governing equations are solved using Control volume method by SIMPLEC algorithm. The sections dimension ε = D / H and the Rayleigh number Ra were fixed respectively at 0,35 and 106. The average heat transfer and the maximum temperature on the active portions will be examined for a given set of the governing parameters, namely the amplitude of the variable temperatures a and their period τp. The obtained results show significant changes in terms of heat transfer, by proper choice of the heating mode and the governing parameters.


Author(s):  
Mo Yang ◽  
Jin Wang ◽  
Kun Zhang ◽  
Ling Li ◽  
Yuwen Zhang

Detailed numerical analysis is presented for three-dimensional natural convection heat transfer in annulus with an internal concentric slotted cylinder. The internal slotted cylinder and the outer annulus are maintained at uniform but different temperatures. Governing equations are discretized using control volume technique based on staggered grid formulation and solved using SIMPLE algorithm with QUICK scheme. Flow and heat transfer characteristics are investigated for a Rayleigh number range of 10 to 106 while Prandtl number (Pr) is taken to be 0.7. The results indicate, at Rayleigh numbers below 105, the system shows two dimensional flow and heat transfer characteristics. On the other hand, the flow and heat transfer shows three dimensional characteristics while for Rayleigh numbers greater than 5×105. Comparison with experimental results indicated that the numerical solutions by three dimensional model can obtain more accuracy than the numerical solutions by two dimensional model. Besides, Numerical results show that the average equivalent conductivity coefficient of natural convection heat transfer of this problem can be enhanced by as much as 30% while relative slot width is more than 0.1.


2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amin Bouraoui ◽  
Rachid Bessaïh

In this paper, a numerical study of three-dimensional (3D) natural convection air-cooling of two identical heat sources, simulating electronic components, mounted in a rectangular enclosure was carried out. The governing equations were solved by using the finite-volume method based on the SIMPLER algorithm. The effects of Rayleigh number Ra, spacing between heat sources d, and aspect ratios Ax in x-direction (horizontal) and Az in z-direction (transversal) of the enclosure on heat transfer were investigated. In steady state, when d is increased, the heat transfer is more important than when the aspect ratios Ax and Az are reduced. In oscillatory state, the critical Rayleigh numbers Racr for different values of spacing between heat sources and their aspect ratios, at which the flow becomes time dependent, were obtained. Results show a strong relation between heat transfers, buoyant flow, and boundary layer. In addition, the heat transfer is more important at the edge of each face of heat sources than at the center region.


1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (2) ◽  
pp. 370-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Le Peutrec ◽  
G. Lauriat

Numerical solutions are obtained for fluid flows and heat transfer rates for three-dimensional natural convection in rectangular enclosures. The effects of heat losses at the conducting side walls are investigated. The problem is related to the design of cavities suitable for visualizing the flow field. The computations cover Rayleigh numbers from 103 to 107 and the thermal conductance of side walls ranging from adiabatic to commonly used glazed walls. The effect of the difference between the ambient temperature and the average temperature of the two isothermal walls is discussed for both air and water-filled enclosures. The results reported in the paper allow quantitative evaluations of the effects of heat losses to the surroundings, which are important considerations in the design of a test cell.


Author(s):  
Patrick H. Oosthuizen ◽  
Murat Basarir ◽  
David Naylor

Heat transfer from the room-side surface of a window covered by a plane blind to the surrounding room has been considered. The window is at a higher temperature than the air in the room. There is an open gap between the blind system and the window at the top of the window and the effect of the size of this gap on the window-to-air heat transfer rate has been numerically examined. Three-dimensional flow has been considered. The flow has been assumed to be steady and laminar and it has been assumed that the fluid properties are constant except for the density change with temperature which gives rise to the buoyancy forces, this having been treated by using the Boussinesq approach. It has also been assumed that the flow is symmetrical about the vertical centre-plane of the window. The solution has been obtained by numerically solving the full three-dimensional form of the governing equations, these equations being written in terms of dimensionless variables. Results have only been obtained for a Prandtl number of 0.7. The effects of the other dimensionless parameters on the window Nusselt number have been numerically determined.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Mohamed Sannad ◽  
Abourida Btissam ◽  
Belarche Lahoucine

This article consists of a numerical study of natural convection heat transfer in three-dimensional cavity filled with nanofluids. This configuration is heated by a partition maintained at a hot constant and uniform temperature TH. The right and left vertical walls are kept at a cold temperature TC while the rest is adiabatic. The fluid flow and heat transfer in the cavity are studied for different sets of the governing parameters, namely, the nanofluid type, the Rayleigh number Ra = 103, 104, 105, and 106, and the volume fraction Ф varying between Ф = 0 and 0.1. The obtained results show a positive effect of the volume fraction and the Rayleigh number on the heat transfer improvement. The analysis of the results related to the heat transfer shows that the copper-based nanofluid guarantees the best thermal transfer. In addition, the increase of the heating section size and Ra leads to an increased amount of heat. Similarly, increasing the volume fraction improves the intensification of the flow and increases the heat exchange.


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