The Role of the Shear Work in Microtube Convective Heat Transfer: A Comparative Study

2015 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ramadan

Convective heat transfer of a thermally developing rarefied gas flow in a microtube with boundary shear work, viscous dissipation, and axial conduction is analyzed numerically for both constant wall temperature (CWT) and constant wall heat flux (CHF) boundary conditions. Analytical solutions for the fully developed flow conditions including the boundary shear work are also derived. The proper thermal boundary condition considering the sliding friction at the wall for the CHF case is implemented. The sliding friction is also included in the calculation of the wall heat flux for the CWT case. A comparative study is performed to quantify the effect of the shear work on heat transfer in the entrance—and the fully developed—regions for both gas cooling and heating. Results are presented in both graphical and tabular forms for a range of problem parameters. The results show that the effect of shear work on heat transfer is considerable and it increases with increasing both the Knudsen number and Brinkman number. Neglecting the shear work in a microtube slip flow leads to over- or underestimating the Nusselt number considerably. In particular, for the CWT case with fully developed conditions, the contribution of the shear work to heat transfer can be around 45% in the vicinity of the upper limit of the slip flow regime, regardless of how small the nonzero Brinkman number can be.

Author(s):  
Jennifer van Rij ◽  
Tim Ameel ◽  
Todd Harman

The effects of rarefaction on convective heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics are numerically evaluated for uniform wall heat flux rectangular microchannels. Results are obtained by numerically solving the momentum and energy equations with both first- and second-order slip velocity and temperature jump boundary conditions. The resulting velocity and temperature fields are then evaluated to obtain the microchannel Poiseuille and Nusselt numbers. In addition to the effects of rarefaction, the effects of aspect ratio, thermal creep flow, and viscous dissipation are investigated for locally fully developed Poiseuille and Nusselt numbers. The constant wall heat flux results obtained in this study are compared to constant wall temperature results obtained previously, using the same numerical algorithm, at various aspect ratios including the limiting case of parallel plate microchannels. In addition to supplying previously unreported data on slip flow convective heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics, these results verify the numerical algorithm for more complex future slip flow analyses.


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