Numerical Simulation of Natural Convection Flow in a Cube With a Horizontal Heated Strip

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esam M. Alawadhi

Natural convection flow in a cube with a heated strip is solved numerically. The heated strip is attached horizontally to the front wall and maintained at high temperature, while the entire opposite wall is maintained at low temperature. The heated strip simulates an array of electronic chips The Rayleigh numbers of 104, 105, and 106 are considered in the analysis and the heated strip is horizontally attached to the wall. The results indicate that the heat transfer strongly depends on the position of the heated strip. The maximum Nusselt number can be achieved if the heater is placed at the lower half of the vertical wall. Increasing the Rayleigh number significantly promotes heat transfer in the enclosure. Flow streamlines and temperature contours are presented, and the results are validated against published works.

2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Mustafizur Rahman ◽  
M. Arif Hasan Mamun ◽  
M. Masum Billah ◽  
Saidur Rahman

In this study natural convection flow in a square cavity with heat generating fluid and a finite size heater on the vertical wall have been investigated numerically. To change the heat transfer in the cavity, a heater is placed at different locations on the right vertical wall of the cavity, while the left wall is considered to be cold. In addition, the top and bottom horizontal walls are considered to be adiabatic and the cavity is assumed to be filled with a Bousinessq fluid having a Prandtl number of 0.72. The governing mass, momentum and energy equations along with boundary conditions are expressed in a normalized primitive variables formulation. Finite Element Method is used in solution of the normalized governing equations. The parameters leading the problem are the Rayleigh number, location of the heater, length of the heater and heat generation. To observe the effects of the mentioned parameters on natural convection in the cavity, we considered various values of heater locations, heater length and heat generation parameter for different values of Ra varying in the range 102 to 105. Results are presented in terms of streamlines, isotherms, average Nusselt number at the hot wall and average fluid temperature in the cavity for the mentioned parameters. The results showed that the flow and thermal fields through streamlines and isotherms as well as the rate of heat transfer from the heated wall in terms of Nusselt number are strongly dependent on the length and locations of the heater as well as heat generating parameter.DOI: 10.3329/jname.v7i2.3292 


1988 ◽  
Vol 110 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Litsek ◽  
A. Bejan

The natural convection flow and heat transfer between two enclosures that communicate through a vertical opening is studied by considering the evolution of an enclosed fluid in which the left half is originally at a different temperature than the right half. Numerical experiments show that at sufficiently high Rayleigh numbers the ensuing flow is oscillatory. This and other features are anticipated on the basis of scale analysis. The time scales of the oscillation, the establishment of thermal stratification, and eventual thermal equilibrium are determined and tested numerically. At sufficiently high Rayleigh numbers the heat transfer between the communicating zones is by convection, in accordance with the constant-Stanton-number trend pointed out by Jones and Otis (1986). The range covered by the numerical experiments is 102 < Ra < 107, 0.71 < Pr < 100, and 0.25 < H/L < 1.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (8) ◽  
pp. 1060-1068 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nader Ben Cheikh ◽  
Brahim Ben Beya ◽  
Taieb Lili

The effect of aspect ratio on natural convection flow in a cavity submitted to periodic temperature boundary, is investigated numerically. The temperature of the heated wall is either maintained constant or varied sinusoidally with time while the temperature of the opposite vertical wall is maintained constant. The results are given for a range of varied parameters as Rayleigh number (5×103⩽Ra⩽106), cavity aspect ratio (1∕6⩽A⩽8), and period of the sinusoidally heated wall (1⩽τ⩽1600). The amplitude of oscillation (a=0.8) and the Prandtl number (Pr=0.71) were kept constant. The results obtained in the steady state regime show that the heat transfer averaged over the cold wall is maximum when the aspect ratio is in the range 1⩽A⩽2. In the case of a periodic temperature boundary, it is shown that the deviation between the mean heat transfer and the heat transfer of the constant heated case is larger for shallow cavities.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Fayz -Al- Asad ◽  
M. M. A. Sarker ◽  
M. J. H. Munshi

Numerical study of natural convection flow in a hexagonal enclosure with a single vertical fin attached to its heated bottom wall has been carried out. Finite element method based Galerkin weighted residual technique is used to solve the governing equation. The horizontal walls of the enclosure are kept at constant high temperature while the inclined walls are kept at constant cold temperature. A vertical heated fin is attached to the hot bottom wall with a length  at a position  from the left surface having thickness . The Prandlt number for the flow inside the enclosure is 0.71. The results of the problem are presented in graphical and tabular forms and discussed. The fin efficiency and temperature distribution were examined. The numerical results indicate the strong influence of the mentioned parameters on the flow structure and heat transfer as well as temperature. A set of graphical results are presented in terms of streamlines, isotherms contour, temperature profiles, velocity profiles, local Nusselt number and average Nusselt number. The obtained results indicated that the heat transfer rate increases with the increase of Rayleigh number in a hexagonal enclosure. The results are validated comparing with the published works.


2015 ◽  
Vol 789-790 ◽  
pp. 462-470
Author(s):  
Emel Evren-Selamet ◽  
Ahmet Selamet

Natural convection flow of air and molten gallium in square and elbow-shaped enclosures is studied by a two-dimensional numerical scheme developed by the lead author. The dependence of the flow field and Nusselt number (Nu) on the Rayleigh (Ra) and Prandtl (Pr) numbers is examined in both enclosures. Results are obtained with sufficiently large Rayleigh numbers to observe transition from steady to damped or undamped oscillatory, and chaotic flow. Constant and oscillatory heat transfer rates are compared in both enclosures for air (Pr=0.71) and molten gallium (Pr=0.024).


2000 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Ho ◽  
F. J. Tu

An experimental and numerical investigation is presented concerning the natural convection of water near its maximum-density in a differentially heated rectangular enclosure at high Rayleigh numbers, in which an oscillatory convection regime may arise. The water in a tall enclosure of Ay=8 is initially at rest and at a uniform temperature below 4°C and then the temperature of the hot vertical wall is suddenly raised and kept at a uniform temperature above 4°C. The cold vertical wall is maintained at a constant uniform temperature equal to that of the initial temperature of the water. The top and bottom walls are insulated. Using thermally sensitive liquid crystal particles as tracers, flow and temperature fields of a temporally oscillatory convection was documented experimentally for RaW=3.454×105 with the density inversion parameter θm=0.5. The oscillatory convection features a cyclic sequence of onset at the lower quarter-height region, growth, and decay of the upward-drifting secondary vortices within counter-rotating bicellular flows in the enclosure. Two and three-dimensional numerical simulations corresponding to the visualization experiments are undertaken. Comparison of experimental with numerical results reveals that two-dimensional numerical simulation captures the main features of the observed convection flow.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 1064-1081
Author(s):  
Basant Kumar Jha ◽  
Michael O. Oni

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of time-periodic thermal boundary conditions on natural convection flow in a vertical micro-annulus.Design/methodology/approachAnalytical solution in terms of Bessel’s function and modified Bessel’s function of order 0 and 1 is obtained for velocity, temperature, Nusselt number, skin friction and mass flow rate.FindingsIt is established that the role of Knudsen number and fluid–wall interaction parameter is to decrease fluid temperature, velocity, Nusselt number and skin friction.Research limitations/implicationsNo laboratory practical or experiment was conducted.Practical implicationsCooling device in electronic panels, card and micro-chips is frequently cooled by natural convection.Originality/valueIn view of the amount of works done on natural convection in microchannel, it becomes interesting to investigate the effect that time-periodic heating has on natural convection flow in a vertical micro-annulus. The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of time-periodic thermal boundary conditions on natural convection flow in a vertical micro-annulus.


Author(s):  
Mustapha Faraji ◽  
El Mehdi Berra

Abstract This paper reported the mathematical modeling and numerical simulation of natural convection flow of Cu/water nanofluid in a square enclosure using the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). The cavity is heated from below by heat source and cooled by the top wall. The vertical walls are adiabatic. After validating the numerical code against the numerical and experimental data, simulations were performed for different Rayleigh numbers (104–0.5 × 107), nanoparticles volume fractions (0–8%), and cavity inclination angle (0 deg–90 deg). The effects of the studied parameters on the streamlines, on isotherms distributions within the enclosure, and on the local and average Nusselt numbers are investigated. It was found that heat transfer and fluid flow structure depend closely on the nanoparticle concentration. Results show differences in stream separation between a base fluid and the nanofluid. Also, adding small nanoparticles fractions, less than 6%, to the base fluid enhances the heat transfer for higher Rayleigh numbers and cavity inclination angle less than 30 deg. It is concluded that the optimal dilute suspension of copper nanoparticles can be applied as a passive way to enhance heat transfer in natural convection engineering applications.


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