scholarly journals Augmentation of convection heat transfer from a horizontal cylinder in a vented square enclosure with variation of lower opening size

2021 ◽  
pp. 176-176
Author(s):  
Omar Ali ◽  
Raid Mahmood ◽  
Mohammed Al-Brifkani

Natural and mixed convection heat transfer from a horizontal cylinder placed in a vented square enclosure has been investigated using numerical method with ANSYS Fluent 16.1 software for laminar and turbulent flow. Navier- Stokes equations and energy equation with standard k-? transport equation turbulence model have been used to simulate both flow and thermal behaviors. The operating conditions covered a range of the Rayleigh number from 103 to 106 and the Richardson number range between 0.1 and 100 at variable sizes of the lower open vent with constant upper opening size. The Nusselt numbers, velocity lines and isotherms are presented to display the flow and thermal behaviors. The results displayed that the average Nusselt number is affected by Rayleigh number, Richardson number, enclosure width and lower opening size. The Nusselt number is enhanced by controlling the lower opening size. The maximum enhancement range for Nusselt number is between 20-85% depending on the Rayleigh number, Richardson number, enclosure width to cylinder diameter, and lower opening size. The velocity lines and isotherms are directly affected by the Rayleigh number, Richardson number, enclosure width to cylinder diameter, and lower opening size.

1981 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 630-637 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Sparrow ◽  
G. M. Chrysler

Experiments were performed to investigate the natural convection heat transfer characteristics of a short isothermal horizontal cylinder attached to an equi-temperature vertical plate. The apparatus was designed so that the cylinder could be attached to the plate at any one of three positions along the height of the plate. Two cylinders were employed (one at a time) during the course of the experiments, one of which had a length equal to its diameter while the other had a length that was half the diameter. At each attachment position and for each cylinder, the Rayleigh number (based on the cylinder diameter) ranged from 1.4 × 104 to 1.4 × 105. It was found that the interaction of the flat plate boundary layer with the cylinder brought about a reduction of the cylinder Nusselt number relative to that for the classical case of the long isolated horizontal cylinder without end effects. The respective deviations of the Nusselt numbers for the shorter and longer of the participating cylinders from the literature correlation for the isolated cylinder were twenty percent and ten percent. At a given Rayleigh number, the cylinder Nusselt number was quite insensitive to the position of the cylinder along the plate, with the typical data spread due to height being in the 5–7 percent range. The Nusselt number was also rather insensitive to cylinder length, showing a ten percent increase as the length-diameter ratio was increased from one-half to one.


2000 ◽  
Vol 122 (4) ◽  
pp. 679-692 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A/K Abu-Hijleh

The problem of laminar natural convection heat transfer from a horizontal cylinder with multiple, equally spaced, low conductivity baffles on its outer surface was investigated numerically. The effect of several combinations of number of baffles and baffle height on the average Nusselt number was studied over a wide range of Rayleigh numbers. The computed velocity and temperature fields were also used to calculate the local and global entropy generation for different cylinder diameters. The results showed that there was an optimal combination of a number of baffles and baffle height for minimum Nusselt number for a given value of the Rayleigh number. Short baffles slightly increased the Nusselt number at small values of the Rayleigh number. The global entropy generation increased monotonically with increasing Rayleigh number and decreased with increasing cylinder diameter, baffle height, and number of baffles. [S0022-1481(00)01203-2]


Author(s):  
Mehdi Ashjaee ◽  
Tooraj Yousefi

Laminar free convection heat transfer from vertical and inclined arrays of horizontal isothermal cylinders in air was investigated experimentally and numerically. Experiments were carried out using Mach-Zehnder interferometer and the FLUENT code was used for numerical study. Investigation was performed for vertical and horizontal cylinder spacing from 2 to 5 and to 2 cylinder diameter respectively. The Rayleigh number based on the cylinder diameter varied between 103 and 3×103. The effect of vertical and horizontal cylinder spacing and Rayleigh number on the local heat transfer from each individual cylinder was investigated. It was seen that the local heat transfer coefficient of each cylinder strongly depends on its position relative to the others. This variation of the local heat transfer coefficient was explained by the interaction of plume’s temperature and velocity profiles.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sattar Aljobair ◽  
Akeel Abdullah Mohammed ◽  
Israa Alesbe

Abstract The natural convection heat transfer and fluid flow characteristic of water based Al2O3 nano-fluids in a symmetrical and unsymmetrical corrugated annulus enclosure has been studied numerically using CFD. The inner cylinder is heated isothermally while the outer cylinder is kept constant cold temperature. The study includes eight models of corrugated annulus enclosure with constant aspect ratio of 1.5. The governing equations of fluid motion and heat transfer are solved using stream-vorticity formulation in curvilinear coordinates. The range of solid volume fractions of nanoparticles extends from PHI=0 to 0.25, and Rayleigh number varies from 104 to 107. Streamlines, isotherms, local and average Nusselt number of inner and outer cylinder has been investigated in this study. Sixty-four correlations have been deduced for the average Nusselt number for the inner and outer cylinders as a function of Rayleigh number have been deduced for eight models and five values of volume fraction of nano particles with an accuracy range 6-12 %. The results show that, the average heat transfer rate increases significantly as particle volume fraction and Rayleigh number increase. Also, increase the number of undulations in unsymmetrical annuli reduces the heat transfer rates which remain higher than that in symmetrical annuli. There is no remarkable change in isotherms contour with increase of volume fraction of nanofluid.


Author(s):  
Tooraj Yousefi ◽  
Sajjad Mahmoodi Nezhad ◽  
Masood Bigharaz ◽  
Saeed Ebrahimi

Steady state two-dimensional free convection heat transfer in a partitioned cavity with adiabatic horizontal and isothermally vertical walls and an adiabatic partition has been investigated experimentally. The experiments have been carried out using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The effects of the angel of the adiabatic partition and Rayleigh number on the heat transfer from the heated wall are investigated. Experiments are performed for the values of Rayleigh number based on the cavity side length in the range between 1.5×105 to 4.5×105 and various angle of the partition with respect to horizon from 0° to 90°. The results indicate that at each angle of the adiabatic partition, by increasing the Rayleigh number, the average Nusselt number and heat transfer increase and at each Rayleigh number, the maximum and the minimum heat transfer occur at θ=45° and θ=90°, respectively. A correlation based on the experimental data for the average Nusselt number of the heated wall as a function of Rayleigh number and the angel of the adiabatic partition is presented in the aforementioned ranges.


2012 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 1317-1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ching-Chang Cho ◽  
Her-Terng Yau ◽  
Cha’o-Kuang Chen

This paper investigates the natural convection heat transfer enhancement of Al2O3-water nanofluid in a U-shaped cavity. In performing the analysis, the governing equations are modeled using the Boussinesq approximation and are solved numerically using the finite-volume numerical method. The study examines the effects of the nanoparticle volume fraction, the Rayleigh number and the geometry parameters on the mean Nusselt number. The results show that for all values of the Rayleigh number, the mean Nusselt number increases as the volume fraction of nanoparticles increases. In addition, it is shown that for a given length of the heated wall, extending the length of the cooled wall can improve the heat transfer performance.


Author(s):  
Jong K. Lee ◽  
Seung D. Lee ◽  
Kune Y. Suh

During a severe accident, the reactor core may melt and be relocated to the lower plenum to form a hemispherical pool. If there is no effective cooling mechanism, the core debris may heat up and the molten pool run into natural convection. Natural convection heat transfer was examined in SIGMA RP (Simulant Internal Gravitated Material Apparatus Rectangular Pool). The SIGMA RP apparatus comprises a rectangular test section, heat exchanger, cartridge heaters, cooling jackets, thermocouples and a data acquisition system. The internal heater heating method was used to simulate uniform heat source which is related to the modified Rayleigh number Ra′. The test procedure started with water, the working fluid, filling in the test section. There were two boundary conditions: one dealt with both walls being cooled isothermally, while the other had to with only the upper wall being cooled isothermally. The heat exchanger was utilized to maintain the isothermal boundary condition. Four side walls were surrounded by the insulating material to minimize heat loss. Tests were carried out at 1011 < Ra′ < 1013. The SIGMA RP tests with an appropriate cartridge heater arrangement showed excellent uniform heat generation in the pool. The steady state was defined such that the temperature fluctuation stayed within ±0.2 K over a time period of 5,000 s. The conductive heat transfer was dominant below the critical Rayleigh number Ra′c, whereas the convective heat transfer picked up above Ra′c. In the top and bottom boundary cooling condition, the upward Nusselt number Nuup was greater than the downward Nusselt number Nudn. In particular, the discrepancy between Nuup and Nudn widened with Ra′. The Nuup to Nudn ratio was varied from 7.75 to 16.77 given 1.45×1012 < Ra′ < 9.59×1013. On the other hand, Nuup was increased in absence of downward heat transfer for the case of top cooling. The current rectangular pool testing will be extended to include circular and spherical pools.


1986 ◽  
Vol 108 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Karim ◽  
B. Farouk ◽  
I. Namer

This paper reports an experimental study of natural convection heat transfer from a horizontal isothermal cylinder between vertical adiabatic walls. Some of the industrial applications of this problem are cooling and casing design of electronic equipment, nuclear reactor safety, and heat extraction from solar thermal storage devices. Heat transfer from 3.81 cm and 2.54 cm diameter cylinders was determined by measuring the electric power supplied to the heater, which was placed inside the cylinders, and correcting for radiation and end losses. Average Nusselt numbers were determined for a Rayleigh number range of 2 × 103 to 3 × 105 and wall spacing to cylinder diameter ratios of 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, and ∞. It was found that the confinement of a heated horizontal cylinder by adiabatic walls enhances the heat transfer from the cylinder continuously. This effect is more pronounced at low Rayleigh numbers. A maximum relative enhancement of 45 percent was obtained over the range of experimental conditions studied. Schlieren and flow visualization studies were conducted at selected values of Rayleigh number and wall spacing to cylinder diameter ratios to further explain the heat transfer characteristics and the associated flow physics of the present problem.


2020 ◽  
Vol 847 ◽  
pp. 114-119
Author(s):  
Barbie Leena Barhoi ◽  
Ramesh Chandra Borah ◽  
Sandeep Singh

The present study relates to numerical investigation of natural convection heat transfer in a nanofluid filled square enclosure. One side of the enclosure is maintained at high temperature and the other side at a low temperature; while the top and bottom sides are adiabatic. The commercial CFD software ANSYS-FLUENT© was used to solve this numerical problem with the governing differential equations discretized by a control volume approach. nanofluids of Cu-water, Al2O3-water and TiO2-water have been simulated for a range of Rayleigh numbers and volume fractions. The results were obtained in the form of streamlines and isotherms. Interpretations of the results are done based on heat transfer rates, volume fraction, Rayleigh number and Nusselt number. It is to be noted that addition of nanoparticles enhances the heat transfer rate. It is also observed that the Nusselt number is highly affected by volume fraction and Rayleigh number.


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