The influence of frontal solidity on fully rough heat transfer modeled through an exposed and sheltered flow dichotomy
ORAL
Abstract
The challenge of predicting rough-wall heat transfer is embodied by the many factors which must be considered: the working fluid dependence (Prandtl number Pr), the flow regime (roughness Reynolds number k+), and further parameters required to characterize any given roughness. Here, we will focus on one particular geometric parameter in the frontal solidity, Λ. With direct numerical simulation data, we will show that in the fully rough regime (high-k+), the local heat transfer can be meaningfully decomposed into two distinct regions: exposed regions following a Reynolds Analogy behaviour and sheltered regions where the heat transfer is spatially-uniform. The total heat transfer follows as a sum of these mechanisms, with their contributions weighted by Λ. We will present a model for the total heat transfer by considering different heat transfer laws in exposed and sheltered regions.
*We acknowledge the financial support of the Australian Research Council (DP200100969 and LP180100712). This work was supported by computational resources provided by the Australian Government through the Pawley Supercomputing Centre and through the National Computational Infrastructure under the National Computational Merit Allocation Scheme and the Pawsey Energy and Resources Merit Allocation Scheme.
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Publication: Rowin et al. (in preparation, Journal of Fluid Mechanics): Effect of roughness density on turbulent forced convection
Presenters
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Kevin Zhong
- University of Melbourne