© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G1 Fluids Review TRN Heat Transfer
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G2 Fluids Review TRN Outline Introduction Modes of heat transfer Typical design problems Coupling of fluid flow and heat transfer Conduction Convection Radiation
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G3 Fluids Review TRN Introduction Heat transfer is the study of thermal energy (heat) flows Heat always flows from “hot” to “cold” Examples are ubiquitous: heat flows in the body home heating/cooling systems refrigerators, ovens, other appliances automobiles, power plants, the sun, etc.
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G4 Fluids Review TRN Modes of Heat Transfer Conduction - diffusion of heat due to temperature gradient Convection - when heat is carried away by moving fluid Radiation - emission of energy by electromagnetic waves q convection q conduction q radiation
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G5 Fluids Review TRN Typical Design Problems To determine: overall heat transfer coefficient - e.g., for a car radiator highest (or lowest) temperature in a system - e.g., in a gas turbine temperature distribution (related to thermal stress) - e.g., in the walls of a spacecraft temperature response in time dependent heating/cooling problems - e.g., how long does it take to cool down a case of soda?
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G6 Fluids Review TRN Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow As a fluid moves, it carries heat with it -- this is called convection Thus, heat transfer can be tightly coupled to the fluid flow solution Additionally: The rate of heat transfer is a strong function of fluid velocity Fluid properties may be strong functions of temperature (e.g., air)
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G7 Fluids Review TRN Conduction Heat Transfer Conduction is the transfer of heat by molecular interaction In a gas, molecular velocity depends on temperature hot, energetic molecules collide with neighbors, increasing their speed In solids, the molecules and the lattice structure vibrate
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G8 Fluids Review TRN Fourier’s Law “heat flux is proportional to temperature gradient” where k = thermal conductivity in general, k = k(x,y,z,T,…) hot wallcold wall 1 temperature profile x heat conduction in a slab units for q are W/m 2
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G9 Fluids Review TRN Generalized Heat Diffusion Equation If we perform a heat balance on a small volume of material… … we get: thermal diffusivity T heat conduction in heat conduction out heat generation rate of change of temperature heat cond. in/out heat generation
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G10 Fluids Review TRN Boundary Conditions Heat transfer boundary conditions generally come in three types: T = 300K specified temperature Dirichlet condition q = 20 W/m 2 specified heat flux Neumann condition q = h(T amb -T body ) external heat transfer coefficient Robin condition T body
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G11 Fluids Review TRN Conduction Example Compute the heat transfer through the wall of a home: shingles k=0.15 W/m 2 -K sheathing k=0.15 W/m 2 -K fiberglas insulation k=0.004 W/m 2 -K 2x6 stud k=0.15 W/m 2 -K sheetrock k=0.4 W/m 2 -K T out = 20° FT out = 68° F Although slight, you can see the “thermal bridging” effect through the studs
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G12 Fluids Review TRN Convection Heat Transfer Convection is movement of heat with a fluid E.g., when cold air sweeps past a warm body, it draws away warm air near the body and replaces it with cold air often, we want to know the heat transfer coefficient, h (next page) flow over a heated block
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G13 Fluids Review TRN Newton’s Law of Cooling T body average heat transfer coefficient (W/m 2 -K) q
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G14 Fluids Review TRN Heat Transfer Coefficient h is not a constant, but h = h( T) Three types of convection: Natural convection fluid moves due to buoyancy Forced convection flow is induced by external means Boiling convection body is hot enough to boil liquid Typical values of h: 4 - 4,000 W/m 2 -K , ,000 T hot T cold T hot T cold T hot
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G15 Fluids Review TRN Looking in more detail... Just as there is a viscous boundary layer in the velocity distribution, there is also a thermal boundary layer y velocity boundary layer edge thermal boundary layer edge
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G16 Fluids Review TRN Nusselt Number Equate the heat conducted from the wall to the same heat transfer in convective terms: Define dimensionless quantities: Then rearrange to get: Nusselt number “dimensionless heat transfer coefficient” conductivity of the fluid
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G17 Fluids Review TRN Energy Equation Generalize the heat conduction equation to include effect of fluid motion: Assumes incompressible fluid, no shear heating, constant properties, negligible changes in kinetic and potential energy Can now solve for temperature distribution in boundary layer Then calculate h using Fourier’s law: From calculated temperature distribution
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G18 Fluids Review TRN Correlations for Heat Transfer Coefficient As an alternative, can use correlations to obtain h E.g., heat transfer from a flat plate in laminar flow: where the Prandtl number is defined as: Typical values are: Pr = 0.01 for liquid metals Pr = 0.7 for most gases Pr = 6 for water at room temperature
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G19 Fluids Review TRN Convection Examples Developing flow in a pipe (constant wall temperature) x bulk fluid temperature heat flux from wall T
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G20 Fluids Review TRN Convection Examples Natural convection (from a heated vertical plate) u T TwTw gravity As the fluid is warmed by the plate, its density decreases and a buoyant force arises which induces flow in the vertical direction. The force is equal to: The dimensionless group that governs natural convection is the Rayleigh number:
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G21 Fluids Review TRN Radiation Heat Transfer Thermal radiation is emission of energy as electromagnetic waves Intensity depends on body temperature and surface characteristics Important mode of heat transfer at high temperatures Can also be important in natural convection problems Examples: toaster, grill, broiler fireplace sunshine
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G22 Fluids Review TRN Surface Characteristics q W/m 2 (incident energy flux) q (reflected) q (transmitted) q (absorbed) absorptance reflectance transmittance translucent slab
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G23 Fluids Review TRN Black Body Radiation A “black body”: is a model of a perfect radiator absorbs all energy that reaches it; reflects nothing therefore = 1, = = 0 The energy emitted by a black body is the theoretical maximum: This is Stefan-Boltzmann law; is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant (5.6697e-8 W/m 2 -K 4 )
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G24 Fluids Review TRN “Real” Bodies Real bodies will emit less radiation than a black body: Example: radiation from a small body to its surroundings both the body and its surroundings emit thermal radiation the net heat transfer will be from the hotter to the colder emissivity (between 0 and 1)
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G25 Fluids Review TRN When is radiation important? Radiation exchange is significant in high temperature problems: e.g., combustion Radiation properties can be strong functions of chemical composition, especially CO 2, H 2 O Radiation heat exchange is difficult solve (except for simple configurations) — we must rely on computational methods
© Fluent Inc. 8/10/2015G26 Fluids Review TRN Heat Transfer — Summary Heat transfer is the study of thermal energy (heat) flows: conduction convection radiation The fluid flow and heat transfer problems can be tightly coupled through the convection term in the energy equation when properties ( , ) are dependent on temperature While analytical solutions exist for some simple problems, we must rely on computational methods to solve most industrially relevant applications Can I go back to sleep now?