Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Yoav Peles
Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
When you finish studying this chapter, you should be able to:
Understand the physical mechanism of natural convection, Derive the governing equations of natural convection, and obtain the dimensionless Grashof number by nondimensionalizing them, Evaluate the Nusselt number for natural convection associated with vertical, horizontal, and inclined plates as well as cylinders and spheres, Examine natural convection from finned surfaces, and determine the optimum fin spacing, Analyze natural convection inside enclosures such as double-pane windows, and Consider combined natural and forced convection, and assess the relative importance of each mode.
Buoyancy forces are responsible for the fluid motion in natural convection. Viscous forces appose the fluid motion. Buoyancy forces are expressed in terms of fluid temperature differences through the volume expansion coefficient 1 V 1 = (1 K ) (9-3) = V T P T P
Viscous Force Buoyancy Force
1 1 = ( ) T T T
( at constant P )
(9-4)
or
= (T T )
1 = T
( at constant P )
(9-5)
(1/K )
(9-6)
The acceleration in the x-direction is obtained by taking the total differential of u(x, y)
du u dx u dy ax = = + dt x dt y dt u u ax =u +v x y
(9-8)
m in Zoo
P Fx = dy ( dx 1) dx ( dy 1) g ( dx dy 1) x y 2u P = 2 g ( dx dy 1) (9-9) x y
Substituting Eqs. 98 and 99 into Eq. 97 and dividing by dxdy1 gives the conservation of momentum in the x-direction
u u 2u P u + v = 2 g y y x x
(9-10)
The x-momentum equation in the quiescent fluid outside the boundary layer (setting u = 0) P (9-11) = g () x Noting that
v<<u in the boundary layer and thus v/ x v/y 0, and there are no body forces (including gravity) in the ydirection,
u u 2u u + v = 2 + ( ) g y y x
(9-12)
Substituting Eq. 9-5 it into Eq. 9-12 and dividing both sides by gives
u u 2u u +v = 2 + g (T T ) x y y
(9-13)
The momentum equation involves the temperature, and thus the momentum and energy equations must be solved simultaneously. The set of three partial differential equations (the continuity, momentum, and the energy equations) that govern natural convection flow over vertical isothermal plates can be reduced to a set of two ordinary nonlinear differential equations by the introduction of a similarity variable.
The dimensionless parameter in the brackets represents the natural convection effects, and is called the Grashof number GrL
GrL =
g (Ts T ) L3 c
(9-15)
Viscous force
GrL=
The flow regime in natural convection is governed by the Grashof number GrL > 109 flow is turbulent
The simple empirical correlations for the average Nusselt number in natural convection are of the form hLc n n (9-16) Nu = C ( GrL Pr ) = C RaL k Where RaL is the Rayleigh number g (Ts T ) L3 c Pr RaL = GrL Pr = 2
(9-17)
The values of the constants C and n depend on the geometry of the surface and the flow regime (which depend on the Rayleigh number). All fluid properties are to be evaluated at the film temperature Tf = (Ts+T). The Nusselt number relations for the constant surface temperature and constant surface heat flux cases are nearly identical. The relations for uniform heat flux is valid when the plate midpoint temperature TL/2 is used for Ts in the evaluation of the film temperature. Thus for uniform heat flux: qs L hL L qs Nu = = ( )= k k T k TL 2 T
(9-27)
1010
Ts = 1000C, T = 300C, g = 9.8 m/s2, Pr = 0.7 Lc = 0.3 m, = 1.93 x 10-5 m2/s 1 / Tavg = 1 / [(373.15+303.15) / 2] = 0.00296 K-1, k = 0.026 W/m-K
RaL = GrL Pr =
= 1.03 x 108 GrL = 1.47 x 108
Lc=0.3 m
g (Ts T ) L3 c
Pr
(laminar flow)
The recommended relation for the average Nusselt number for vertical isothermal parallel plates is
hS 576 2.873 Nu = = + 2 0.5 k ( Ras S L ) ( Ras S L )
0.5
(9-31)
Pr
RaL
g (Ts T ) L3
L3 Pr = Ra s 3 S
WL (Ts =constant) :
Sopt S L = 2.714 Ras
3
0.25
0.25
= 2.714
L 0.25 RaL
(9-32)
S opt = 2.714[
S4 S Ras ( ) L
S = S opt
S Ra s ( ) = 54.255 L
n =
= Q = h (2nLH) (Ts T)
(9-34)
Nu = C Ra where C and n are constants, are sufficiently accurate, but they are usually applicable to a narrow range of Prandtl and Rayleigh numbers and aspect ratios.
n L
Therefore, the parameter Gr/Re2 represents the importance of natural convection relative to forced convection.
Gr/Re2 < 0.1 : natural convection is negligible. Gr/Re2 > 10 : forced convection is negligible. 0.1 < Gr/Re2 <10 : forced and natural convection are not negligible.
Natural convection may help or hurt forced convection heat transfer depending on the relative directions of buoyancy-induced and the forced convection motions.
Nusselt Number for Combined Natural and Forced Convection (Mixed Convection) A review of experimental data suggests a Nusselt number correlation of the form
Nucombined = Nu
n forced
Nu
n natural
1n
(9-66)
Nuforced and Nunatural are determined from the correlations for pure forced and pure natural convection, respectively.