Publication:
Thermal development in open-cell metal foam: An experiment with constant wall heat flux

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisor

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Abstract Experimental heat transfer results for a commercial open-cell aluminum foam cylinder heated at the wall by a constant heat flux and cooled by water flow, are presented. The results cover thermal-entry and fully-developed regions. Measurements include wall temperature along flow direction as well as average inlet and outlet temperatures of the water. Flow rates are in the Darcy and non-Darcy (transitional and Forchheimer) regimes. The wall temperature along the foam clearly shows two distinct behaviors related to thermally-developing and fully-developed conditions, which is confirmed by the behavior of local Nusselt number. The thermal entry length is determined and discussed in detail; it is also compared to its analytical counterpart for Darcy flow. The thermal entry region in metal foam is found to be significant and much longer than its analytically-predicted value. A method for estimating the bulk fluid temperature is envisioned for calculating the local Nusselt number. Previously undiscussed phenomenon is captured in the behavior of Nusselt number for non-Darcy regimes, which suggests periodic thermal development along the foam. The fully-developed data for the Darcy flow cases is compared to its analytical counterpart, and a correlation for the Nusselt number as a function of Reynolds number is proposed for non-Darcy flows.

Description

Subject

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Goal

0

Views

0

Downloads
View PlumX Details