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13
2) Forced convection :
The bulk fluid motion is caused by external means, such
as a fan, a pump or natural wind, etc.
u
U
14
The properties of the flow fields
Due to the properties of fluid both velocity and thermal
boundary layers are formed. Velocity boundary layer is
caused by viscosity and thermal boundary layer is
caused by both viscosity and thermal conductivity of the
fluid.
Internal versus external flow
- External flow : the solid surface is surrounded by the
pool of moving fluid
- Internal flow : the moving fluid is inside a solid channel
or a tube.
15
The properties of the flow fields
Laminar flow versus turbulent flow
- Laminar flow: the stream lines are approximately parallel to
each other
- Turbulent flow: the bulk motion of the fluid is superimposed
with turbulence
u
Heat Transfer in Equilibrium Layer
The thickness of stagnant layer decides the magnitude of normal temperature
gradient at the wall.
And hence, the thickness of wall fluid layer decides the magnitude of convective
heat transfer coefficient.
Typically, the convective heat transfer coefficient for laminar flow is relatively
low compared to the convective heat transfer coefficient for turbulent flow.
This is due to turbulent flow having a thinner stagnant fluid film layer on the
heat transfer surface.
At the wall for fluid layer :
{ }
layer m equilibriu Across
,
=
)
`
c
c
T T hA
y
T
A k
wall fluid fluid
{ }
)
`
c
c
=
T T
y
T
k
h
wall
wall
fluid
At Thermodynamic equilibrium
wall wall fluid
T T =
,
Estimation of Heat Transfer
Coefficient
{ }
)
`
c
c
=
T T
y
T
k
h
wall
wall
fluid
( )
0
' '
=
c
c
= =
y
Across
s
y
T
k T T h q
o
Non-dimensional Temperature:
=
T T
T T
s
u
Non-dimensional length:
L
y
y =
*
0
*
0
*
scale Length
scale e Temperatur
= =
c
c
|
|
.
|
\
|
=
c
c
y y
y y
T u
( )
0
*
*
=
c
c
|
.
|
\
|
=
y
s
fluid s
y L
T T
k T T h
u
fluid
y
k
hL
y
=
c
c
=0
*
*
u
0
*
*
=
c
c
=
y
fluid
y L
k
h
u
This dimensionless temperature gradient at the wall is named as
Nusselt Number:
resistance Convection
resistance Conduction
1
= = =
h
k
L
k
hL
Nu
fluid
fluid
fluid
y
k
hL
y
Nu =
c
c
=
=0
*
*
u
Local Nusselt Number
Average Nusselt Number
avg fluid
avg
avg
k
L h
Nu
,
=
Estimation of heat transfer coefficient is basically
computation of temperature profile at the wall.
A general theoretical and experimental study is
essential to understand how the stagnant layer is
developed.
The global geometry of the solid wall and flow
conditions will decide the structure of stagnant layer.
Basic Geometry : Internal Flow or External Flow.
22
The governing parameters of convection
heat transfer
Newtons law of cooling
The main objective to study convection heat transfer is to
determine the proper value of convection heat transfer
coefficient for specified conditions. It depends on the
following parameters:
- The Bulk motion velocity, u, (m/s)
- The dimension of the body, L, ( m)
- The surface temperature, T
s
,
o
C or K
- The bulk fluid temperature, T
,
o
C or K
( )
s
Q hA T T
=
23
The governing parameters of convection
heat transfer (Cont.)
- The density of the fluid, , kg/m
3
- The thermal conductivity of the fluid, k
f
, (W/m.K)
- The dynamic viscosity of the fluid, , (kg/m.s)
- The specific heat of the fluid, C
p
, (J/kg.K)
- The change in specific weight, , (kg/(m
2
s
2
) or (N/m
3
)
- The shape and orientation of the body, S
The convection heat transfer coefficient can be written as
h = f( u, L, T
s
, T
, , k
f
, , C
p
, , S)
24
It is impossible to achieve a correlation equation for
convection heat transfer in terms of 10 variables. A better
way to reduce the number of variables is required.
Dimensionless analysis
There are 11 parameters with 4 basic units (length, m), (mass,
kg), (temperature,
o
C or K) , and (time, s).
Applying the method of dimensional analysis, it can be
grouped into 11- 4 = 7 dimensionless groups, they are:
3 2
2
( , , , , , )
p
s
p
c
T hL uL g L u
F S
k k T c T
A
=
25
1. Nusselt number : =
2. Eckert number : =
3. Reynods number : =
4. Temperature ratio :
s
=
5. Grashof number : =
6. S : shape of the surface
7. Prandtl number : =
hL
k
uL
3
2
g L
A
p
c
k
2
p
u
c T
s
T
T
L
Nu
Re
L
L
Gr
Pr
k
E
26
The Governing Parameters of
Convection Heat Transfer
The convection heat transfer
coefficient can be written as:
Nu = f( E
k
, Re
L
,
s
, Gr
L
, Pr, S)
27
To find Reynolds number
Choosing density (), dimension (L), surface temperature (T
s
), and
dynamic viscosity () as the 4 basic parameters, and velocity (u) as the
input parameter. The dimensionless number is obtained by solving the 4
constants, a, b, c, & d.
1
3
0
( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
3 1 0
0
0
1 0
1, 0, 1, 1
Re
a b c d
s
a b o c d
o
L
L T u
kg kg L
L C
L sL s
L a b d
kg a d
C c
s d
d c a b
Lu
t
=
=
+ + =
+ =
=
=
= = = =
= =
28
Simply the dimensionless equations !!!
Now we have reduced the equation involving 11
variables into a 7 dimensionless group equation.
However, 7 dimensionless groups is still too large, we
need neglecting the unimportant dimensionless
groups.
Eckert number is important for high speed flow. It can be
neglected for our application.
If the average fluid temperature is used for getting the fluid
properties, the temperature ratio can also be discarded.
29
Nu = f( E
k
, Re
L
,
s
, Gr
L
, Pr, S)
After neglecting the two unimportant
dimensionless groups, the general
convection equation is
(Re , Pr, , )
L L L
Nu F Gr S =
30
Forced Convection: the density change is very small, the
Grashoff number is neglected
Natural Convection: there is no bulk fluid motion induced by
external means, u = 0, Reynolds number is disappeared.
(Re , Pr, )
L L
Nu F S =
( , Pr, )
L L
Nu F Gr S =
31
The Physical Meaning of
The Dimensionless Numbers
Nusselt Number
It is the ratio of convection heat transfer
rate to the conduction heat transfer rate.
Consider an internal flow in a channel of
height L and the temperatures at the lower
and upper surfaces are T
1
& T
2
, respectively.
The convection heat transfer rate is
The conduction heat transfer rate is
The ratio
&
Q
cov
= hA(T
1
T
2
)
&
Q
cond
=
kA
L
(T
1
T
2
)
Nu
L
=
&
Q
cov
&
Q
cond
=
hA
kA
L
=
hL
k
u
T
1
T
2
L
32
The Reynolds Number
It is the ratio of inertia force to viscous force of the
moving fluid.
- Inertia force
- The viscous force
- The ratio
3 2 2 2 2
2
( )
i
L L
F ma L L L u
s s
= = = =
2 2
v
u u
F A L L uL
y L
t
A
= = = =
A
Re
L
uL uL uL
= = =
33
The Prandtl Number
It is the ratio of the momentum diffusivity to the thermal
diffusivity.
The momentum diffusivity is the kinematic viscosity and it
controls the rate of diffusion of momentum in a fluid
medium.
Thermal difusivity controls how fast the heat diffuses in a
medium. It has the form
The ratio of the two is called Prandtl number.
Pr
p
p
c
k
k
c
u
o
= = =
p
k
c
o
=
34
The Thermal Expansion Coefficient
It is defined as
The negative sign results from the fact that, for gases, the
change of density with respect to temperature under constant
pressure process is always negative. From ideal gas law
For ideal gas, the thermal expansion coefficient is the inverse
of the absolute temperature
1
( )
p
T
c
=
c
0 p RT dp RdT RTd = = + =
( )
p
d
dT T
=
1
T
| =
35
Grashoff Number
The Grashoff number represents the ratio of
the buoyant force to the viscous force.
3
2
g L
Gr
u
A
=
36
Grashof number
The change of density is
Substituting into Grashof number
The subscript L means that the characteristic length of the
Grashof number. It may be the length of the surface. For
ideal gas, Gr
L
is
( ) ( ) T T T T T | | |
A = A = = =
3 3 3
2 2 2
( ) ( )
L
g T T L g T T L g L
Gr
| |
u u u
A
= = =
3
2
( )
L
g T T L
Gr
T u
=
T
s
T
Buoyant force
Viscous force
Chapter 1 Chee 318 37
Example
Air at 20C blows over a hot plate, which is maintained at
a temperature T
s
=300C and has dimensions 20x40 cm.
C T
20 =
q
C T
S
300 =
Air
The convective heat flux is proportional to
T T q
S x
"
Chapter 1 Chee 318 38
The proportionality constant is the convection heat
transfer coefficient, h (W/m
2
.K)
) (
"
= T T h q
S x
Newtons law of Cooling
For air h=25 W/m
2
.K, therefore the heat flux is q
x
= 7,000
W/m
2
The heat rate, is q
x
= q
x
. A = q
x
. (0.2 x 0.4) = 560 W.
In this solution we assumed that heat flux is positive when heat
is transferred from the surface to the fluid
How would this value change if instead of blowing air we had
still air (h=5 W/m
2
.K) or flowing water (h=50 W/m
2
.K)