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Proceedings ArticleDOI

An Experimental and Numerical Study of Heat Transfer and Pressure Losses of V- and W-Shaped Ribs at High Reynolds Numbers

TLDR
In this paper, an experimental and numerical investigation was conducted to assess the thermal performance of V- and W-shaped ribs in a rectangular channel, where the ribs were located on one channel sidewall in order to simulate a typical combustor liner cooling.
Abstract
An experimental and numerical investigation was conducted to assess the thermal performance of V- and W-shaped ribs in a rectangular channel. The ribs were located on one channel sidewall in order to simulate a typical combustor liner cooling. The cross section of the channel had an aspect ratio of 2:1. Local heat transfer coefficients were measured using the transient thermochromic liquid crystal technique. Pressure taps along the channel sidewall were used to obtain the periodic pressure losses. The rib height-to-hydraulic diameter ratio (e/Dh ) was set to 0.02, and the rib pitch-to-height ratios (P/e) were 5 and 10. The Reynolds numbers investigated varied from 80,000 to 500,000. All rib configurations were additionally investigated numerically and the obtained computational results were compared with experimental data. For all computations the commercial software FLUENT™ was used with a two-layer k-e turbulence model. It could be demonstrated that applying W-shaped ribs instead of V-shaped ribs has the advantage of an increased heat transfer enhancement, but is accompanied by a rise in pressure loss. Reducing the rib pitch-to-height ratio from 10 to 5 decreases the heat transfer enhancement, but results in a significantly reduced pressure loss. Finally, the best thermal performance was found for W-shaped ribs with a pitch-to-height ratio of 10, having a slightly increased pressure loss but with considerable rise in heat transfer enhancement compared to V-shaped ribs.© 2007 ASME

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Journal ArticleDOI

Validation and Analysis of Numerical Results for a Varying Aspect Ratio Two-Pass Internal Cooling Channel

TL;DR: In this paper, an internal ribbed cooling channel including a 180 deg bend with a 2:1 inlet and a 1:1 aspect ratio outlet channel was validated against experimental results in terms of spatially resolved heat transfer distributions, pressure losses, and velocity distributions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancement of convective heat transfer in smooth air channels with wall-mounted obstacles in the flow path

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive literature review of the various heat transfer strategies used to improve the performance of smooth air channels (SACs) is presented, including attached, semi-attached, or detached; parallel, orthogonal or inclined; solid, perforated, or porous; and simple, corrugated or shaped.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical investigation of turbulent flow and heat transfer in two-pass ribbed channels

TL;DR: In this article, the heat transfer and friction characteristics of four different rib geometries-45° angled, V-shaped, W-shaped and M-shaped ribs in a two-pass stationary channel have been numerically investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convective heat transfer enhancement in solar air channels

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the existing experimental and numerical studies in this area is given, and various future possibilities, such as the use of turbulence promoters in a solar air channels, are also addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of turbulators for heat transfer augmentation in an air duct – A review

TL;DR: In this article, the authors carried out an extensive literature review of various turbulators investigated for enhancing heat transfer and friction in solar air heaters and heat exchangers and found that ribs, baffles and delta winglets are effective techniques to enhance the heat transfer rate.
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It could be demonstrated that applying W-shaped ribs instead of V-shaped ribs has the advantage of an increased heat transfer enhancement, but is accompanied by a rise in pressure loss.