Jet stability and wall impingement flow field in a thermal striping experiment
Autor: | Stephen W. Lomperski, Paul Fischer, W. D. Pointer, Elia Merzari, Aleks Obabko |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Jet (fluid) geography Materials science geography.geographical_feature_category Field (physics) business.industry 020209 energy Mechanical Engineering Flow (psychology) Context (language use) 02 engineering and technology Mechanics Computational fluid dynamics Condensed Matter Physics Inlet 01 natural sciences Instability 010305 fluids & plasmas 0103 physical sciences Thermal 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering business |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer. 115:1125-1136 |
ISSN: | 0017-9310 |
Popis: | We present velocity and temperature field measurements for a 0.9 × 0.9 × 1.7 m glass tank in which two air jets mix and impinge upon the lid at ambient temperature and pressure. At jet Re ≈ 10,000, flow patterns below the lid were characterized for two inlet geometries: (1) “extended”, in which inlet channels protrude above the tank base, and (2) “flush”, a flat base without protrusions. This minor geometry variation produced distinct changes in the lid velocity field, appearing as three stagnant regions for the extended case and only one for flush. The dichotomy is attributed to system stability characteristics: jets are stable in the extended case and unstable for flush. In a separate set of nonisothermal tests, the impingement temperature field was measured for inlet temperature mismatches of 4 °C with jets again near Re = 10,000. A 50 m-long fiber optic distributed temperature sensor beneath the lid measured at 1350 locations. Like the velocity fields, the temperature fields differ for the two inlet geometries: good thermal mixing for the flush case and subdued mixing for the extended case. Simulations with the spectral element code Nek5000 replicated the observed stability dichotomy, duplicating the number of stagnant regions observed in the experiment and matching their locations within ±10 mm. Simulation data suggests that flush case instability is due to interactions between jets and wall flows at the bottom of the tank. The clear flow dichotomy exhibited by this two-jet setup presents an unambiguous case to test the ability of CFD tools to predict subtle flow field changes driven by minor modifications in geometry in the context of thermal striping. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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