Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4995263 | International Journal of Thermal Sciences | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
In this regard, this paper presents steady state thermal contact conductance analysis on two solid bodies of brass, carrying flat and curvilinear contact combinations, under variable loading conditions ranging in between 0.27 and 4.0Â kN. A customized and standardized experimental set up has been used to measure steady state TCC for three different types of geometrical configurations, which are flat-flat, cylinder-flat and cylinder-cylinder contacts. At the start, TCC has been evaluated on the basis of centrally placed high response, super accurate, ungrounded thermocouples, which are mounted axially across the contacting bodies. In the later part of the paper, an optical, non-invasive and inexpensive method, based upon liquid crystal thermography (LCT) has been implemented to get the precise estimate of TCC for different configurations under consideration. The region close to the interface, which has the profound effect on the axial temperature distributions, is identified. Eventually, the separation region, where dramatic variation in the thermal conductivity occurs and classical Fourier law tends to fail has been identified. The separation region is further segregated in sub-regions on the basis of distinct temperature zones, which allows estimating the effective thermal conductivity of the materials in gap. The precise temperature jump close to the interface is extrapolated, and consequentially used to predict the steady state TCC for all three geometrical configurations. The value of TCC is evaluated again on the basis of effective thermal conductivity concept, and the results have been compared together. The present investigation establish a unique methodology for TCC estimation on the basis of steady state liquid crystal (LC) measurements, and provide valuable insight of heat transfer across the curvilinear contacts, and can be treated as the base line measurements for any of the upcoming scale resolved numerical models.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
Authors
Surya Kumar, Andallib Tariq,