Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
661831 International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

This work experimentally studied heat transfer associated with an impinging jet onto a rotating heat sink. Air was used as the impinging coolant, and a square Al-foam heat sink was adopted. The variable parameters were the jet Reynolds number (Re), the relative nozzle-to-foam tip distance (C/d), the rotational Reynolds number (Rer) and the relative side length of the square heat sink (L/d). The effects of Re, C/d, Rer and L/d on the dimensionless temperature distributions and the average Nusselt number were considered. For a stationary system, the results reveal that the average Nusselt number (Nu0) with Al-foam was two to three times that without Al-foam. Nu0 increased with Re. A larger L/d responded to a larger Nu0 based on the same jet flow rate. The effect of C/d on Nu0 was negligible herein. For a rotating system, when Re and L/d were small and C/d was large, the average Nusselt number (NuΩ) increased considerably with Rer. Additionally, for NuΩ/Nu0 ⩾ 1.1, the results suggest that rotation was substantial at Rer/Re ⩾ 1.13 when L/d = 4.615 with C/d = 0–5 and at Rer/Re ⩾ 1.07 when L/d = 3.0 with C/d = 0–5. For L/d = 2.222, rotation was substantial at Rer/Re ⩾ 1.44 when C/d = 0 and was always substantial when C/d ⩾ 1.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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