Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
754985 | Applied Acoustics | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
An oil-heated thermoacoustic refrigerator was constructed in order to investigate the use of waste-heat sources to operate a refrigerator. Fluid flows within the resonator in the vicinity of the stack/heat exchanger assemblies were measured through optical means. During the course of the experiment, anomalous centerline steady flows were observed at magnitudes of up to three times the acoustic amplitudes within the resonator of the thermoacoustic device. An evanescent component of the acoustic field was also measured at the same location. An order of magnitude calculation indicates that the body force induced by the evanescent mode is of sufficient magnitude and structure to be the source of the streaming.
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Authors
Gordon P. Smith, Richard Raspet, Robert Hiller, Joseph McDaniel,