Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Nanofluid with Rod-like Particles in Turbulent Flows through a Curved Pipe
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Model and Equation
2.1. Flow of Nanofluid
2.2. Density and Thermal Diffusivity of Nanofluid
2.3. Probability Density Function and Tensor of Particle Orientation
2.4. Turbulent Model
2.5. Equation of Particle Number Density
2.6. Pressure Drop and Nusselt Number
3. Numerical Method and Parameters
3.1. Main Steps
- (1)
- Solving Equations (1)–(4) and (12)–(14) with Φ = μa = Sk = Sɛ = 0 to obtain Uj, P, k, ε and .
- (2)
- Solving Equations (17)–(19) to obtain n(v) and Φ.
- (3)
- Substituting Φ into Equations (4)–(8) to obtain μa, ρnf,Dnf, knf and (ρCp)nf.
- (4)
- Substituting Uj, k, ε and Equation (11) into Equation (10) and solving it to obtain ψ.
- (5)
- Substituting ψ into Equation (9) to get aij and aijkl.
- (6)
- Substituting ρnf, μa, akl, aijkl and Dnf into Equations (1)–(4) and (12)–(14) to obtain Uj, P, k, ε, and T.
- (7)
- Repeating steps (2) to (6) using the new values of Uj, P, k, ε, , and T until the difference between the successive results of Ui, p, and T is less than a definite value.
- (8)
- Calculating the friction factor f and Nusselt number using Equations (20) and (21).
3.2. Numerical Method
3.3. Parameters in Numerical Simulation
3.4. Mesh Independence Test
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Validation
4.2. Friction Factor
4.2.1. Impact of Reynolds Number
4.2.2. Impact of Particle Volume Concentration
4.2.3. Impact of Schmidt Number
4.2.4. Impact of Particle Aspect Ratio
4.2.5. Impact of Dean Number
4.3. Heat Transfer
4.3.1. Impact of Reynolds Number
4.3.2. Impact of Particle Volume Concentration
4.3.3. Impact of Schmidt Number
4.3.4. Impact of Particle Aspect Ratio
4.3.5. Impact of Dean Number
4.4. Energy Performance Evaluation Criterion
4.4.1. Impact of Re and Φ
4.4.2. Impact of Sc, λ and De
4.4.3. Correlation Model
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- The values of f in nanofluid are larger than that in pure water, and are increased with increases in Φ, Sc, and Re, and with decreases in Re and λ. The magnitude of decrease for f is large and small at Re < 20,000 and Re > 20,000, respectively.
- (2)
- Rod-like nanoparticles added to the base fluid can promote convective heat transfer. Heat transfer performance is enhanced with increasesinRe, Φ, λ, and De, and with decreases in Sc. The effect of Φ on the heat transfer is more obvious at low Re than that at high Re.
- (3)
- The ratios of energy PEC for the nanofluid to the base fluid are increased with increases in Re, Φ, λ, and De, and with decreases in Sc. Finally, the formula of ratio of energy PEC for nanofluid to the base fluid as a function of Re, Φ, Sc, λ, and De is derived based on the numerical data.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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r × θ × S Nu | r × θ × S Nu | r × θ × S Nu |
---|---|---|
56 × 48 × 112 177.308 | 64 × 40 × 112 177.315 | 64 × 48 × 104 177.301 |
60 × 48 × 112 177.336 | 64 × 44 × 112 177.338 | 64 × 48 × 108 177.333 |
64 × 48 × 112 177.357 | 64 × 48 × 112 177.357 | 64 × 48 × 112 177.357 |
68 × 48 × 112 177.372 | 64 × 52 × 112 177.370 | 64 × 48 × 116 177.374 |
72 × 48 × 112 177.383 | 64 × 56 × 112 177.378 | 64 × 48 × 120 177.386 |
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Lin, W.; Shi, R.; Lin, J. Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Nanofluid with Rod-like Particles in Turbulent Flows through a Curved Pipe. Entropy 2022, 24, 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/e24030416
Lin W, Shi R, Lin J. Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Nanofluid with Rod-like Particles in Turbulent Flows through a Curved Pipe. Entropy. 2022; 24(3):416. https://doi.org/10.3390/e24030416
Chicago/Turabian StyleLin, Wenqian, Ruifang Shi, and Jianzhong Lin. 2022. "Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Nanofluid with Rod-like Particles in Turbulent Flows through a Curved Pipe" Entropy 24, no. 3: 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/e24030416
APA StyleLin, W., Shi, R., & Lin, J. (2022). Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop of Nanofluid with Rod-like Particles in Turbulent Flows through a Curved Pipe. Entropy, 24(3), 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/e24030416