Thermal Boundaries in Cone Calorimetry Testing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Non-uniform distribution of irradiance on both the exposed top and side surfaces due to the truncated cone-shaped heat source. The actual quantity of this distribution is theoretically predicted by calculating geometric view factors based on the contour integration method [10];
- Radiant absorption into the surfaces. The fraction of the irradiance that is actually absorbed by the areas is represented by absorptivity. This property is strongly dependent on optical aspects, such as the nature of absorbing surfaces and spectral/directional characteristics of incident radiation. In this study, a coupled numerical–experimental process was used for its determination;
- Heat losses from the surfaces by radiant emission. This radiation transfer is represented by emissivity. This radiative property is highly case-dependent on the nature of the materials and their surface conditions. In this study, radiant heat losses were determined using a cooling test procedure;
- Heat losses from the surfaces in convection mode, which are represented by the convective coefficient. Two sets of coefficients were individually defined for the dissimilar orientations of the top and side surfaces. Their derivations are demonstrated from correlations for buoyancy-induced air flows over horizontally and vertically-oriented planes, since such thermal energy transfers are correlated with physical fluid motions driven on the solids’ boundaries.
2. Heat Transfers in Cone Calorimeter Testing
2.1. External Heat Transfers
2.1.1. Power of Heat Source
2.1.2. Radiation Absorption Mechanism (Ⓐ and Ⓑ)
2.1.3. Radiation Emission Mechanism (① and ③)
2.1.4. Convection Loss Mechanism
2.2. Internal Heat Transfer
2.3. Energy Balance
2.4. Determination Procedure of Key Parameters
3. Experimental Details
4. Determination of Key Parameters
4.1. Convection Heat Transfer Coefficient
- In the tests, specimens’ exposed surfaces were heated consistently by a uniform radiant flux density emitted by the conical heater. Prior research [32,33] examined free convection from a vertical plane under such heating conditions, differentiated from the conventional condition for uniform wall temperatures, and developed a modified Rayleigh number. However, the deviations between the correlations obtained under the two different heating conditions are negligible in the case of free convective flow, adjacent to the vertical and horizontal planes [34]. Hence, the conventional version of the Rayleigh number, which has been more widely examined, was adopted for the steel block model studied in this work.
- Regarding surface orientation, the use of gravitational term in place of the gravitational acceleration ( in m/s2) in the typical Grashof number (Gr) was suggested for inclined surfaces, including horizontal surfaces [35], where θ is the angle of inclination from vertical in radians. This approach was capable of correlating well with the classical studies on free convective motion adjacent to vertical planes [36]. However, the correlations were not satisfactory for the horizontal top surface of the heated blocks [37], and even the turbulence data in this orientation from the air provide a closer correlation to the general than with the modified [34]. Considering these assertions, the conventional was adopted for the convection on the top surface of solids in this work.
- With respect to the flow regime, the onset of the transition in free convection over vertical planes occurs when is in the order of [38]. For inclined, upward-facing planes under uniform heat fluxes, a correlation for the critical was derived to be [39]. According to these suggestions, the patterns of fluid motions anticipated in this instrument were evaluated as laminar and turbulent for the side and top surfaces of the heated steel bodies, respectively.
4.2. Emissivity
4.3. Absorptivity
5. Discussion
5.1. Individual Contributions of Top and Side Surfaces
5.2. Individual Contributions of Radiation and Convection Modes
5.3. Individual Contributions of Radiant Absorption and Emission
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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H a (mm) | Thickness of Specimens δ (mm) | View Factor | |
---|---|---|---|
Top Surface b (Fh-top) | Side Surface c (Fh-side) | ||
25 | 10 | 0.2508 | 0.0151 |
20 | 15 | 0.2627 | 0.0263 |
15 | 20 | 0.2730 | 0.0410 |
Author | Convection Heat Transfer Coefficient (W/m2K) |
---|---|
Janssens (1991) | 9–27 a |
Rhodes et al. (1996) | 10 |
Hopkins Jr. et al. (1996) | 10 |
de Ris et al. (2000) | 7.6 |
Janssens (2002) | 3.9–17.1 a |
Bartholmai et al. (2003) | 20 |
Wang (2005) | 20 |
Lautenberger et al. (2006) | 10 |
Staggs (2009) | 15.15–25.25 |
Zhang et al. (2009) | 7–15 |
Mesquita et al. (2009) | 20 |
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Kang, S.; Kwon, M.; Choi, J.Y.; Choi, S. Thermal Boundaries in Cone Calorimetry Testing. Coatings 2019, 9, 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9100629
Kang S, Kwon M, Choi JY, Choi S. Thermal Boundaries in Cone Calorimetry Testing. Coatings. 2019; 9(10):629. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9100629
Chicago/Turabian StyleKang, Sungwook, Minjae Kwon, Joung Yoon Choi, and Sengkwan Choi. 2019. "Thermal Boundaries in Cone Calorimetry Testing" Coatings 9, no. 10: 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9100629
APA StyleKang, S., Kwon, M., Choi, J. Y., & Choi, S. (2019). Thermal Boundaries in Cone Calorimetry Testing. Coatings, 9(10), 629. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings9100629