Heat Transfer in an Airfoil Shaped Strut


Autoria(s): Crawford, James
Contribuinte(s)

Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.). Theses (Queen's University (Kingston, Ont.))

Birk, A. Michael

Mechanical and Materials Engineering

Data(s)

31/08/2016

31/08/2016

31/08/2016

31/08/2016

Resumo

Thesis (Ph.D, Mechanical and Materials Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2016-08-31 09:37:50.239

The heat transfer from a hot primary flow stream passing over the outside of an airfoil shaped strut to a cool secondary flow stream passing through the inside of that strut was studied experimentally and numerically. The results showed that the heat transfer on the inside of the strut could be reliably modeled as a developing flow and described using a power law model. The heat transfer on the outside of the strut was complicated by flow separation and stall on the suction side of the strut at high angles of attack. This separation was quite sensitive to the condition of the turbulence in the flow passing over the strut, with the size of the separated wake changing significantly as the mean magnitude and levels of anisotropy were varied. The point of first stall moved by as much as 15% of the chord, while average heat transfer levels changed by 2-5% as the inlet condition was varied. This dependence on inlet conditions meant that comparisons between experiment and steady RANS based CFD were quite poor. Differences between the CFD and experiment were attributed to anisotropic and unsteady effects. The coupling between the two flows was shown to be quite low - that is to say, heat transfer coefficients on both the inner and outer surfaces of the strut were relatively unaffected by the temperature of the strut, and it was possible to predict the temperature on the strut surface quite reliably using heat transfer data from decoupled tests, especially for CFD simulations.

Ph.D

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1974/14818

Idioma(s)

en

en

Relação

Canadian theses

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Palavras-Chave #experiment #CFD #fluid mechanics #thermodynamics #heat transfer #fluent #RANS
Tipo

Thesis