Conjugate forced convection flow past a circular cylinder with internal heat generation in a porous medium
Purpose - The aim is to determine the effect of different conductivity ratios on forced convection past a circular cylinder embedded in a porous medium, where the solid cylinder forms a uniform heat source.Design methodology approach - The authors employ an unsteady finite difference method to obtai...
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Published in | International journal of numerical methods for heat & fluid flow Vol. 18; no. 6; pp. 730 - 744 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Bradford
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
08.08.2008
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Purpose - The aim is to determine the effect of different conductivity ratios on forced convection past a circular cylinder embedded in a porous medium, where the solid cylinder forms a uniform heat source.Design methodology approach - The authors employ an unsteady finite difference method to obtain the resulting steady-state solutions. Interface conditions are applied using the fictitious point method.Findings - It is found that, the thermal field within the cylinder and in the external porous region depend strongly on the ratio of the respective conductivities. In the extreme cases the cylinder acts either as one with a uniform temperature (high-cylinder conductivity) or with a uniform heat flux (low-cylinder conductivity).Research limitations implications - Conductivity ratios in the range 0.1≤γ≤100 and Péclet numbers in the range, 1≤Pe≤1,000 were taken.Originality value - Forced convection studies usually focus on cases where the solid phase has a prescribed temperature or heat flux. The present paper employs a uniform heat generation within the cylinder to determine how the therrmal field depends on the Péclet number and the conductivity ratio. |
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Bibliography: | ark:/67375/4W2-G6GT01WF-L original-pdf:1340180604.pdf istex:3B14B464A5D0CF48E897DE47180905DF5325A4DB filenameID:1340180604 href:09615530810885542.pdf ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0961-5539 1758-6585 |
DOI: | 10.1108/09615530810885542 |