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Periodic unsteady effects on turbulent boundary layer transport and heat transfer: An experimental investigation in a cylinder-wall junction flow

Posted on:1998-02-23Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Boston UniversityCandidate:Xie, QiFull Text:PDF
GTID:1462390014974069Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Heat transfer in a turbulent boundary layer downstream of junction with a cylinder has many engineering applications including controlling heat transfer to the endwall in gas turbine passages and cooling of protruding electronic chips. The main objective of this research is to study the fundamental process of heat transport and wall heat transfer in a turbulent three-dimensional flow superimposed with local large-scale periodic unsteadiness generated by vortex shedding from the cylinder. Direct measurements of the Reynolds heat fluxes ({dollar}overline{lcub}utheta{rcub}, overline{lcub}vtheta{rcub} {lcub}rm and{rcub} overline{lcub}wtheta{rcub}{dollar}) and time-resolved wall heat transfer rate will provide insight into unsteady flow behavior and data for advanced turbulence models for numerical simulation of complex engineering flows.; Experiments were conducted in an open-circuit, low-speed wind tunnel. Reynolds stresses and heat fluxes were obtained from turbulent heat-flux probes which consisted of two hot wires, arranged in an X-wire configuration, and a cold wire located in front of the X-wire. Thin-film surface heat flux sensors were designed for measuring time-resolved wall heat flux. A reference probe and conditional-sampling technique connected the flow field dynamics to wall heat transfer. An event detecting and ensemble-averaging method was developed to separate effects of unsteadiness from those of background turbulence.; Results indicate that unsteadiness affects both heat transport and wall heat transfer. The flow behind the cylinder can be characterized by three regions: (1) Wake region, where unsteadiness is observed to have modest effect; (2) Unsteady region, where the strongest unsteadiness effect is found; (3) Outer region, where the flow approaches the two-dimensional boundary-layer behavior. Vortex shedding from both sides of the cylinder contributes to mixing enhancement in the wake region. Unsteadiness contributes up to 51% of vertical and 59% of spanwise turbulent heat fluxes in the unsteady region. The instantaneous wall Stanton number increased up to 100% compared with an undisturbed flow. Large-scale fluctuations of wall Stanton number were due to the periodic thinning and thickening of the thermal layer caused by periodic vertical velocity fluctuations. This suggests that the outerlayer motion affects near-wall flow behavior and wall heat transfer.
Keywords/Search Tags:Heat transfer, Wall, Flow, Layer, Turbulent, Cylinder, Periodic, Unsteady
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