Introduction To Convection: Flow and Thermal Considerations
Introduction To Convection: Flow and Thermal Considerations
Pr
Pr 1 for gases, Pr<<1 for liquid metals, Pr>>1 for oils
3 / 1
Pr ~
t
o
o
Dimensionless Parameters
y Dif f usivit Mass
y Dif f usivit Momentum
D D
Sc
AB AB
= =
v /
3 / 1
Sc
c
~
o
o
Dimensionless Parameters
y Dif f usivit Mass
y Dif f usivit Thermal
Sc
D
Le
AB
= =
Pr
o
3 / 1
Le
c
t
~
o
o
Dimensionless Parameters
f
k
hL
Nu Dimensionless T gradient at the surface
AB
m
D
L h
Sh
2 /
2
V
C
s
f
From
Observations:
Reynolds Analogies
Sh Nu C
L
f
= =
2
Re
If dp*/dx*=0, Pr=Sc=1, the boundary layer equations for
fluid flow, heat transfer and mass transfer become same form.
m f
St St C = = 2 /
Pr Re
Nu
Vc
h
St
p
=
Sc
Sh
V
h
St
m
m
Re
=
Pr = Sc =1
Chilton-Colburn Analogies
H
f
j St
C
=
3 / 2
Pr
2
0.6 < Pr < 60
m m
f
j Sc St
C
=
3 / 2
2
0.6 < Sc < 3000
For Laminar flow, need dP*/dx* =0;
For turbulent flow, doesnt need dp*/dx*=0
Evaporative Cooling
The term evaporative cooling originates from association of the latent energy
created by evaporation at a liquid interface with a reduction in the thermal
energy of the liquid. If evaporation occurs in the absence of other energy transfer
processes, the thermal energy, and hence the temperature of the liquid, must decrease.
If the liquid is to be maintained at a fixed temperature, energy loss due
to evaporation must be replenished by other means. Assuming convection
heat transfer at the interface to provide the only means of energy inflow to
the liquid, an energy balance yields
Evaporative Cooling
conv evap
q q '' '' =
" " " "
rad evap add conv
q q q q + = +
fg A sat A m fg A s
h Ts h h n T T h * ]} ) ( [ * { * ) (
, ,
"
= =
" "
evap conv
q q =
fg A sat A
m
s
h Ts
h
h
T T * ] ) ( [ ) (
, ,
=
With radiation from the interface and heat addition by other means,
Example 1
Analogy between heat and mass transfer
Example 1
Known: Boundary layer temperature and heat flux at a
location on a solid in an air stream given T and V
Find: Water vapor concentration and flux associate with
the same location on a larger surface
Assumptions: Steady state, 2-D, incompressible
boundary layer behavior, constant properties; boundary
layer approximations are valid; molar fraction of water
vapor is much less than unit.
Example 1
Properties: Table A.4 air (50 C) v, k, Pr, Table A.6
saturated water vapor (50C), , Table A.8 Water vapor-
air (50C), D
AB
=
Analysis:
T* = f(x*, y*, Re
L
, Pr, dp*/dx*)
C
A
*= f(x*, y*, Re
L
, Sc, dp*/dx*)
Example 1
For case 1 (L=1m):
Re
L,1
= 5.5x10
6
, Pr=0.7
For case 2 (L=2m):
Re
L,2
= 5.5x10
6
, Sc=0.7
Re
L,1
=Re
L,2
, Pr= Sc, x
1
*=x
2
*, y
1
*=y
2
*
Example 1
T*=(T-T
s
)/(T
T
s
) = f(x*, y*, Re
L
, Pr, dp*/dx*)
C
A
*=(C
A
-C
A,s
)/(C
A,
- C
A,s
)=f(x*, y*, Re
L
, Sc, dp*/dx*)
We expect T* = C
A
* = f ( . )
We can calculate C
A
from T*
and h
m
from h (Sh=Nu ?)
And N
A
= h
m
(C
A,s
-C
A,
)
Example 2
Dry air at atmospheric pressure blows across a thermometer whose bulb
has been covered with a dampened wick. This classic wet-bulb
thermometer indicates a steady-state T reached by a small amount of
liquid evaporating into a large amount of unsaturated vapor-gas mixture.
The thermometer reads at 18.3 C. At this T, the following properties
were evaluated:
Vapor pressure of water: 0.021 bar, density of air: 1.22 kg/m
3
Latent heat
of water vaporization: 2458 J/kg, Pr: 0.72, Sc: 0.61
Specific heat, c
p
of air: 0.56 J/kg/c
What is the Temperature of dry air ?
Example 2
Known: Thermophysical properties and T of water
Find: Temperature of dry air
Schematic:
p
H2O
=0.021 bar
T
s
=18.3 C
h
fg
=2458 J/kg
T
=?
C
H2O,
= 0
=1.22 kg/m
3
c
p
=0.56 J/kg/C
Pr=0.72 Sc=0.61
q
conv
q
evap
Example 2
Assumption: Steady-state, constant properties
Analysis:
Energy balance: q
conv
= q
evap
The energy required to evaporate the water is supplied by convective heat
transfer.
q
conv
= h(T
T
s
) = h
fg
*M
H2O
*N
H2O
Example 2
Where N
H2O
is the molar flux of water transferred from thermometer to air
N
H2O
= h
m
*(C
H2O,S
-C
H2O,
)
) (
, 2 , 2
2
+ =
O H S O H
m O H fg
s
C C
h
h M h
T T
How do we determine h
m
/h and C
H2O,S
?
Example 2
Pr = 0.72, Sc = 0.61,
Reynolds analogy is not accurate
Chilton-Colburn analogy can be used to relate h
m
and h.
J
H
= J
m
or St*Pr
2/3
= St
m
*Sc
2/3
St
m
/St= (Pr/Sc)
2/3
Example 2
St = h/(Vc
p
), St
m
= h
m
/V
St
m
/St= (h
m
/h)*(c
p
) = (Pr/Sc)
2/3
h
m
/h = (Pr/Sc)
2/3
/(c
p
)
From ideal gas law: PV = nRT
C
H2O,S
= n/V = P/(R*T
s
)
Example 2
) (
, 2 , 2
2
+ =
O H S O H
m O H fg
s
C C
h
h M h
T T
)
*
(
) (Pr/
3 / 2
2
s P
O H fg s
T R
P
c
Sc
M h T T
+ =
M
H2O
= 18 (kg/kmol), R = 0.08314 (m
3
bar/kmol/K)
T