An experimental study of flow and heat transfer in a differentially side heated cavity filled with coarse porous media

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

Iman Dadavi (TU Delft - ChemE/Transport Phenomena)

Nima Rounaghi (Student TU Delft)

Manu Chakkingal (TU Delft - ChemE/Transport Phenomena)

S. Kenjeres (TU Delft - ChemE/Transport Phenomena)

Chris R. Kleijn (TU Delft - ChemE/Transport Phenomena)

M.J. Tummers (TU Delft - Fluid Mechanics)

Research Group
ChemE/Transport Phenomena
Copyright
© 2019 I. Ataei Dadavi, Nima Rounaghi, M. Chakkingal, S. Kenjeres, C.R. Kleijn, M.J. Tummers
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2019.118591
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 I. Ataei Dadavi, Nima Rounaghi, M. Chakkingal, S. Kenjeres, C.R. Kleijn, M.J. Tummers
Research Group
ChemE/Transport Phenomena
Volume number
143
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Abstract

Flow and heat transfer in a differentially side heated cubic cavity filled with relatively large solid spheres forming a coarse porous medium have been studied experimentally. Nusselt numbers were measured for Rayleigh numbers between 1.9 × 107 and 1.7 × 109, solid-to-fluid conductivity ratios between 0.32 and 618, and for different sphere sizes (d/H = 0.065, 0.14, 0.20), and packing geometries. The heat transfer results indicate that the presence of a porous medium in the cavity decreases the heat transfer compared to the pure-fluid cavity unless the solid spheres are highly conductive. We present a new Nusselt number correlation for coarse porous media based on porous medium dimensionless numbers. Particle image velocimetry and liquid crystal thermography measurements were performed in a refractive index-matched porous medium to obtain pore-scale velocity and temperature fields. The results show that the layers of spheres adjacent to the hot/cold walls play the most prominent role in the heat transfer reduction by hindering the formation of high-velocity boundary layers along the hot/cold walls, causing a portion of the boundary layer fluid to divert away from these walls, thus changing the stratified temperature distribution to a tilted one which leads to a lower overall heat transfer.