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Go to Editorial ManagerMixed convection heat transfer of air in a horizontal channel with an open square cavity is studied numerically. At the center of the cavity, it is an insulated rotating circular cylinder for enhancing the efficiency of heat transmission, the location of the inner cylinder is changed vertically along the centerline of the cavity. Heat is applied to the bottom wall of the cavity at a constant temperature, and the other walls are adiabatic. The flow is steady-state, laminar, and incompressible. Using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and the commercial software program FLUENT 2019 R1, the equations of continuity, momentum, and energy are numerically solved. The angular velocity of the cylinder range is (0 . 5 ≤ ω ≤ 4) rad/sec in a counterclockwise direction, the Richardson number range ( Ri = 0 . 1 , 1 , 10), Reynolds number is 100 and the cylinder location is ( C = 70 , 50 , 30) mm. The airflow Prandtl number is taken as ( Pr = 0 . 7). The effect of various positions of the rotating cylinder has been examined through the visualization of streamline and isotherm contour, as well as the distribution of the average Nusselt number of the heated surface. The results indicate that the flow field and temperature distributions inside the cavity are strongly dependent on the rotating circular cylinder and the position of the inner cylinder.
This study numerically investigates natural convection of Cu-water nanofluid in a square cavity subjected to a cooling air stream along the left wall, with the right and bottom walls maintained at cold (TC) and hot (TH) temperatures, respectively, while the top wall is adiabatic. The nanofluid flow is assumed laminar and governed by the Boussinesq approximation. The governing equations are solved using the finite volume method in ANSYS FLUENT. Simulations are performed for nanofluid volume fractions (φ = 0–0.16), Rayleigh numbers (Ra = 10³–10⁵), and free stream Reynolds numbers (Re∞ = 10³–10⁴). The effects of these parameters on stream function (ψ), temperature contours (θ), and average Nusselt number (Nuavg) are analyzed. Results indicate that heat transfer rates increase with higher φ, Ra, and Re∞. Increasing φ and Ra enhances circulation within the cavity, whereas higher Re∞ induces secondary vortices and reduces circulation in the primary vortex. Comparisons of local Nusselt numbers and temperature distributions with previous studies show good agreement, with maximum errors of 14.28% and 3.2%, respectively.
A numerical study of mixed convection inside a horizontal channel with an open square cavity that includes an adiabatic rotating cylinder. The bottom wall of the cavity is heated at a constant temperature, and the remaining walls are adiabatic. The flow is incompressible, laminar and steady state. The equations of continuity, momentum and energy are solved numerically using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) with the commercial software package FLUENT 2019 R1. Reynolds number values of 50, 100 and 150, the Richardson number (0.1 ≤ Ri ≤ 10) and the angular velocity ( ω ) of cylinder is (0.5 ≤ ω ≤ 4) rad/sec with direction counter clockwise. Prandtl number for air flow is ( Pr = 0.7). The results are presented in terms of streamlines, isotherms, and the average Nusselt value is given over the heated bottom cavity. The combined effects of natural and forced convection in and out of the cavity were obtained. The results showed that at low Richardson values, Ri = 0.1 the effect of buoyancy force is neglected. The effect of increasing the cylinder speed is clearly noticeable at low Reynolds values, Re = 50. Average Nusselt values increase with increasing rotational speed of the cylinder for all Richardson values.