Abstract

This article presents a numerical simulation of combined radiation and natural convection in a three-dimensional differentially heated rectangular cavity with two opposite side walls kept at a temperature ratio Th/Tc=2.0 and Tc=500 K, with others walls insulated. A non-Boussinesq variable density approach is used to incorporate density changes due to temperature variation. The Navier–Stokes (NSE), temperature, as well as the radiative transfer (RTE) equations are solved numerically by a finite volume method, with constant thermophysical fluid properties (except density) for Rayleigh number Ra=105 and Prandtl number Pr=0.71. The convective, radiative, and total heat transfer on the isothermal and adiabatic walls is studied along with the flow phenomena. The results reveal an extraordinarily complex flow field, wherein, along with the main flow, many secondary flow regions and singular points exist at the different planes and are affected by the optical properties of the fluid. The heat transfer decreases with increase in optical thickness and the pure convection Nusselt number is approached as the optical thickness τ>100, but with substantially different velocity field. The wall emissivity has a strong influence on the heat transfer but the scattering albedo does not.

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