Abstract

Abstract This article addresses compound heat transfer enhancement for gaseous natural convection in closed enclosures; that is, the simultaneous use of two passive techniques to obtain heat transfer enhancement, which is greater than that produced by only one technique itself. The compounded heat transfer enhancement comes from two sources: (1) reshaping the bounded space and (2) the adequacy of the gas. The sizing of enclosures is of great interest in the miniaturization of electronic packaging that is severely constrained by space and∕or weight. The gases consist in a subset of binary gas mixtures formed with helium (He) as the primary gas. The secondary gases are nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and xenon (Xe). The steady-state flow is governed by a system of 2-D coupled mass, momentum, and energy conservation equations, in conjunction with the ideal gas equation of state. The set of partial differential equations is solved using the finite volume method, for a square and a right-angled isosceles triangular enclosure, accounting for the second-order accurate QUICK and SIMPLE schemes. The grid layouts rendered reliable velocities and temperatures for air and the five gas mixtures at high Ra=106, producing errors within 1% were 18,500 and 47,300 elements for the square and triangle enclosures, respectively. In terms of heat transfer enhancement, helium is better than air for the square and the isosceles triangle. It was found that the maximum heat transfer conditions are obtained filling the isosceles triangular enclosure with a He–Xe gas mixture. This gives a good trade-off between maximizing the heat transfer rate while reducing the enclosure space in half; the maximum enhancement of triangle∕square went up from 19% when filled with air into 46% when filled with He–Xe gas mixture at high Ra=106.

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