Abstract
Elastic turbulence has shown great potential to enhance heat transfer performance at the microscale. Most of the studies, however, have only considered global convective heat transfer performance along curvilinear channels, despite that the intensity of the chaotic flow varies along the streamline, leading to different local heat transfer characteristics. This work systematically investigated the local convective heat transfer performance by elastic turbulence of a shear-thinning fluid in a serpentine channel. The flow visualization along the serpentine channel was obtained and analyzed to show the existence of elastic instability and elastic turbulence. Significantenhancement of mixing was observed with the increase of polymer concentration and bulk flowrate. The variations of pressure drop, heat transfer coefficients and Nusselt numbers along the serpentine channel were analyzed to reveal local characteristics of elastic turbulence. A three-stage pressure drop profile was identified due to the variations of viscosity and elastic turbulence intensity at different flowrates and Reynolds numbers. A non-linear heat transfer performance, which increased with the increase of polymer concentrations, was observed. These are mainly attributed to the increasing intensity of elastic instability, resulting from the balance between normal stresses and streamline curvatures. A large increase of Nusselt number versus Weissenberg number was also revealed due to the coupling of shear-thinning behavior and elastic instability effects.
Accepted Version (Free)
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have