Abstract

This paper presents an experimental study on buoyancy-induced flow patterns and heat transfer characteristics of airflow through a horizontal rectangular channel. The channel had an aspect ratio of six, and its bottom and sidewalls were heated, whereas the top of the channel was cooled. The experiments were conducted at the Reynolds numbers 40 and Rayleigh numbers ranging from 100 to 4200. The Nusselt number and the temperature distributions on the top surface of the channel were measured simultaneously at different thermal/flow conditions, and the heat transfer characteristics of the channel was evaluated, together with the flow patterns in the channel. The results showed that due to the heated sidewalls, which was an `imperfect' factor comparing with the classic Rayleigh–Bénard channel, the longitudinal vortex rolls can occur at the Rayleigh number Ra=100, starting with number of rolls N=2 and then N=4 as the Ra increases, rather than the N=6 mode for the same channel with `perfect' sidewalls. In the present study, the six-roll mode occurred at Ra=1730 and above, but an initial trigger was required. Otherwise the four-roll mode would continue to be the dominant flow pattern at high Rayleigh numbers. It was demonstrated that significant heat transfer enhancement could be achieved in low Reynolds and Rayleigh number flow if the longitudinal vortex rolls were excited in the channel.

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