Abstract
Abstract Research results demonstrate the heat transfer effectiveness of an impinging synthetic jet toward cooling a plane normal to it. The utility of the synthetic jet lies in that the supply of coolant comes from the device itself as an alternating jetting flow that emerges from a plenum followed by a sink flow that returns to that same plenum. Experiments reported herein were conducted with the synthetic jet driven by an oscillating diaphragm powered by a rotating cam to expel fluid from the plenum out of a single hole, then return it through the same hole. The frequency of diaphragm oscillation and the distance from the synthetic jet's orifice to the surface being cooled are varied in the test program to determine their effects on cooling performance. A numerical study agrees with the results given by the experiment and flow visualization utilizing a smoke generator supports the data and numerical results. The local, time-average Nusselt numbers were measured in the experiment using the thermochromic liquid crystal technique and air as coolant. The color display of each test case was recorded with a fisheye camera. In the case of the highest frequency and shortest distance from orifice to cooled plate, a Nusselt number of nearly 40 was achieved within the central region of the cooled plate when the Reynolds number based upon jet maximum velocity and orifice diameter was 7500 and the distance from the orifice to cooled plate was 3.2 orifice diameters.
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