Abstract

The flow field and heat transfer in the internal cooling system of gas turbines can be modeled using rotating-disk systems with axial throughflow. Because of the complexity of these flows, in which buoyancy-induced phenomena are of the utmost importance, numerical studies are notoriously difficult to perform and need extensive experimental validation. J.M. Owen proposed using the maximum entropy production (MEP) principle as a possible means of simplifying numerical computations for these complex flows since this would enable us to use stationary numerical calculations to predict the flow field. Simply said, this theory is based on the heat flux out of the cavity. In this numerical study, the computed Nusselt numbers on the disk walls inside an open rotating cavity with a Rayleigh number of approximately 4.97 × 108. This is representative of the lower values encountered in the flow inside rotating cavities. It is shown that, as predicted by Owen, the flow is stable when the heat transfer out of the cavity is maximized, or, conversely, the system is unstable when the heat transfer is minimized. Furthermore, it is proven that the level of the Nusselt number plays an important role for the change between the number of vortex pairs in the flow as well.

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