Abstract

The effect of the top and bottom wall temperatures on the natural convection heat transfer characteristics in an air-filled square cavity driven by a difference in the vertical wall temperatures was investigated by measuring the temperature distributions along the heated vertical wall and visualizing the flow patterns in the cavity. The experiments were performed at a horizontal Grashof number of 1.9 × 10 8. Increasing the top wall temperature resulted in a separated flow region on the top wall, which caused a secondary flow between the separated flow and the boundary layer on the heated vertical wall. This secondary flow had a significant effect on the heat transfer in this region. Changes in the top and bottom wall temperatures changed the temperature gradient and the average temperature of the air outside the thermal boundary layers in the cavity. The local heat transfer along much of the heated vertical wall could be correlated by Nu = C · Ra 0.32, but the constant C increased when the average of the top and bottom wall temperatures increased.

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