Abstract

The supercritical CO 2 closed Brayton cycle is a promising cooling scheme for hypersonic aircraft. However, the high pressure and large heat flux make the thermal behavior of supercritical CO 2 inside the cooling channel extremely complex. In this study, the turbulent heat transfer of supercritical CO 2 in different structural cooling channels is simulated by using the modified turbulence model. A mathematical model of heat transfer coefficient is established by theoretical derivation. The model shows that the heat transfer coefficient is determined by 6 parameters such as turbulent viscosity ( μ t δ ) and wall viscous shear stress ( τ w ). The study found that there is still a slight local heat transfer deterioration (HTD) at low aspect ratio, even though the CO 2 is far from the critical state. By weight analysis of the mathematical model, the results show that the μ t δ and the τ w have the greatest influence on the heat transfer coefficient at the low aspect ratio, and their local decay causes the local HTD. With the change of aspect ratio, the bottom heat load and the μ t δ have the opposite rule, which makes the cooling channel have an optimal aspect ratio and its value is about 0.8. • The optimal aspect ratio of the supercritical CO 2 cooling channel is around 0.8. • The heat transfer coefficient is determined by 6 parameters such as μ t and τ w . • The local attenuation of μ t and τ w causes local heat transfer deterioration.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call