Abstract

The present computational study aims to investigate and improve the turbulent dual jet cooling performance on an undulated surface with varying profiles. This study also aims to highlight the flow and thermal features arising owing to an undulated surface having amplitude (UA) between 0.0 and 0.7. The transient RANS equations are considered to simulate the complex behaviour of turbulent dual jet. Four Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) turbulence models, namely, standard k-ω, shear-stress transport (SST) k-ω, renormalization group (RNG) k-ϵ, and realizable k-ϵ models, are used to predict the thermal performance and flow field of a turbulent dual jet for a fixed Reynolds number (Re) of 10,000 and offset ratio of 2. A constant wall temperature and constant wall heat flux boundary conditions are used. For the amplitude between 0.0 and 0.1, a periodic vortex shedding phenomenon near the jet exit is observed. However, two stable counter-rotating vortices are observed with no periodic vortex shedding for higher values of UA ≥ 0.3. The axial position of the merge point reduces with a rise in the amplitude. It is also observed that the velocity profile becomes self-similar and the inflection point in the velocity profile rises near the wall region with amplitude. The time series of U and V velocity signals unveil sinusoidal oscillations and display almost the same peak to peak amplitude for UA ≤ 0.1 at various times. The FFT of U velocity signals displays a solo peak dominant frequency which is the same as shown by V velocity in the FFT plot corresponding to the Strouhal number of the vortex shedding phenomenon. The average Nusselt number is increased up to 63.89% and 65.03% for higher amplitude for the constant heat flux and constant temperature boundary conditions. Correlations have been also proposed for the average Nusselt number, the average heat flux and the merge point. The outcomes of the present research can be implemented for better design in automobile industries and utilization of cooling or heating jets in electronics, metal, and material processing.

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