Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze numerical results for heat transfer through mixed convection in an incompressible steady lid-driven fluid flow inside a trapezoidal cavity in the presence of a uniform magnetic field. Design/methodology/approach In this study, the authors have considered three different cases, in which left and right walls of the cavity are tilted at different angles of 0, 30 and 45 degrees, respectively. Both left and right side walls of the cavity are taken cold and the upper wall is insulated and assumed moving with constant speed, whereas the bottom wall is considered to be heated uniformly/non-uniformly. To eliminate pressure term, penalty method is applied to governing Navier–Stokes’ equations. The reduced equations are solved by Galerkin weighted residual technique of finite element method. Grid-independent results are obtained and shown in terms of plots for streamlines, isotherms, Nusselt number and average Nusselt number for a wide range of flow parameters, including Rayleigh numbers Ra, Prandtl number Pr and Hartman number Ha. Findings It has been observed that the effects of moving lid become negligible for Ra = 100,000, whereas increasing Rayleigh number results in stronger streamline circulation and convection dominant effects inside the enclosure. Local Nusselt number Nu along the bottom wall is observed to be maximum at edges and it reduces while moving toward the center from edges, and attains minimum value at the center of the bottom wall. Research limitations/implications The problem is modeled for laminar and incompressible flow, induced magnetic field has been considered negligibly small and local thermal equilibrium has been assumed. Originality/value In this investigation, the authors have presented new and original results for mixed convection flow inside a lid-driven trapezoidal cavity under the influence of a magnetic field. Hence, this study would be important for the researchers working in the area of heat transfer in cavity flows involving magnetic effects to become familiar with the flow behavior and properties.
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to perform a numerical study for heat transfer through natural convection in the presence of a constant magnetic field in an incompressible steady nanofluid flow inside an isosceles triangular cavity. Design/methodology/approach For this flow problem, the left wall of the cavity subjected to uniform/nonuniform heat was considered, while right and bottom walls of the cavity were kept cold. The obtained equations were solved by using the Galerkin weighted residual technique. Results are computed for a wide range of parameters including Rayleigh number (Ra) (10^3 < Ra < 10^7), Hartman number (Ha) (0 < Ha < 60), and heat-generation/-absorption coefficient (q) (−10 < q < 10), while, Prandtl number (Pr) was kept fixed at 6.2. These computed results are presented in terms of stream functions, isotherms, Nusselt numbers and average Nusselt numbers through figures. Findings It is observed that, in case of uniform heating of the side wall, the strength of stream lines’ circulations increases with an increase in Ra and decreases with an increase in Ha. Similarly, by increasing heat-absorption coefficient q, an increase in the circulation strength is noted and the circulation cell moves towards the left wall in the presence of a heat sink (q < 0) and moves to the cold right wall in the presence of a heat source (q > 0). In the case of nonuniformly heated left wall in the presence of a heat source (q > 0), a higher-temperature gradient is observed in the cavity and isotherms are clustered to the left wall in the lower portion and to right wall in the upper portion; these appear to be straight and parallel to the x-axis near the bottom wall. On the other hand, the heat transfer rate along all the walls of the cavity is observed to be higher for smaller values of q. Whereas, Nusselt number along the bottom wall (Nu-B) increases with an increase in the values of x, while, that along the left wall (Nu-L) first increases and then decreases. But Nusselt number along the right wall (Nu-R) is found to be qualitatively opposite to Nu-L with an increase in distance x. Whereas, average Nusselt number increases with an increase in Rayleigh number Ra and heat-generation/-absorption coefficient q. Research limitations/implications The problem is formulated for an incompressible flow; viscous dissipation has been neglected, negligible induced magnetic field has been considered and local thermal equilibrium has been considered. Originality/value Results presented in this paper are original and new for the effects of a uniform magnetic field on the natural convection of Cu–water nanofluid in a triangular cavity. Hence, this study is important for researchers working in the area of heat transfer in cavity flows involving the nanofluid to become familiar with the flow behavior and properties.
In this article, numerical simulations are carried out for fluid flow and heat transfer through natural convection in an isosceles triangular cavity under the effects of uniform magnetic field. The cavity is of cold bottom wall and uniformly/non-uniformly heated side walls and is filled with isotropic porous medium. The governing Navier Stoke's equations are subjected to Penalty finite element method to eliminate pressure term and Galerkin weighted residual method is applied to obtain the solution of the reduced equations for different ranges of the physical parameters. The results are verified as grid independent and comparison is made as a limiting case with the results available in literature, and it is shown that the developed code is highly accurate. Computations are presented in terms of streamlines, isotherms, local Nusselt number and average Nusselt number through graphs and tables. It is observed that, for the case of uniform heating side walls, strength of circulation of streamlines gets increased when Rayleigh number is increased above critical value, but increase in Hartmann number decreases strength of streamlines circulations. For non-uniform heating case, it is noticed that heat transfer rate is maximum at corners of bottom wall.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.