Laminar convective heat transfer of shear-thinning liquids in rectangular channels with longitudinal vortex generators
Amin Ebrahimi, Benyamin Naranjani, Shayan Milani, Farzad Dadras Javan

TL;DR
This study numerically investigates laminar heat transfer of shear-thinning CMC solutions in rectangular channels with vortex generators, demonstrating significant heat transfer enhancement but also increased pressure losses, depending on flow and generator parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed numerical analysis of shear-thinning liquids with vortex generators in rectangular channels, highlighting their heat transfer enhancement mechanisms and effects of various parameters.
Findings
Heat transfer increased by 39-188% with CMC solutions compared to water.
Adding vortex generators enhances heat transfer by 24-135% over plain channels.
Heat transfer performance improves with higher Reynolds number, CMC concentration, and vortex generator angles.
Abstract
Heat and fluid flow in a rectangular channel heat sink equipped with longitudinal vortex generators have been numerically investigated in the range of Reynolds numbers between 25 and 200. Aqueous solutions of carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) with different concentrations (200-2000 ppm), which are shear-thinning non-Newtonian liquids, have been utilised as working fluid. Three-dimensional simulations have been performed on a plain channel and a channel with five pairs of vortex generators. The channels have a hydraulic diameter of 8 mm and are heated by constant wall temperature. The vortex generators have been mounted at different angles of attack and locations inside the channel. The shear-thinning liquid flow in rectangular channels with longitudinal vortex generators are described and the mechanisms of heat transfer enhancement are discussed. The results demonstrate a heat transfer…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
