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Old   March 26, 2013, 00:01
Default Simulation of heat transfer
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Clay Connor
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I am trying to simulate heat transfer for a plate heat exchanger. However, I am new at CFX. My result turn out to have no heat transfer. The parameters for the simulation must be wrong. Any help from you guys is much appreciated.
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Old   March 26, 2013, 04:14
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This sounds like a simply conjugate heat transfer simulation. Have you done the tutorials?

And if you get no heat transfer either:
* Your interfaces are not connected
* You have not run the simulation long enough for the heat flow to start up.
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Old   March 26, 2013, 05:22
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CHT case setup details are required ...
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Old   March 26, 2013, 09:12
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ERROR #004100008 has occurred in subroutine FINDL.
Message:
Insufficient space for array LNOD.

is this because the poor performance of PC?

There are heat transferred when i set the boundary condition of the interface with temperature.
But what i want to do is to let the heat transfer from the fluid domain.
By tutorial, do you mean the one with heating coil?
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Old   March 26, 2013, 16:47
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This is an unusual error and almost certainly caused by a problem in the way you set it up. But if you want any help you will need to post an image of what you are modelling and the CCL.

All tutorials are useful, but the ones with solid heat transfer especially so in this case.
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Old   March 27, 2013, 04:30
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I have tried running it with my lab's PC. This is a simple version i tried to run before using the real model. The simple version only consists of two fluid region and a plate between them. There are heat transfer. There are temperature difference at the both outlets. But the temperature contour inside the plate seems to be constant. Is this correct? I was following a tutorial where they use air ideal gas as the fluid. In my case, I'm using water. Should i include the buoyancy?
Here are the results.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/j45yrjaw5e4108t/hotfluid.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/k3jp7yuflww41tx/inout.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/7oee9w44bhrczpq/platetemp.jpg
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Old   March 27, 2013, 06:10
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Based on the small amount of information you have provided I have no idea whether what you are seeing is real or not. If the thermal conductivity of the plate is high relative to the fluid then you would expect to see only small temperature gradients across the plate - in this case the effect could be real.

Alternately, if you have not set the interfaces up correctly then no heat transfer will occur.

Please post your output file and/or the CCL as attachments.
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Old   March 27, 2013, 06:17
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# Check the Pr number for water and oil based on that fix near the wall mesh (heating surface) wher you'll have more temp gradient.
# check the material details, K
# check the turbulence model, it is better to you SST- KW
# Is interface area between fluid to solid are same, Pls show the interface area comparison
# Pls show the mesh cut section..

Last edited by jthiakz; March 27, 2013 at 13:47.
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Old   March 28, 2013, 00:02
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hoahongtim0907 View Post
lên nÃ*o.............................................. .................................................. .....................
I do not understand you...
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Old   March 28, 2013, 00:21
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ghorrocks View Post
Based on the small amount of information you have provided I have no idea whether what you are seeing is real or not. If the thermal conductivity of the plate is high relative to the fluid then you would expect to see only small temperature gradients across the plate - in this case the effect could be real.

Alternately, if you have not set the interfaces up correctly then no heat transfer will occur.

Please post your output file and/or the CCL as attachments.
I am not sure which one is the output file. Here is the CCL. What information should i provide? Because I'm still kind of new in CFX. Thank you for your patience.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/nxbs3jk0xtv5014/simplePHE.ccl
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Old   March 28, 2013, 00:28
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jthiakz View Post
# Check the Pr number for water and oil based on that fix near the wall mesh (heating surface) wher you'll have more temp gradient.
# check the material details, K
# check the turbulence model, it is better to you SST- KW
# Is interface area between fluid to solid are same, Pls show the interface area comparison
# Pls show the mesh cut section..
how do i check the Pr number, material details and turbulence model?

Here is the meshing cut section.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/nm0oef9x6onpqsd/meshing.jpg
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Old   March 28, 2013, 00:44
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I changed the fluid from air ideal gas to water. Should buoyancy be included, if so what is the buoyancy reference temperature for water?
The result of using water is different with the air ideal gas. No temperature change in the fluid. I used the same setting.
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Old   March 28, 2013, 02:43
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#solid domain mesh is ok
# Pr number check this link, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prandtl_number, I mean to say that Pr less ,thermal diffusion is dominant than momentum. so Thermal BL is thicker than Momentum Boundary Layer.so you need prism mesh there. Now you are not having prism mesh, so the sharp temp grad near wall cannot be captured.
Create 10 layer prism mesh on fluid side interface walls (for both fluids), first cell height =0.001mm , growth ratio =1.3
# For buoyancy ref density in single phase flow. you can give far field density (unaffected density). In your case, check the density at inlet and same value use it for ref.density.
# But before doing all of this, pls make sure that the interface area (contact area) of fluid & solid are equal and update us value of it.
# Fluid time step =0.01s, solid domain =0.1s, update the convergence plot
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Old   March 28, 2013, 03:11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jthiakz View Post
#solid domain mesh is ok
# Pr number check this link, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prandtl_number, I mean to say that Pr less ,thermal diffusion is dominant than momentum. so Thermal BL is thicker than Momentum Boundary Layer.so you need prism mesh there. Now you are not having prism mesh, so the sharp temp grad near wall cannot be captured.
Create 10 layer prism mesh on fluid side interface walls (for both fluids), first cell height =0.001mm , growth ratio =1.3
# For buoyancy ref density in single phase flow. you can give far field density (unaffected density). In your case, check the density at inlet and same value use it for ref.density.
# But before doing all of this, pls make sure that the interface area (contact area) of fluid & solid are equal and update us value of it.
# Fluid time step =0.01s, solid domain =0.1s, update the convergence plot
Should i continue with this simple version of PHE or just go for the real model? The real model consists of much more plates with corrugations on it. The auto fluid-solid interface domain is not working, it seems impossible to select one by one out of so many surfaces.
And for water, there are only option to fill in buoyancy reference temperature and not density.
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Old   March 28, 2013, 03:20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Clay View Post
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And for water, there are only option to fill in buoyancy reference temperature and not density.
yes , because for water (liquid), boussinesq model is used, so you can specify inlet liquid temp as ref temp.
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Old   March 28, 2013, 03:38
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jthiakz View Post
yes , because for water (liquid), boussinesq model is used, so you can specify inlet liquid temp as ref temp.
Thanks, I am trying to run it again. Added inflation for the prism layer. Does the number of iteration affect much? And for mesh connection, i used GGI.
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Old   March 28, 2013, 03:44
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# when you make the case setup, include temp monitor points in all the 3 domains
# run the case and first check the mass, mom,energy convergence levels and then check the monitor plots.
# Ideally Last 100 iteration(min) residual, monitor plot values should not change much
# pls show the residual plot
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Old   March 28, 2013, 07:34
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Quote:
yes , because for water (liquid), boussinesq model is used, so you can specify inlet liquid temp as ref temp.
Typically, the reference temperature for Boussinesq approaximation should be volume averaged temperature, not region specific, to make it relevant to all parts of the domain.


Quote:
yes , because for water (liquid), boussinesq model is used, so you can specify inlet liquid temp as ref temp.
Boussinesq approximation is a faster way to achieve convergence in natural convection, using steady state physics, since the density is constant in all governing equations, except the buoyant term in momentum equations - where it is an empirical function of temperature difference and thermal expansion. But this only applies when temperature differences in the domain are smaller. The plots in attached snap show a wide range of temperatures.

I wonder, is it even appropriate to use Boussinesq approximation here?

OJ
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Old   March 31, 2013, 01:37
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jthiakz View Post
# when you make the case setup, include temp monitor points in all the 3 domains
# run the case and first check the mass, mom,energy convergence levels and then check the monitor plots.
# Ideally Last 100 iteration(min) residual, monitor plot values should not change much
# pls show the residual plot
here are the results.
anything else need to be included?
https://www.dropbox.com/s/pyighpurgozndw9/coldfluid.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/jmov3e3r0f7b7lj/hotfluid.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/93mlt8zdkykvo5l/platetemp.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ezlhjkc5kwaxva7/meshing.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/trw9njxsvy...attransfer.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/pjsk59t4334km9x/momentum1.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ikx3sefp8dwkoew/momentum2.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/uib8qv8pw2...ransfermax.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/nk6c5rnqs5...mentum1max.jpg
https://www.dropbox.com/s/94rrxf1l00...mentum2max.jpg
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Old   April 4, 2013, 00:36
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help? anyone...
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