Defining thermal convecting zones

This topic explains how to define thermal convecting zones to model heat transfer to a fluid at a known temperature, acting as a fixed-temperature convective sink.

This lesson may include hands-on exercises. Review the Discussion section for background information or click the button to proceed to the practical section.

Discussion

Use the Thermal Convecting Zone load to define heat transfer for a part of the model convecting to a fluid at a known temperature.

You can define:

  • Pressure at the model surface.
  • Heat transfer characteristics.
  • Spatial and time-varying convection coefficients.

Use Thermal Convecting Zone to model high-speed continuous flows when the fluid temperature is known and assumed to remain unaffected by heat exchange with the surrounding metal.

Thermal convecting zone energy equation
Because the temperature of the Thermal Convecting Zone is known and independent of the metal temperature, it effectively behaves as a local ambient temperature.

A Thermal Convecting Zone can be considered as a Thermal Stream with a very high flow rate, such that the fluid temperature remains unchanged by heat exchange with the solid. ​It defines a local convection constraint on the bounding solid element surfaces, with heat flow given by:

Where:

  • is the heat flux from the metal to the prescribed temperature fluid volume, which can vary with time and space.
  • is the solid-fluid interface area determined by the thermal solver.
  • is the known fluid temperature.
  • is the metal temperature, computed by the thermal solver.

The Thermal Convecting Zone behaves as a fixed temperature convective sink in the thermal model. It can be considered to have infinite thermal capacity.

Hands-on material

To gain experience with the topics discussed here, complete the following: