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:
