Special considerations when calculating local heat transfer coefficient
There are uncertainties regarding the validity of the correlations found in the literature when the orientation of the solid surface is such that ϕ > 150°. In addition, as the angle ϕ approaches 180° (heated surface facing downward or cooled surface facing upward), laminar flow prevails even for very high Ra numbers. In the flow solver, the methodology adopted for 150° < ϕ <180° is to evaluate laminar and turbulent heat fluxes and select the highest one
The heat flux for laminar flow can be written as:
The near wall fluid temperature for laminar flow Tf,lam is expressed in terms of the nodal temperature TN using:
so that:
For turbulent flow, the heat flux is:
The near wall fluid temperature for turbulent flow Tf,turb is expressed in terms of the nodal temperature TN using:
which gives:
The turbulent heat flux corresponds to an amplification of the laminar heat flux, that is:
The amplification factor qw,turb tends to 1 when yf < 1 (laminar flow). Test done with the flow solver indicate that the turbulent heat flux tends naturally towards the laminar heat flux for cases where ϕ > 150° (heated surface facing downward or cooled surface facing upward).