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    Natural Convection: Buoyant Flow Between Heated Plates

    This validation case belongs to fluid dynamics. The aim of this test case is to validate the following parameters for a buoyant flow simulation between heated plates, and specifically a hot and cold wall:

    • Velocity parallel to the plates (\(U_y\))and temperature profiles

    The simulation results from SimScale were compared to the experimental results presented in a research article on turbulent natural convection in a closed cavity by Betts et. al. \(^1\)

    Geometry

    The geometry is constructed based on the reference case \(^1\), as shown below:

    geometry of the buoyant flow between two plates with different temperature
    Figure 1: The geometry for the buoyant flow between heated plates consists of a rectangular block.

    It is basically a rectangular block with dimensions 0.076 \(m\ \times \) 2.18 \(m\ \times \) 0.52 \(m \).

    Analysis Type and Domain

    Tool Type: OpenFOAM®

    Analysis Type: Steady-state, incompressible, Convective heat transfer

    Mesh and Element Types:

    SimScale’s Standard algorithm was used for the creation of this mesh :

    details of the mesh created with the standard meshing algorithm
    Figure 2: The generated mesh for the whole flow region (top) and meshing details after zooming in (bottom)

    Simulation Setup

    Fluid:

    • Air
      • Kinematic viscosity \((\nu)\) = 1.529 e-5 \(m^2 \over \ s\)
      • Density \((\rho)\) = 1.196 \(kg \over \ m^3\)

    Boundary Conditions:

    • Wall conditions
      • No-slip walls with wall function for all faces
    • Temperature conditions
      • 34.65 \(°C\) on the hot wall (face ABFE)
      • 15 \(°C\) on the cold wall (face DCGH)
      • Zero gradient/Adiabatic on the rest of the faces

    Initial Conditions:

    • Uniform temperature of 19.85 \(°C\)

    Model:

    • Gravity towards the negative y direction \(g_y\) = – 9.81 \(m \over \ s^2 \)

    Result Comparison

    In the graphs below the velocity profile data that is parallel to the plates, \((U_y)\), extracted with ParaView, is plotted against the experimental findings \(^1\) at different heights. The reference lines are located at the mid-plane normal to the z-direction:

    • \(U_y\) at 0.109 \(m\):
    comparison of velocity profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 0.109 meters
    Figure 3: The \(U_y\) comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 0.109 \(m\)
    • \(U_y\) at 0.218 \(m\):
    comparison of velocity profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 0.218 meters
    Figure 4: The \(U_y\) comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 0.218 \(m\)
    • \(U_y\) at 0.654 \(m\):
    comparison of velocity profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 0.654 meters
    Figure 5: The \(U_y\) comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 0.654 \(m\)
    • \(U_y\) at 0.872 \(m\):
    comparison of velocity profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 0.872 meters
    Figure 6: The \(U_y\) comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 0.872 \(m\)
    • \(U_y\) at 1.09 \(m\):
    comparison of velocity profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 1.09 meters
    Figure 7: The \(U_y\) comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 1.09 \(m\)

    Shown below is the comparison of the temperature profile between the two plates obtained from SimScale simulation results with the reference paper \(^1\) at a height of 0.109 \(m\) . The reference line is located at the mid-plane normal to the z-direction:

    comparison of temperature profiles between a hot and a cold wall with buoyant flow at a height of 0.109 meters
    Figure 8: The temperature comparison across the x direction, mid-plane normal to the z direction, and at a height of 0.109 \(m\)

    The \(U_y\) distribution mid-plane normal to the z-direction can be seen in the following figure:

    parallel to the plates velocity distribution for buoyant flow between plates
    Figure 9: The \(U_y\) distribution mid-plane normal to the z-direction

    On the same plane, the temperature is also visualized:

    temperature distribution for buoyant flow between plates
    Figure 10: The temperature distribution mid-plane normal to the z-direction

    All results are in good agreement with the reference.

    Last updated: July 18th, 2022

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