Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels

Thermally developing, electro-osmotically generated flow has been analyzed for a circular microtube under imposed constant wall temperature (CWT) and constant wall heat flux (CHF) boundary conditions. Established by a voltage potential gradient along the length of the microtube, the hydrodynamics of...

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Main Author: Broderick, Spencer L.
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/232
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1231&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-12312021-09-01T05:00:53Z Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels Broderick, Spencer L. Thermally developing, electro-osmotically generated flow has been analyzed for a circular microtube under imposed constant wall temperature (CWT) and constant wall heat flux (CHF) boundary conditions. Established by a voltage potential gradient along the length of the microtube, the hydrodynamics of such a flow dictate either a slug flow velocity profile (under conditions of large tube radius-to-Debye length ratio, a/lambda_d) or a family of electro-osmotic flow (EOF) velocity profiles that depend on a/lambda_d. The imposed voltage gradient results in Joule heating in the fluid with an associated volumetric source of energy. For this scenario coupled with a slug flow velocity profile, the analytical solution for the fluid temperature development has been determined for both thermal boundary conditions. The local Nusselt number for the CHF boundary condition is shown to reduce to the classical slug flow thermal development for imposed constant wall heat flux, and is independent of Joule heating source magnitude. For the CWT boundary condition, a local minimum in the streamwise variation in local Nusselt number for moderate positive dimensionless inlet temperature is predicted. For negative dimensionless inlet temperature, which arises if the fluid entrance temperature is below the tube wall temperature, the fluid is initially heated, then cooled, resulting in a singularity in the local Nusselt number at the axial location of the heating/cooling transition. The thermal development length is considerably larger than for traditional pressure-driven flow heat transfer, and is a function of the magnitudes of Peclet number and dimensionless inlet temperature. For the EOF velocity profile scenario, numerical techniques were used to predict the fluid temperature development for both wall boundary conditions by utilizing a finite control volume approach. In addition to Joule heating as an energy source, viscous dissipation is also considered. The results predict that for decreasing a/lambda_d, the local Nusselt number decreases for all axial positions and the thermal development shortens for both wall boundary conditions. Viscous dissipation has significant effect only at intermediate values of a/lambda_d. Results predict local Nusselt numbers to increase for a CWT boundary condition and to decrease for an imposed constant wall heat flux with increasing viscous dissipation. 2004-11-02T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/232 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1231&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive electro-osmosis electro-osmotic heat transfer numerical heat transfer convection thermally developing microchannel microtube slug flow Mechanical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic electro-osmosis
electro-osmotic
heat transfer
numerical heat transfer
convection
thermally developing
microchannel
microtube
slug flow
Mechanical Engineering
spellingShingle electro-osmosis
electro-osmotic
heat transfer
numerical heat transfer
convection
thermally developing
microchannel
microtube
slug flow
Mechanical Engineering
Broderick, Spencer L.
Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
description Thermally developing, electro-osmotically generated flow has been analyzed for a circular microtube under imposed constant wall temperature (CWT) and constant wall heat flux (CHF) boundary conditions. Established by a voltage potential gradient along the length of the microtube, the hydrodynamics of such a flow dictate either a slug flow velocity profile (under conditions of large tube radius-to-Debye length ratio, a/lambda_d) or a family of electro-osmotic flow (EOF) velocity profiles that depend on a/lambda_d. The imposed voltage gradient results in Joule heating in the fluid with an associated volumetric source of energy. For this scenario coupled with a slug flow velocity profile, the analytical solution for the fluid temperature development has been determined for both thermal boundary conditions. The local Nusselt number for the CHF boundary condition is shown to reduce to the classical slug flow thermal development for imposed constant wall heat flux, and is independent of Joule heating source magnitude. For the CWT boundary condition, a local minimum in the streamwise variation in local Nusselt number for moderate positive dimensionless inlet temperature is predicted. For negative dimensionless inlet temperature, which arises if the fluid entrance temperature is below the tube wall temperature, the fluid is initially heated, then cooled, resulting in a singularity in the local Nusselt number at the axial location of the heating/cooling transition. The thermal development length is considerably larger than for traditional pressure-driven flow heat transfer, and is a function of the magnitudes of Peclet number and dimensionless inlet temperature. For the EOF velocity profile scenario, numerical techniques were used to predict the fluid temperature development for both wall boundary conditions by utilizing a finite control volume approach. In addition to Joule heating as an energy source, viscous dissipation is also considered. The results predict that for decreasing a/lambda_d, the local Nusselt number decreases for all axial positions and the thermal development shortens for both wall boundary conditions. Viscous dissipation has significant effect only at intermediate values of a/lambda_d. Results predict local Nusselt numbers to increase for a CWT boundary condition and to decrease for an imposed constant wall heat flux with increasing viscous dissipation.
author Broderick, Spencer L.
author_facet Broderick, Spencer L.
author_sort Broderick, Spencer L.
title Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
title_short Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
title_full Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
title_fullStr Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
title_full_unstemmed Thermally Developing Electro-Osmotic Convection in Circular Microchannels
title_sort thermally developing electro-osmotic convection in circular microchannels
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2004
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/232
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1231&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT broderickspencerl thermallydevelopingelectroosmoticconvectionincircularmicrochannels
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