Fully-developed flow and heat transfer in periodic converging-diverging channels with rectangular cross sections are studied using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations for Reynolds numbers ranging from 50 to 200. Experimental laser sheet flow visualizations have also been utilized with the aid of an enlarged transparent Perspex model, which serves as a form of secondary verification of the CFD results. The CFD investigations focus on two principal configurations of converging-diverging channels, namely the constant curvature and sinusoidal converging-diverging channel. Heat transfer simulations have been carried out under constant wall temperature conditions using liquid water as the coolant. It is found that due to the fluid mixing arising from a pair of recirculating vortices in the converging-diverging channels, the heat transfer performance is always significantly more superior to that of straight channels with the same average cross sections; at the same time the pressure drop penalty of the converging-diverging channels can be much smaller than the heat transfer enhancement. The effects of channel aspect ratio and amplitude of the converging-diverging profiles have been systematically investigated. The results show that for a steady flow, the flow pattern is generally characterized by the formation of a pair of symmetrical recirculating vortices in the two furrows of the converging-diverging channel. Both the optimal aspect ratio and channel amplitude are being presented with the support of CFD analyses. Experimental flow visualizations have also been utilized and it was found that the experimental results agrees favorably with the CFD results. The present study shows that these converging-diverging channels have prominent advantages over straight channels. The most superior configuration considered in this paper has been found to yield an improvement of up to 60% in terms of the overall thermal-hydraulic performance compared to microchannels with straight walls, thus serving as promising candidates for incorporation into efficient heat transfer devices.

References

1.
Sharp
,
K. V.
,
Adrian
,
R. J.
,
Santiago
,
J. G.
, and
Molho
,
J. I.
,
2006
, “
Liquid Flows in Microchannels
,”
The MEMS Handbook
,
M.
Gad-el-Hak
, ed.,
CRC Press
, New York, Chap. X.
2.
Tuckerman
,
D. B.
, and
Pease
,
R. F. W.
,
1981
, “
High-Performance Heat-Sinking for VLSI
,”
IEEE Electron Device Lett.
,
2
(
5
), pp.
126
129
.10.1109/EDL.1981.25367
3.
Amon
,
C. H.
,
Guzman
,
A. M.
, and
Benoit
,
M.
,
1996
, “
Lagrangian Chaos, Eulerian Chaos, and Mixing Enhancement in Converging–Diverging Channel Flows
,”
Phys. Fluids
,
8
, pp.
1192
1206
.10.1063/1.868910
4.
Guzman
,
A. M.
,
Maria
,
J. C.
,
Felipe
,
A. U.
, and
Pablo
,
E. A.
,
2009
, “
Heat Transfer Enhancement by Flow Bifurcations in Asymmetric Wavy Wall Channels
,”
Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer
,
52
, pp.
3778
3789
.10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2009.02.026
5.
Amon
,
C. H.
, and
Guzman
,
A. M.
,
1994
, “
Transition to Chaos in Coverging-Diverging Channel Flows: Ruelle-Takens-Newhouse Scenario
,”
Phys. Fluids
,
6
, pp.
1994
2002
.10.1063/1.868206
6.
Amon
,
C. H.
, and
Guzman
,
A. M.
,
1996
, “
Dynamical Flow Characterization of Transitional and Chaotic Regimes in Converging-Diverging Channels
,”
J. Fluid Mech.
,
321
, pp.
25
27
.10.1017/S002211209600763X
7.
Nishimura
,
T.
,
1995
, “
Oscillatory Flow and Mass Transfer Within Asymmetric and Symmetric Channels With Sinusoidal Wavy Walls
,”
Heat Mass Transfer
,
30
, pp.
269
278
.10.1007/BF01602773
8.
Tatsuo
,
N.
,
Shinichiro
,
M.
,
Shingo
,
A.
, and
Yuji
,
K.
,
1990
, “
Flow Observations and Mass Transfer Characteristics in Symmetrical Wavy-Walled Channels at Moderate Reynolds Numbers for Steady Flow
,”
Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer
,
33
(
5
), pp.
835
845
.10.1016/0017-9310(90)90067-5
9.
Sobey
,
I. J.
,
1982
, “
Oscillatory Flows at Intermediate Strouhal Number in Asymmetric Channels
,”
J. Fluid Mech.
,
125
, pp.
359
373
.10.1017/S0022112082003371
10.
Ramgadia
,
A. G.
, and
Saha
,
A. K.
,
2013
Numerical Study of Fully Developed Flow and Heat Transfer in a Wavy Passage
,”
Int. J. Therm. Sci.
,
67
, pp.
152
166
.10.1016/j.ijthermalsci.2012.12.005
11.
Sobey
,
I. J.
,
1980
, “
On Flow Through Furrowed Channels. Part 1 Calculated Flow Patterns
,”
J. Fluid Mech.
,
96
(
1
), pp.
1
26
.10.1017/S002211208000198X
12.
Stephanoff
,
K. D.
,
Sobey
,
I. J.
, and
Bellhouse
,
B. J.
,
1980
, “
On Flow Through Furrowed Channels. Part 2. Observed Flow Patterns
,”
J. Fluid Mech.
,
96
(
1
), pp.
27
32
.10.1017/S0022112080001991
13.
Gong
,
L.
,
Krishna
,
K.
,
Tao
,
W.
, and
Joshi
,
Y.
,
2011
, “
Parametric Numerical Study of Flow and Heat Transfer in Microchannels With Wavy Walls
,”
ASME J. Heat Transfer
,
133
, pp.
1365
1373
.10.1115/1.4003284
14.
Shah
,
R. K.
, and
London
,
A. L.
,
1978
,
Laminar Flow Forced Convection in Ducts
,
Academic
Press,
New York
.
15.
Gambit v6.2 User's Guide, 2008, Fluent, Inc., Lebanon, NH.
16.
Ansys Fluent v13.0 User's Guide, 2011, Ansys, Inc., Canonsburg, PA.
17.
Sui
,
Y.
,
Teo
,
C. J.
, and
Lee
,
P. S.
,
2011
, “
Direct Numerical Simulation of Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer in Periodic Wavy Channels With Rectangular Cross-Sections
,”
Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer
,
55
, pp.
73
88
.10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2011.08.041
18.
Gong
,
L.
,
Kota
,
K.
,
Tao
,
W.
, and
Joshi
,
Y.
,
2011
, “
Thermal Performance of Microchannels With Wavy Walls for Electronics Cooling
,”
IEEE Trans. Compon., Packag., Manuf. Technol., Part C
,
1
, pp.
1029
1035
.10.1109/TCPMT.2011.2125963
You do not currently have access to this content.