화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol.51, No.19-20, 4728-4742, 2008
Numerical investigation of the cooling effectiveness of a droplet impinging on a heated surface
Computational fluid dynamics numerical simulations for 2.0 mm water droplets impinging normal onto a flat heated surface under atmospheric conditions are presented and validated against experimental data. The Coupled problem of liquid and air flow,. heat transfer with the solid wall together with the liquid vaporization process from the droplet's free surface is predicted using a VOF-based methodology accounting for phase-change. The cooling of the solid wall surface, initially at 120 degrees C, is predicted by solving simultaneously with the fluid flow and evaporation processes, the heat conduction equation within the solid wall. The range of impact velocities examined was between 1.3 and 3.0 m/s while focus is given to the process during the transitional period of the initial stages of impact prior to liquid deposition. The droplet's evaporation rate is predicted using a model based oil Fick's law and considers variable physical properties which are a function of the local temperature and composition. Additionally, a kinetic theory model was used to evaluate the importance of thermal non-equilibrium conditions at the liquid-gas interface and which have been found to be negligible fertile test cases investigated. The numerical results are compared against experimental data, showing satisfactory agreement. Model predictions for the droplet shape, temperature, flow distribution and vaporised liquid distribution reveal the detailed flow mechanisms that cannot be easily obtained from the experimental observations. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.