FLOW AND HEAT TRANSFER PHENOMENA IN A 90° BEND
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Abstract
This paper deals with the overall performance of a
two-dimensional, 90°, potential flow bend having a contract ion ratio of 2:1 and using air as the working fluid. It
deals as well with the effect on the boundary layer and the
heat transfer rate at the inner bend surface due to the
cooling and curvature of the inner wall.
The overall characteristics of the bend are reported
for four inlet velocities from 60 to 175 ft./sec. Static
pressure distributions for the inner and outer walls of the
bend and velocity and turbulence profiles at the bend inlet,
mid-bend, and bond outlet are given. Both the pressure dis tributions and the velocity profiles are compared to those
predicted by ideal potential flow and neglecting the velocity
decay at the walls due to the boundary layer, agreement is
very good.
The characteristics of the boundary layer formed at
the inner surface of the bend arc reported for the four in-
let velocities. Velocity profiles are plotted for isother mal flow conditions in dimensional form, universal velocity
profile form, and logarithmic form. The effects on the
velocity profiles due to varying inlet velocities and temp erature differences between the wall and the flow’ of up to
60°F are shown to be small.
The temperature profiles for all the variations of
speed and temperature difference are shown and as the temp erature difference increases the temperature boundary layer
thickens slightly.
The convective heat transfer coefficient is reported
for a point on the inner surface at raid-bend. Evaluations
by the accepted heat transfer correlation and from shear
stress results agree but actual measurements using a heat
flow transducer show that the heat transfer rate is substan tially reduced due to the effect of curvature. These re ductions in heat transfer occur in a region where the accel eration which the flow experiences due to turning is from
730 to 3,3'30 times the acceleration duo to gravity.