External Forced Convection
External Forced Convection
External Forced Convection
Fourth Edition
Yunus A. Cengel, Afshin J. Ghajar
McGraw-Hill, 2011
Chapter 7
EXTERNAL FORCED
CONVECTION
2
DRAG AND HEAT TRANSFER IN EXTERNAL FLOW
• Fluid flow over solid bodies frequently
occurs in practice such as the drag force
acting on the automobiles, power lines,
trees, and underwater pipelines; the lift
developed by airplane wings; upward
draft of rain, snow, hail, and dust particles
in high winds; and the cooling of metal or
plastic sheets, steam and hot water pipes,
and extruded wires.
• Free-stream velocity: The velocity of the
fluid relative to an immersed solid body
sufficiently far from the body.
• It is usually taken to be equal to the
upstream velocity V (approach
velocity) which is the velocity of the
approaching fluid far ahead of the body.
• The fluid velocity ranges from zero at the
surface (the no-slip condition) to the free-
stream value away from the surface. 3
Friction and Pressure Drag
• Drag: The force a flowing fluid exerts on a
body in the flow direction.
• The components of the pressure and wall
shear forces in the normal direction to flow tend
to move the body in that direction, and their
sum is called lift.
• Both the skin friction (wall shear) and pressure
contribute to the drag and the lift.
4
The drag force FD depends on the density of the fluid, the upstream velocity V,
and the size, shape, and orientation of the body, among other things.
The drag characteristics of a body is represented by the dimensionless drag
coefficient CD defined as
5
• At low Reynolds numbers, most drag is
due to friction drag.
• The friction drag is proportional to the
surface area.
• The pressure drag is proportional to the
frontal area and to the difference
between the pressures acting on the
front and back of the immersed body.
• The pressure drag is usually dominant
for blunt bodies and negligible for
streamlined bodies.
• When a fluid separates from a body, it
forms a separated region between the Wake: The region of flow trailing
body and the fluid stream. the body where the effects of the
• Separated region: The low-pressure body on velocity are felt.
region behind the body here recirculating Viscous and rotational effects are
and backflows occur. the most significant in the
• The larger the separated region, the boundary layer, the separated
larger the pressure drag. region, and the wake.
6
Heat Transfer
Film temperature:
Average friction
coefficient:
7
PARALLEL FLOW OVER FLAT PLATES
The transition from laminar to turbulent flow depends on the surface geometry,
surface roughness, upstream velocity, surface temperature, and the type of fluid,
among other things, and is best characterized by the Reynolds number.
The Reynolds number at a distance x from the leading edge of a flat plate is
expressed as
9
10
Heat Transfer Coefficient
The local Nusselt number at a location x for laminar flow over a flat
plate may be obtained by solving the differential energy equation to be
Laminar +
turbulent
15
FLOW OVER CYLINDERS AND SPHERES
Flow over cylinders and spheres is frequently encountered in practice.
The tubes in a shell-and-tube heat exchanger involve both internal flow through
the tubes and external flow over the tubes.
Many sports such as soccer, tennis, and golf involve flow over spherical balls.
Average drag
coefficient for
cross-flow
over a smooth
circular cylinder
and a smooth
sphere. 17
18
Effect of Surface Roughness
Surface roughness, in general, increases the drag coefficient in turbulent flow.
This is especially the case for streamlined bodies.
For blunt bodies such as a circular cylinder or sphere, however, an increase in
the surface roughness may increase or decrease the drag coefficient depending
on Reynolds number.
25
diagonal
pitch
Arrangement of the
tubes in in-line and
staggered tube
banks (A1, AT, and
AD are flow areas at
indicated locations,
and L is the length of
the tubes).
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All properties except Prs are to
be evaluated at the arithmetic
mean temperature.
Correlations in Table 7-2
The average Nusselt number relations in Table 7–2 are for tube banks
with more than 16 rows. Those relations can also be used for tube
banks with NL < 16 provided that they are modified as
NL < 16
Heat transfer
rate
27
28
Pressure drop
29
Summary
• Drag and Heat Transfer in External Flow
Friction and pressure drag
Heat transfer
• Parallel Flow Over Flat Plates
Friction coefficient
Heat transfer coefficient
Flat plate with unheated starting length
Uniform Heat Flux
• Flow Across Cylinders and Spheres
Effect of surface roughness
Heat transfer coefficient
• Flow across Tube Banks
Pressure drop
30